Friday, April 13, 2018

Salsa roja picante


Don't let the deep red hue fool you. Salsa roja picante comes with a warning. It carries a bite, and a healthy dose of heartburn if you're not careful!

Warning labels aside, the ubiquitous Mexican red table sauce is good. A common element in every taqueria salsa bar, salsa roja picante flavors any meal part. From chips to huevos rancheros to your go-to burrito, the spicy red sauce will spice up the meal.

And the best part? The recipe couldn't be simpler. Toast dried chile peppers, add water along with garlic, onion and tomato, and simmer 20 minutes. Pour it all into a blender bowl with additional flavors and whirl away. Pure goodness is the result.

Spice up breakfast!

SALSA ROJA PICANTE

Buy pequin and arbol chile peppers at well stocked markets or on-line from stores like Amazon.com. My latest batch of pequin chiles came from Spice Lab via Amazon. If the $60 per pound price tag seems a tab bit high, smaller quantities are available. So, unless you're operating a hot sauce plant, the two-ounce package (at $15) will last months.

1/2 ounce pequin chile peppers, stems pinched off
1/4 ounce arbol chile peppers, stems pinched off
1 medium tomato, core removed & seeded
2 tablespoons chopped sweet onion
2 cloves fresh garlic
2 cups cold water
2 tablespoons chopped cilantro
1-1/2 tablespoon white distilled vinegar
2 teaspoons turbinado sugar
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin

Toast chile peppers and garlic in a dry skillet over medium heat, 2 to 3 min., or just until aroma begins to bite. Do not burn. Place chiles, tomato, onion and garlic in a saucepan with the water, bring to a boil, then reduce heat. Simmer for 20 min., then cool 10 to 15 minutes. Add cilantro, vinegar, sugar, salt and cumin to chile mixture. Puree in blender 20 sec. or until smooth. Strain if desired. Age in refrigerator. Yields 2 to 2-1/4 cups unstrained.