Hatch Chile Tres Leches Bread Pudding Recipe & More Hatch!
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The Hatch Chile Festival, celebrating the famous Hatch green chile (photo #2), is held annually in Hatch, New Mexico on Labor Day weekend, (in 2025, August 30th-31st). It’s a major event for chile lovers, attracting up to 30,000 people each year. If you have FOMO (fear of missing out), there are plenty of recipes you can make at home—in fact, you’ve got time to schedule a Hatch Chile Potluck for Labor Day Weekend. You can feast on everything and anything and everything from Hatch Bloody Marys, New Mexican stews and casseroles, and “Hatched” chocolate chip cookies and more. So have your own festival! Hatch-based foods are great company for burgers, franks, steaks, corn, and other traditional Labor Day fare. Recipes. You can search for recipes online or purchase and download Melissa’s Hatch Chile Cookbook here here (photo #6). You can find the hardcover version on Amazon. Hatch Products. You can buy fresh Hatch chiles from Melissa’s, too, and other online purveyors. Check your local specialty stores in August and September. We’ve even found them at Costco, and markets nationwide have Hatch roasts in their parking lots (and sell the fresh chiles). Melissa’s also sells Organic Hatch Pepper Polenta, Hatch Salsa, Hatch Pepper Avocado Salsa, Hatch Pecans, and more spicy stuff. And there are plenty of Hatch salsas, chile powders, and whole roasted canned chiles available on Amazon and elsewhere. > The history of the Hatch chile is below. > The history of chile peppers. > The different types of chiles: a photo glossary. > The year’s chile pepper holidays. > The history of bread pudding. > The history of Tres Leches Cake. Also below: > Why chiles are called peppers. > The year’s hot and spicy food holidays. > The year’s 24 pudding holidays. Celebrated for their smoky, earthy, and slightly sweet flavor, green Hatch chiles are celebrated fresh roasted in late August and September. The green chiles (photo #2) are also diced and frozen for year-round sales. Whole, ripe, red Hatch chiles (photo #5) are dried and available year-round. They’re also ground into Hatch chile powder. Hatch chile season typically runs from early August through late September, with some variation depending on the weather and growing conditions in southern New Mexico. The peak harvest is mid-August to early September. Fresh Hatch chiles are often available in markets across the Southwest and increasingly nationwide—especially during August when many grocery stores hold roasting events. You can stock up and freeze them for the rest of the year. Hatch chiles can be hotter, milder, or the same heat level as jalapeños. The heat varies greatly depending on the specific variety, ranging from mild (around 1,000 Scoville Heat Units [SHU] to quite hot (up to 8,000 SHU or more—jalapeños typically range from 2,500 to 8,000 SHU). There’s more about them below. Here’s a different spin on that creamy comfort food, bread pudding. The recipe contains Hatch chiles, grown in the Hatch Valley of New Mexico, where the unique soil and climate create their signature flavor. (If you can’t find fresh Hatch chiles, substitute frozen or dried red Hatch chiles.) Prep time is 15 minutes and bake time is 1 hour. The bread pudding uses bolillo, Mexico’s most popular bread (photo #3). If you can’t find good bolillos and don’t want to bake your own, substitute French bread (baguette or batard) or Italian bread. Brioche or challah may be too rich and eggy for this recipe, and white sandwich bread is too soft. Whatever bread you use, for best results it should be day-old/slightly stale. In this state the bread absorbs the custard better without getting mushy. For a planned celebration, National Bread Pudding Day on November 13th, May 1st is Bread Pudding Recipe Exchange Day, and May 1st-7th is Bread Pudding Recipe Exchange Week. See all the pudding holidays below. Many thanks to Melissa’s for the recipe. As specialty produce purveors, they have many custom recipes to make with their fruits and vegetables. For a photo of the inspiration for this recipe, see photo #8, Tres Leches Cake. 1. PREHEAT the oven to 350°F. 2. COMBINE in a blender the Hatch chiles, evaporated milk, and condensed milk. Blend until smooth. Strain into a large bowl. 3. ADD the heavy cream, eggs, ground cinnamon, and sugar. Whisk until fully incorporated. 4. LAYER the torn bolillo pieces into a baking dish. Pour the Hatch chile custard mixture over the bread and let soak for 10 minutes. 5. PLACE the baking dish in a water bath and bake for 1 hour. 6. MAKE the topping: Blend the evaporated milk, condensed milk, and Hatch chiles until smooth. Strain into a saucepan and stir in the heavy cream. Bring to a simmer, then remove from the heat. 7. POUR the warm topping over the bread pudding immediately after removing it from the oven. Let it soak in before serving warm. Garnish as desired. Hatch chiles, a type of New Mexican chile pepper, are named after the growing area of Hatch, New Mexico. It’s in southern New Mexico in the Mesilla Valley, just north of Las Cruces. The valley, which stretches along the Rio Grande’s southernmost bend before crossing into Texas and Mexico, is covered with row after row of green, leafy Hatch chile plants for most of the summer. Every year, after the harvest, there are formal and informal Hatch chile festivals, the big one taking place in Hatch itself over Labor Day Weekend. In towns throughout New Mexico, the aroma of roasted chiles fills the air, along with the sounds of the Hatch chiles popping and crackling as they roast in propane-powered roasters. They’re roasted in grocery store parking lots, on street corners and seemingly everywhere and just about everyone enjoys the seasonal treat. Experts say that the intense sunlight, hot days and cool nights in the valley result in a uniquely flavored chile. Hatch chiles are descended from chiles cultivated for thousands of years in Central and South America. Capsicum annuum‡ was domesticated in Mexico at least 6,000 years ago. It is the most widely cultivated and economically important species of the Capsicum genus, and includes popular peppers like Anaheim, banana, bell, Hungarian Wax peppers, jalapeños, cayenne, paprika, pimiento, poblano peppers, serrano, shishito, and many others. Spanish settlers and missionaries brought chile seeds northward into the American Southwest in the late 1500s. There, the Pueblo peoples and other Native American groups were already cultivating and adapting chiles to the arid climate. The modern Hatch chile developed in the late 1800s to early 1900s. Mexico’s Mesilla Valley, which includes the village of Hatch, became a fertile region for chile cultivation due to its hot days, cool nights, and volcanic soil. In the period from 1907 to 1921 Dr. Fabián García, a horticulturist at New Mexico State University (then called New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts), began to selectively breed chile peppers to create uniform, thick-walled, and flavorful peppers as a crop for local farmers. His NuMex No. 9 variety, released in 1913, is considered the ancestor of modern Hatch chiles. Later in the 20th century, additional NuMex (for New Mexico) varieties were developed for flavor, size, and heat. These included: Thus, “Hatch chile” refers to any New Mexican-style chiles grown in the Hatch Valley, rather than to one specific cultivar. The annual Hatch Chile Festival, begun in the 1970s, helped to popularize the chile pepper nationwide. The concept of a Hatch chile roast spread nationwide, with roasting events held in grocery store parking lots across the U.S. in late summer. Thus was Hatch chile season turned into an American culinary ritual. There is no Hatch Chile Day (yet), but here are 14 chile pepper holidays. So we’re taking this opportunity to presenting the 12 hot and spicy food holidays. While there is a National Bread Pudding Day on November 13th, and two more bread pudding holidays in May, we’re taking this opportunity to present all the pudding holidays. We like to plan ahead! > Here’s how American pudding is different from British pudding. Both types listed. > Have a pudding party! Here’s how to set up a pudding buffet. |
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WHY CHILES ARE CALLED PEPPERS Chiles were “discovered” in the Caribbean by Christopher Columbus, who called them “peppers” (pimientos in Spanish) because of their fiery similarity to the black peppercorns he was familiar with—although there is no botanical relationship between the two plants, or with the Szechuan pepper. That’s why calling chiles “peppers” is a misnomer. The term “pepper” (pimiento) is not used to describe them in the Spanish language. But that’s why chiles are called peppers by many Americans. (The Nibble calls them either chiles or chile peppers [so people who only call them peppers can relate], and we only use “peppers” when referring to bell peppers.) The Aztec (Nahuatl language) word is chilli, which the Spanish spelled chile. The British spelling “chilli” results from how the word traveled from Spanish to English and was influenced by English spelling conventions of the 17th–19th centuries. So why do Americans call their dish chili instead of chile? In 19th‑century Texas and the Southwest, the Mexican “chile con carne” became “chili con carne” in cookbooks and newspapers. Reasons given include that “chile” could be read as Chile, the country. By the late 1800s, “Texas chili” was a distinct American frontier dish. The Anglicized “chili” reinforced it as a local specialty rather than just referring to the Spanish chile pepper. If you want a bit more chile history: The first chiles were brought to Spain in 1493 by Diego Álvarez Chanca, a physician on Columbus’ second voyage to the West Indies. He first wrote about their medicinal effects in 1494. From Europe, chiles spread rapidly to India, China, and Japan. In Europe, they first were grown in the monastery gardens of Spain and Portugal as botanical curiosities, but the monks experimented with their culinary potential and discovered that their pungency offered an inexpensive substitute for black peppercorns. Peppercorns, imported from southeast Asia, were so costly that they were used as legal currency in some countries! What we call “heat” or ”fire” of the chile is known in the industry as the pungency level. The pungency is the result of both the plant’s genetics and the environment in which it grows. Although plant breeders can produce a chile with a certain amount of relative heat by varying water amounts and temperature levels, genetic control is not yet fully understood. The heat is due to capsaicin, an alkaloid, and four related chemicals, collectively called capsaicinoids. Each capsaicinoid has a different effect on the mouth, and variation in the proportions of these chemical is responsible for the differing sensations produced by different varieties. Capsaicin causes pain and inflammation if consumed to excess, and can even burn the skin on contact in high concentrations (habaneros, for example, are routinely picked with gloves). It is also the primary ingredient in pepper spray. †Why two tapioca holidays? June 28th is a broader National Tapioca Day celebration, July 15th celebrates tapioca pudding specifically. There’s no clear explanation for why there are two similar days so close to each other. Other uses for tapioca: Tapioca is a popular gluten-free flour substitute used in baking, creating chewy textures in bread. It helps to bind ingredients as a thickening agent for gravies, sauces, and soups. Cassava flatbreads and crackers are dietary staples in many Caribbean and South American countries. Brazilian is known for its savory and sweet tapioca crêpes, beiju de tapioca. Various Asian noodles and crispy snacks are made from tapioca starch. The cassava root vegetable can be boiled, fried, or roasted as a potato substitute. These culinary uses, along with industrial uses, make tapioca one of the most versatile plants. ‡The other significant species of Capsicum include Capsicum frutescens, known for small, pungent chiles (bird’s eye, Tabasco, Thai), Capsicum chinense, an extremely hot species (Carolina Reaper, ghost pepper, Habanero, Scotch bonnet), and Capsicum baccatum, chiles with fruity flavors, best known for the aji amarillo. CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING ON OUR HOME PAGE, THENIBBLE.COM. |
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