Your email address is required to begin the subscription process. We will use it for customer service and other communications from Milk Street. You can unsubscribe from receiving our emails at any time.



Ancho Chili Salsa Roja
This recipe is free until May 31, 2023. 12 WEEKS FOR $1 TO ACCESS EVERY MILK STREET RECIPE. Learn More.
We use ancho chilies, with their earthy, smoky flavor, to up the flavor of a simple salsa. Deep-red anchos are dried ripe poblano chilies. The chilies are harvested green to use fresh, but to make anchos, they're left to ripen until red, developing a sweetness that balances their moderate heat. Left alone, anchos can taste a bit like prunes, but combining them with fresh tomato, garlic and shallot balances their sweetness. The brightness of the raw ingredients emphasizes the chilies' smoky notes. Use this salsa as a dip for tortilla chips, spooned onto tacos or in a marinade for beef, pork or chicken.
1½
cups
15 minutes
-
3
medium ancho chilies, stemmed, seeded and torn into pieces
-
Boiling water
-
1
large garlic clove, smashed and peeled
-
1
medium shallot, roughly chopped
-
1
medium vine-ripened tomato, cored and roughly chopped
-
2
teaspoons white sugar
-
Kosher salt
-
01In a 12-inch skillet over medium, toast the chilies, pressing with a wide metal spatula and flipping once or twice, until fragrant and a shade darker in color, 2 to 4 minutes. Transfer to a medium bowl and pour in enough boiling water to cover. Let stand until softened, about 10 minutes.
-
02Drain the chilies and discard the soaking liquid. Transfer to a food processor or blender. Add the garlic, shallot, tomato, sugar, ½ teaspoon salt and ½ cup water. Process until finely chopped and well combined, about 20 seconds, scraping the sides as needed.
So many uses for this delicious sauce. One of our fave ways to use it is similar to a local Mexican eatery where the owner / chef is from Michoacan and he offers small corn tortillas cut in half moons and made crispy with a spicy salsa similar to this to spread on them to eat. Using his concept and this recipe we've had great home outcome. Also we think this is great drizzled over slices of fresh avocado that are laid on a warm tortilla then topped with a few thin slices of radish to eat as a taco. But, really, it is so good we lick the spoon.
Made this and think it lacked a bit of brightness and was a bit bitter (similar to commentor above). I used fresh ingredients and a beautiful summer tomato. Maybe I'll add a splash of vinegar and sugar to amp it up a bit. Texture was slightly watery which could have been because I didn't drain the ancho's well enough from the water (I picked them up with a fork and put them straight in a the blender). Will eat it all I'm sure, but will seed the tomatoes and cut back on water next time and add a splash of vinegar. :)
I also thought the salsa was bitter, and a little too earthy. It also lacked punch on the front end, but I definitely got a strong ancho taste on the back end. While I followed the directions perfectly, I'm wondering if I did something wrong like not letting the anchos soak long enough, or not draining the anchos enough. I tried adding a touch of vinegar, and then a fresh serano for more kick on the front end, but it didn't do much.
I tried this. It ended up being bitter (even though it was flavorful). Not sure why.