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Posted

I bought some at Krogers over the weekend. Roasted in the Ninja Foodi and then peeled. They will be going into green chile cheeseburgers.

 

I did see a case of them, the label on the case said, "Hot House Grown". I bought them anyway and they smelled delicious when I roasted them, not sure why they would need a hot house if they are gown in New Mexico. 

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That's the thing about opposum inerds, they's just as tasty the next day.

Posted
1 hour ago, chileheadmike said:

I bought some at Krogers over the weekend. Roasted in the Ninja Foodi and then peeled. They will be going into green chile cheeseburgers.

 

I did see a case of them, the label on the case said, "Hot House Grown". I bought them anyway and they smelled delicious when I roasted them, not sure why they would need a hot house if they are gown in New Mexico. 

I think cuz still seasonal outdoors, plus can control, heat, humidity, pests, and water

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Posted

Probably because the plants are started in greenhouse for a jump-start for harvest.  Then transplanted outside when hardened up.   There was deep drought (failed Monsoon and winter rains 2019-2020)  up until the last 2 months and now the SW Monsoon is practically biblical with moisture now.  Hallelujah!

Also, earlier harvest so fresh chiles in mid-Summer benefit.

 

https://www.lcsun-news.com/story/news/2021/07/22/chile-harvest-starts-early-some-new-mexico-farmers/8054285002/

 

 

"Instead of starting from seed, more farmers are planting seedlings that have sprouted in a greenhouse to get their fields going faster. For some, it's a hedge against increasing labor costs, while others see the method as a way to save water as climate change adds to the uncertainty of irrigation supplies with every passing growing season."

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Posted

My daughter lives in Albuquerque..  we always love to go to the Corrales area.  We usually fill up with fresh when season is on..  the farmers market there  sells a green chili burrito..  that is steller.

 

If u travel to Santa Fe--  get up to Rancho Chimayo   some of the best NM  food around

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Its good to have Morels

Posted (edited)

Side Note  for RC  --Have a designated driver to leave/ one pitcher of Margaritas for 3/  Wasted we were :)

 

Edited by Paul Bacino (log)
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Its good to have Morels

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

I just ordered HatchGreenChilis a few minutes ago. An annual tradition. Tomatillos are about to form up in the garden. A wild patch in the back. Smoked hatch tomatillo salsa for the winter months. My best home grown are the tiny Peruvian Ahi Amarillo. Not much luck with others in my climate. An Ahi plant I can bring indoors and will continue to produce fruit throughout the holidays. 

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Posted
3 hours ago, Annie_H said:

I just ordered HatchGreenChilis a few minutes ago. An annual tradition. Tomatillos are about to form up in the garden. A wild patch in the back. Smoked hatch tomatillo salsa for the winter months. My best home grown are the tiny Peruvian Ahi Amarillo. Not much luck with others in my climate. An Ahi plant I can bring indoors and will continue to produce fruit throughout the holidays. 

I usually order those, too.  I told my husband I was going to skip this year because I still have a couple packs in the freezer....but I am really wanting some fresh ones....

Posted

When they are delivered I panic about processing...lol. But they keep for a few weeks being so fresh. I freeze some whole, but most get roasted/smoked. I used my last zip-lock gallon bag in the Spring....roasted/smoked with garlic and onions...

We are not entertaining as much as pre-covid....but I will go ahead and make my smoked tomatillo salsa as always and deliver to friends and family. It does freeze fine.

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Posted

You all have me tempted to order some chiles. Which of the varieties do you prefer?

 

@Annie_H — how do you smoke the chiles? I just got an electric smoker this year and this sounds like a fantastic use of it.

Posted

Last year they gave us a heads up that BigJim was much more mild than usual. I prefer the big size of BigJim. Do note that 5 pounds is 35$ and 10 pounds is 40$.

!0 is a better deal. (I get 25lbs) 🤪 share with friends and co-workers if I have too much to dealio.

I roast/smoke with tomatillos and a few whole heads of garlic per tray. I did run out of steam last year and just froze some whole fresh. Straight from the freezer into the smoker buried in snow in January. Stuffed a couple dozen over the holidays. I'm sure we could find many uses but we like the salsa. Our electric smoker is just outside the kitchen door so we can keep an eye on it. 

Our monster wood fired smoker is not a winter game. 

If you do order, just bag them like any pepper and stick in the fridge crisper drawer. Even oven roasted in a turkey roaster with tomatoes is good. 

Smoked are killer good. 

 

Posted
37 minutes ago, dtremit said:

You all have me tempted to order some chiles. Which of the varieties do you prefer?

 

@Annie_H — how do you smoke the chiles? I just got an electric smoker this year and this sounds like a fantastic use of it.

 

Try here - https://www.hatch-green-chile.com/collections/fresh-hatch-green-chile

 

I don't believe they are smoked; I think they get roasted.

Mitch Weinstein aka "weinoo"

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Posted
26 minutes ago, Annie_H said:

Last year they gave us a heads up that BigJim was much more mild than usual. I prefer the big size of BigJim. Do note that 5 pounds is 35$ and 10 pounds is 40$.

!0 is a better deal. (I get 25lbs) 🤪 share with friends and co-workers if I have too much to dealio.

I roast/smoke with tomatillos and a few whole heads of garlic per tray. I did run out of steam last year and just froze some whole fresh. Straight from the freezer into the smoker buried in snow in January. Stuffed a couple dozen over the holidays. I'm sure we could find many uses but we like the salsa. Our electric smoker is just outside the kitchen door so we can keep an eye on it. 

Our monster wood fired smoker is not a winter game. 

If you do order, just bag them like any pepper and stick in the fridge crisper drawer. Even oven roasted in a turkey roaster with tomatoes is good. 

Smoked are killer good. 

 


Thanks -- that's super helpful! I am on the fence about Big Jim vs Sandia — think we might like them a little hotter. (I wish they'd let you split a 10lb box between two varieties.)

 

What's the time and temp you use for smoking them?

 

We are supposed to start getting tomatillos from our farm share soon...super excited about that.

Posted

That is where I purchase. HatchGreenChile.com.  Same website. Fresh or roasted. I buy fresh. Right now is the season through mid September. They ship every Tuesday. 

6 years now. Always fresh and gorgeous. I first bought them at Kalustyan spice NYC. old and shriveled at top dollar. (must have been weeks old). Fresh direct from the grower is the way to go. 

Posted

BigJim does have some heat. Last year I ordered Sangria. We decided this year we want the BigJim and can add a bit of habanero if not spicy enough. Too spicy ruins it for me. 

I think smokers are like ovens...all different. Smokers may be more oddly different. Last weekend we had sausage lower rack, then salmon fillets, then upper rack a variety of cheeses on a tray of ice packs. Mozzarella, cheddar, chunks of pecorino. Cheeses I did 45 minutes, salmon and sausage 1.5 hours, (sausage pre-cooked a bit in a cast iron pan)...smoking salsa/tomatoes/tomatillos/garlic/chilis....one hour for our liking. Good smoke flavor without killer char smoke. Our smoker kicks in about 1/2 hour after plug-in. When the chips start smoking, trays go in. Shallow trays for salsa and peppers. 

Last weekends cheese. Pecorino so good on popcorn. 

IMG_1023.jpeg

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Posted

@Annie_H That's a good point — it's not the heat that's unique in those chiles, and I always have hotter peppers around. 

 

That cheese looks phenomenal! It's one of the things I'm really looking forward to doing. 

 

I did a smoked cream cheese as one of the first things into the smoker — coat it in a BBQ rub, and smoke for a couple of hours. Bizarre recipe, but a food writer I trust wrote about it. It was amazingly good. I did it in a small cast iron skillet so it went straight to the table as an appetizer. I'm thinking goat cheese would be even better. I am hoping to get a pellet "maze" to do something closer to true cold smoking when the weather eases up a bit — you just light the pellets in the switched off smoker.

 

I was expecting I would use the smoker mostly for meat, but I am finding I really love it with other stuff. Smoked peaches were great in a salad, and smoked tofu was phenomenal. Some eggplants will be going in this weekend.

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Posted
On 8/27/2021 at 1:51 PM, dtremit said:

I was expecting I would use the smoker mostly for meat, but I am finding I really love it with other stuff. Smoked peaches were great in a salad, and smoked tofu was phenomenal. Some eggplants will be going in this weekend.

I bought mine for salmon. Holiday stocking stuffer 2019. (we are not big gifters usually) A last minute thing. Had it running outside the kitchen door in the snow within an hour. Brilliant during lock-down. With 4 racks I'm always searching for other things to go in while it is running anyway. Peppercorns, lemon zest salt blend...chunk of feta, cherry toms, olives, garlic, lots of lemon slices...need to try tofu! 

The salmon from BristolBay Alaska is flash frozen sushi grade. I've taken out a couple fillets straight from the freezer into the smoker. 

I should receive my Hatch end of next week. First batch I plan to smoke whole for stuffing. 

Posted

Hatch chilis were three days late due to the storm. Picked a bad week to order. From NewMexico to CO, to OH, to MO...then NewJersey. At one point they trackers said to expect on the 7th. Thankfully they came this morning. 90% are fine and firm/fresh but not nearly as nice as usual. I have 20 of the biggest and straight in the smoker for stuffing...a load cut into rings in the oven...turkey roaster. 

Lots to process. This much and more in the crisper drawer....

 

IMG_1153.jpeg

roastinghatch:toms.png

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Posted
15 hours ago, Shelby said:

Do you think they are not as meaty due to the longer shipping time and getting older or they just aren't as good this year

Oh, no, the quality is excellent usually. Like any produce from the garden or grocery will, once harvested, start to suffer. Like the lime uncovered in my crisper from 3 weeks ago compared to the fresh ones. 

Horrible storm and airports shut down. I have a hard time complaining about some suffering produce. They offer a higher shipping with guarantee but i've

never had an issue. With the guarantee and a pic I would have a new box sent this week. 

Here is a pic from my files 2018. Ordering straight from the farm to my door will often be quicker than what is found in the grocery. (transfer station, trucking, loading dock, then shelved...maybe sits a couple days before purchase). My box traveled the country diverted. When they estimated delivery sept 7th, yikes. Would have been a slimy mess for all that handled the box.

They offered a 50% off a re-order but I can't put blame on the farm for delays from the Delta variant and a deadly storm. 

I can usually, like this 2018 pic, start processing my various ways, over the course of a week or so, then the remaining start to turn a bit pink/red....my delayed box this year is at that point now. I need to process asap. What is left in the crisper now will be some fresh pico, in another fresh slaw, etc. Another roasting tomorrow and be done with it.  2nd pic is 2 dozen roasted whole and a batch roasted sliced in rings, (six one quart zip-locks), and two 10 inchers stuffed for last nights dinner. 

 

hatch box 2018.png

IMG_1161.jpeg

IMG_1155.jpeg

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Posted

Dinner plate after some oven time. Stuffed with wild rice, merguez, gorgonzola dolce. Fennel, red onion, fresh hatch slaw. 

IMG_5633.jpeg

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Posted

I took this while peeling a batch of chiles. They were Roasted on my Weber kettle. Kroger's has them on sale, I've picked up a bag full every time I go. 

20210829_184005.jpg

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That's the thing about opposum inerds, they's just as tasty the next day.

  • 1 month later...
Posted

Well, then...this brings discussions of "terroir" and growing conditions to a whole other level.

 

https://blogs.nasa.gov/kennedy/2021/10/05/houston-we-have-a-pepper/

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“Who loves a garden, loves a greenhouse too.” - William Cowper, The Task, Book Three

 

"Not knowing the scope of your own ignorance is part of the human condition...The first rule of the Dunning-Kruger club is you don’t know you’re a member of the Dunning-Kruger club.” - psychologist David Dunning

 

"My imagination makes me human and makes me a fool; it gives me all the world and exiles me from it." Ursula K. Le Guin

  • 9 months later...
Posted

Saw this yesterday at my local (Richmond VA) Kroger:

1-IMG_0311.jpg.830dd11422e4502542051aa4bfd54f10.jpg

Not at all sure whether I believe it or not.  It reminds me a little of the San Marzano tomato issue brought up in Stanley Tucci's Italy series - the person he was interviewing said basically that there is only so much land to grow these things - do you really think that there is enough to supply all that Italy AND the rest of the world demands?  Even more true of Hatch chilies.  I have a vague memory of someone here mentioning driving near Hatch and seeing trucks full of chilies heading into the area.  

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