Chipotle Red Sauce Recipe - Cooking Index
5 | Dried chipotle chiles - (see note) | |
2 | Dried New Mexico red chiles | |
1 | Dried ancho chile | |
6 | Garlic - unpeeled | |
1 1/2 cups | 355ml | Water |
OR chile water - (see below) | ||
3/4 teaspoon | 3.8ml | Salt |
6 tablespoons | 90ml | Cider vinegar |
1 teaspoon | 5ml | Unsweetened cocoa |
2 tablespoons | 30ml | Dark brown sugar |
1/4 teaspoon | 1.3ml | Ground cumin |
1 cup | 237ml | Fresh orange juice |
1/4 teaspoon | 1.3ml | Ground cloves |
1/2 teaspoon | 2.5ml | Ground cayenne |
Preheat oven to 250F.
Stem and slit all the dried chiles, removing half the seeds. (For a milder sauce, remove all the seeds.) Roast the chiles in the oven just until you smell them, about 3 minutes maximum. Submerge them in a pot of hot water and soak until softened, about 20 minutes. While the chiles are soaking, turn oven up to 500 degrees. Roast the garlic on a baking sheet for 20 minutes, then peel.
Taste the chile water. If it's not bitter, use it instead of water. Combine the chiles, garlic chile water, salt, vinegar, cocoa, sugar, cumin, orange juice, cloves, and 1/4 teaspoon cayenne in blender and puree. Taste, and add an additional 1/4 teaspoon cayenne if greater heat is desired. Pour into sterilized bottle and seal. Refrigerated, the sauce will keep approximately 8 weeks. Makes 3 cups.
Note: You may substitute canned chipotles in adobo, which will make roasting and soaking unnecessary. Lift the chipotles from the sauce, but don't rinse, as the adobo adds flavor.
The cocoa--borrowed from Mexican mole sauces--doesn't sweeten the sauce; rather, it adds a mellowness that, combined with the orange juice, takes the sometimes bitter edge off the dried chiles.
This sauce has great range: it is "big" enough to be used as a marinade for grilled meats and is also a fine steak sauce that's not too sweet. Not particularly searing, it is also a wonderful dipping accompaniment to grilled chicken and fish. My favorite dish for this sauce, however, is Fajitas , where the onions, peppers, steak, and warm tortillas come alive with the smoky chipotles.
Source:
Jennifer Trainer Thompson "Hot Licks"1994
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