Food EditionCookAmericanSauceRoasted Green Chile Salsa
30 minEasyServes 4
American · Sauce

Roasted Green Chile Salsa

Blister fresh Hatch or poblano chiles until the skins char, then steam them in a bowl before peeling. Blend the flesh with raw tomatillos, white onion, garlic, and fresh cilantro, adjusting the acidity with lime juice to balance the fire of the peppers.

Total time
30 min
Hands-on
20 min
Serves
4
Difficulty
Easy
Before you start

Mind the heat

The spice level varies wildly between individual peppers; taste a tiny piece of the raw flesh near the stem before you commit the whole batch to the blender.

  • gas stove or broiler
  • tongs
  • mixing bowl
  • plastic wrap
  • blender or food processor
Ingredients

What goes in.

  • 1 lbfresh green chiles (Hatch or poblano)
  • 1/2 lbtomatillos, husked and rinsed
  • 1/4white onion, peeled
  • 2 clovesgarlic, peeled
  • 1/2 cupfresh cilantro leaves
  • 1 tbspfresh lime juice
  • 1 tspkosher salt
The key technique

Skin removal

After charring, trapping the chiles in a covered bowl creates steam that separates the tough, papery skin from the flesh, making it slide off with a quick scrape.

Step by step

The method.

  1. Char the chiles

    Place chiles directly over a high gas flame or under a broiler. Turn them with tongs until the skin is blackened and blistered on all sides.

  2. Steam and peel

    Put the hot chiles in a bowl and cover tightly for 10 minutes. Use a paring knife or your thumbs to peel off the charred skin; discard the stems and seeds.

  3. Combine

    Add the peeled chiles, raw tomatillos, onion, garlic, cilantro, lime juice, and salt into the blender.

  4. Pulse to texture

    Pulse the blender until the mixture is broken down but still retains a rustic, chunky texture. Do not over-process into a smooth puree.

Variations

Other turns to take.

Creamy Style

Add half of a ripe avocado during the blending process for a thicker, milder sauce.

Roasted Vegetable

Roast the tomatillos and onion alongside the peppers until soft to deepen the base sweetness.

Tips & troubleshooting

When it doesn't go to plan.

Tip

Wear kitchen gloves if you are sensitive to capsaicin, especially when handling many chiles at once.

Tip

If the salsa is too thick, add a tablespoon of water at a time until you reach your preferred consistency.

Tip

Let the salsa sit in the refrigerator for at least an hour before serving to let the garlic and onion mellow into the chiles.

Questions

The ones that keep coming up.

Can I use canned chiles?

You can, but the flavor will be significantly flatter. Fresh roasting adds a distinct smoky depth that canned products cannot replicate.

How long will this stay fresh?

Keep it in a sealed glass jar in the refrigerator for up to five days.