Nutrition Facts
Servings 24
- Iron 0.0 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
I make Chipotle pepper puree when I open a can of chipotles and only need one pepper. I want food that tastes cared for, but I also want the method to make sense on a regular day.
The detail I learned to respect is adding too much water and making it hard to measure. When I ignore that, the recipe still might be edible, but it loses the texture or balance that makes me want a second helping. I would rather slow down for one minute than fix a problem at the table.
I wrote the method in the way I actually cook: prep first, cook with the pan in front of me, taste before serving, and keep storage realistic. If a garnish or topping is supposed to be crisp, I do not bury it early and hope for the best.
I follow this phase closely: Start by opening a can of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce. Carefully remove the peppers and discard the sauce.
I follow this phase closely: Place the desired number of peppers in a food processor or blender, then add just enough water to thin out the puree. You may need to stop and scrape down the sides of the machine if you're blending more than a few peppers at once.
I follow this phase closely: Blend the mixture until it's smooth and creamy, then transfer to an airtight container or jar and store in the refrigerator for up to two weeks. It will keep in the freezer for up to one year.
I store Chipotle pepper puree based on its texture. Saucy parts go in airtight containers, crisp pieces stay separate, and anything creamy goes straight into the refrigerator after it cools. I reheat gently when dairy, chocolate, or tender protein is involved.
For make-ahead cooking, I do the chopping, measuring, soaking, or sauce mixing first. I save the final browning, frying, dressing, rolling, or slicing for close to serving because that is where freezer chile paste tastes most alive.
I usually serve Chipotle pepper puree with beans, chili, taco meat, mayonnaise, soups, and marinades. If the recipe is rich, I add something bright or crisp. If it is spicy, I add something cooling. If it is sweet, I keep the plate simple so the main flavor is not crowded.
Yes, I prep the sturdy parts ahead and finish the texture closer to serving. With Chipotle pepper puree, I do not like sacrificing the part that should be crisp, creamy, or freshly sauced.
For me, it is adding too much water and making it hard to measure. Once I started watching that detail, the recipe became much more reliable.
Yes. I make small changes, taste, and then adjust again. Big changes can throw off the sauce, crumb, or coating.
I cool leftovers first, then refrigerate them in a covered container. If there is a crunchy topping or fresh garnish, I store that separately.
I usually serve it with beans, chili, taco meat, mayonnaise, soups, and marinades. I like a side that balances the richest part of the recipe.
I keep a clean spoon nearby for tasting, a towel near the stove, and a bowl for scraps. None of that is glamorous, but it keeps me from rushing. With Chipotle pepper puree, rushing is usually how I miss the one texture cue that matters.
When I cook Chipotle pepper puree again, I pay attention to how it behaves in my own kitchen rather than treating the written time as the only truth. Ovens run hot, pans brown differently, and even the same brand of ingredient can change texture from one shopping trip to the next.
I also write down any change I make the first time I make a recipe. If I add more acid, reduce sweetness, or cook something a few minutes longer, I want to know that next time instead of guessing from memory.
If you make Chipotle pepper puree, tell me what you changed and what you kept exactly as written. I always like hearing which small detail mattered most in another kitchen.
This Chipotle pepper puree is my cleaned-up, first-person rewrite with practical steps and the source measurements preserved. The main ingredients are chipotle peppers in adobo sauce, water.
Servings 24
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Measure before heat. I line up the small ingredients first because the cooking moves faster than it looks.
Watch the key detail. I pay attention to adding too much water and making it hard to measure; the clock helps, but the pan tells the truth.
Taste at the end. Salt, acid, heat, and sweetness settle differently once the dish is hot or chilled.
Store by texture. I keep crisp toppings, sauces, and tender bases separate whenever possible.