Chipotle
Chipotle | |
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Heat | Hot (SR: 9,999-49,999) |
Chipotles are smoke-dried chili peppers (usually jalapeños) used primarily in Mexican- and Mexican-inspired cuisine.
In the United States and Mexico, consumers prefer green jalapenos. Typically, a grower will go through a jalapeno field multiple times picking the best green jalapenos for market. At the end of the growing season, jalapenos naturally start to turn red. Many growers in the United States disk the red jalapenos into the ground. In Mexico, the red jalapenos are saved. They stay on the vine as long as possible. When the jalapenos are deep red and have lost much of their moisture, they are picked to be made into chipotles.
The red jalapenos are moved to a smoking chamber. The red jalapenos are spread out on metal grills. Wood is placed into a firebox and the smoke enters the chamber. In northern Mexico, the pruned branches from pecan trees are used as firewood. Every few hours, a person enters the smoking chamber and stirs the jalapenos so that smoke can penetrate the whole jalapeno. The chiles are smoked for several days until most of the moisture is taken out of the chile.
In recent years, growers have started to use large gas dryers. Some have even started to use liquid smoke. These commercial techniques produce an inferior chipotle chile.
Most chipotle chiles are produced in the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua. This variety of chipotle is known as a morita. In Spanish morita means little purple one. This is an accurate description of how the chipotle looks.
Chipotles can be purchased in dried form, or canned and preserved in adobo sauce. Ten pounds of fresh chiles will yield approximately one pound of dried chipotle peppers when the process is complete.
Other varieties
In addition to moritas, other varieties of chiles can be smoke-dried, including red jalapeños, serranos, habaneros, New Mexican chiles, Hungarian wax chiles, Santa Fe Grande chiles, and a milder jalapeño called the TAM (a cultivar named for Texas A&M University). Lesser-known varieties of smoked chiles include: Cobán, a piquín chile native to southern Mexico and Guatemala; Pasilla de Oaxaca: a variety of pasilla chile from Oaxaca used in mole negro; Jalapeño chico: jalapeños, smoked while still green; and Capones: a rare and quite expensive smoked red jalapeño without seeds. "Capones" means "castrated ones."
Use
Chipotles are a key ingredient that impart a relatively mild but earthy spiciness to many dishes in Mexican cuisine. The chiles are used to make various salsas. Chipotle chiles can also be ground up and combined with other spices to make a meat marinade known as an adobo.
Etymology
The word chipotle, which was also sometimes spelled chilpoctle and chilpotle, comes to English originally from the Nahuatl word chilpoctli by way of Mexican Spanish. The Nahuatl word chilpoctli means "smoked chile", formed from chil (="chile pepper") + poctli (="smoke"). The original Nahuatl word was spelled "pochilli" and has apparently become reversed. Today it is commonly misspelled and mispronounced as chipolte, an error of metathesis. Other early spellings from Mexico are tzilpoctil, tzonchilli and texochilli. The most common pronunciation is chee-POHT-lay, although some of those who are aware of this word's Nahuatl roots prefer the more historical pronunciation chee-POHT-l. Some Mexicans also know chipotles as chile poctle.
References
- Bayless, Rick (1987). Authentic Mexican: Regional Cooking from the Heart of Mexico. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc. pp. 332–334. ISBN 0-688-04394-1.
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