Chile Verde Guacamole
Published Aug. 12, 2020

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1fresh Anaheim chile
- 1serrano chile, finely chopped
- 3tablespoons finely chopped white onion
- 2tablespoons coarsely chopped cilantro leaves and tender stems
- 1teaspoon kosher or sea salt, plus more to taste
- 3ripe avocados, halved and pitted, meat diced and mashed
Preparation
- Step 1
Place the Anaheim chile on a small baking sheet covered with aluminum foil. Roast it under the broiler, flipping a couple times, until the chile is wilted and its skin is completely charred and wrinkly, 9 to 12 minutes. (Alternatively, you can char the chile directly on a hot comal or a cast-iron pan set over medium heat, or on a grill set to high.)
- Step 2
Place the charred Anaheim chile in a plastic bag and close it well. Let it steam and sweat for 5 to 10 minutes.
- Step 3
As the Anaheim chile steams, add the serrano chile, onion, cilantro and salt in a bowl or molcajete, and mash until combined. Add the avocado and continue to mix and mash until you form a chunky purée.
- Step 4
Once it is cool enough to handle, remove the Anaheim chile from the bag, slip off the charred skin, make a slit down the side and remove the seeds and stem. You could rinse the chile under a thin stream of water, to help remove the seeds, or rinse it off by dipping it into a bowl of water.
- Step 5
Finely chop the Anaheim chile. Add it to the avocado mixture, and stir to combine. Season to taste with salt.
Private Notes
Comments
No reason to fire up the grill or broiler. Char the chiles over your gas burners on your cooktop; watch closely. I spear them with a meat fork so I can control the char. I also use this technique for red and yellow bell peppers (slice thinly along with good onions and dress with a good vinegar & olive oil. Let set for an hour or so. Makes a dandy relish for pork or chicken) Sadly, I have no advice for folks with electric cooktops so the broiler it is
Paper bag, not plastic to steam your charred peppers.
You can clean the roasted chiles up by stripping any remaining seeds off with the dull side of a knife or between your fingers. Rinse your fingers or the knife under running water, not the chile. Rinsing a roasted chile or red pepper rinses off the delicious smokey taste and leaves it watery.
Please don't come at me, as I'm fully-aware this is not typical or traditional, but a great friend to avocado, in either guacamole or on avocado toast, is extra-virgin olive oil. The best one you have, which for me is usually a great Tuscan oil, added to taste. Don't knock it until you try it!
Never, ever, rinse the chilis after removing the charred skins. If you do you will send lots of the rich chili flavors down the drain.
Very tasty! Next time add whole Serrano for more zip and only use about 2/3 salt. A tiny bit too salty
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