ROASTED JALAPEñO SALSA RECIPE
Intensely flavored pan-roasted jalapeño salsa which packs some heat. The peppery flavor of the jalapeños is front and center and enhanced by onion, garlic, cilantro, and lime juice. It's easy to make and a great addition to your salsa repertoire.
Provided by Douglas Cullen
Categories Appetizer
Time 40m
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Heat a dry pan to medium-hot and add the jalapeños, onion, and garlic.
- Cook until the peppers are completely blackened, about 20 minutes. Remove from the pan.
- Cut the stems off of the jalapeños and place them in your blender.
- Remove the garlic cloves from their husks and add to your blender.
- Add the onion and cilantro, 1/4 cup of water, lime juice, and 1 tsp. salt.
- Blend for 30 seconds.
- Heat 2 tbsp of cooking oil to medium-hot in the same pan that you roasted the jalapeños.
- Pour the blended salsa into the hot oil. This step is called "seasoning" the salsa.
- After 1 minute in the hot oil, reduce the heat to low and simmer for 15 minutes. This deepens and intensifies the flavor.
- After 15 minutes, take and adjust the salt if needed.
Nutrition Facts : ServingSize 1 /4 cup, Calories 43 kcal, Carbohydrate 3 g, Fat 3 g, Sodium 50 mg, Sugar 2 g
TOMATO JALAPENO SALSA
Roasting the tomatoes and adding the jalapeno incrementally is the key to finding your perfect homemade salsa!
Provided by Patrick Calhoun | Mexican Please
Time 25m
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Rinse and de-stem the tomatoes. Roast the tomatoes in the oven at 400F for 20-30 minutes.
- Add the roasted tomatoes to a blender along with 1/2 onion, 1 garlic clove, and only 1/4 of the jalapeno. Pulse blend until combined.
- Taste for heat level. Add another 1/4 of the jalapeno if you want additional heat. Keep adding additional quarters of the jalapeno until you find a heat level that works for your taste buds.
- Salt to taste. Serve immediately.
- Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 26 kcal, ServingSize 1 serving
ROASTED JALAPENO AND TOMATO SALSA
Originally from Rick Bayless, adapted to my own taste. I think this is a medium hot salsa. Heat level can be adjusted up or down with the habaneros.
Provided by acid.
Categories Southwestern U.S.
Time 55m
Yield 5 cups
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Place oven rack to highest position and preheat broiler.
- Put tomatoes and peppers on a baking sheet and place under broiler for about 10 minutes.
- Tomatoes and peppers should be blackened in spots.
- Turn tomatoes and peppers over and broil for about another 10 minutes.
- Tomatoes and peppers should be blackened in spots and cooked through.
- Peppers may be done before tomatoes, if so, remove them as they are done.
- Remove from oven and let cool.
- Reduce heat to 425 degrees F.
- Cut onion into 1/4 inch slices and separate into rings.
- Place onion and garlic on a baking sheet and place in oven.
- Cook for about 15 minutes or until onion is wilted and slightly charred and garlic is soft and brown.
- Stir a couple of times during cooking.
- Remove from oven and let cool.
- Remove stems from peppers and tomatoes.
- Put peppers, onion and garlic in a food processor and coarsely chop.
- Scoop into a large bowl.
- Coarsely chop tomatoes and put in bowl.
- Stir together and add salt and apple cider vinegar.
- Chop cilantro and add.
- You may want to use less cilantro.
- Adjust salt and vinegar to taste.
ROASTED JALAPEñO-TOMATO SALSA WITH FRESH CILANTRO
Steps:
- 1. Heat the broiler. Lay the whole tomatoes and jalapeños out on a broiler pan or baking sheet. Set the pan 4 inches below the broiler and broil for about 6 minutes, until darkly roasted - even blackened in spots - on one side (the tomato skins will split and curl in places). With a pair of tongs, flip over the tomatoes and chiles and roast the other side for another 6 minutes or so. The goal is not simply to char the tomatoes and chiles, but to cook them through while developing nice, roasty flavors. Set aside to cool.
- 2. Turn the oven down to 425 degrees. Separate the onions into rings. On a similar pan or baking sheet, combine the onion and garlic. Roast in the oven, stirring carefully every couple of minutes, until the onions are beautifully browned and wilted (even have a touch of char on some of the edges) and the garlic is soft and browned in spots, about 15 minutes total. Cool to room temperature.
- 3. For a little less rustic texture or if you're canning the salsa, pull off the peels from the cooled tomatoes and cut out the "cores" where the stems were attached, working over your baking sheet so as not to waste any juices. In a food processor, pulse the jalapeños (no need to peel or seed them) with the onion and garlic until moderately finely chopped, scraping everything down with a spatula as needed to keep it all moving around. Scoop into a big bowl. Without washing the processor, coarsely puree the tomatoes - with all that juice that has accumulated around them - and add them to the bowl. Stir in enough water to give the salsa an easily spoonable consistency. Stir in the cilantro.
- 4. Taste and season with salt and vinegar, remembering that this condiment should be a little fiesty in its seasoning. If you're planning to use your salsa right away, simply pour it into a bowl and it's ready, or refrigerate it covered and use within 5 days.
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