
I make this Chuy’s Boom Boom Sauce when a plain pan of enchiladas needs the big green sauce treatment. It is creamy, sharp with lime, and built on roasted Hatch chiles, tomatillo, jalapeño, serranos, cilantro, and American cheese.
The sauce is not shy. It has heat, but the cheese rounds the edges and turns the whole pan glossy. I like it spooned over chicken enchiladas, tucked into breakfast tacos, or used as a warm dip when tortilla chips are already on the counter.
The main thing I have learned is to keep the heat low once the cheese goes in. If I rush it, the sauce can go grainy. If I let the chile base simmer first and melt the cheese gently, it stays smooth and scoopable.
Why I keep a green sauce like this in rotation
- Roasted Hatch chiles give depth without needing a long simmer.
- Tomatillo and lime keep the cheese from tasting heavy.
- American cheese melts smoothly, which matters in a quick sauce.
- The heat is adjustable because the jalapeño and serranos can be trimmed or seeded.
- It works as an enchilada sauce, taco sauce, quesadilla dip, or chip dip.
- The whole batch comes together fast once the peppers are roasted.
What I use and why
I treat this as a chile-cheese sauce, not a queso and not a salsa. The broth and roasted vegetables make the base; the cheese turns it creamy.
- Chicken broth, 1/2 cup.I use it to loosen the chiles and carry the roasted flavor through the sauce.
- Roasted hot Hatch chiles, 3/4 cup.They are the backbone. If mine are frozen, I thaw and drain them first.
- Roasted tomatillo, 1.It adds tang and keeps the sauce from tasting flat.
- Roasted jalapeño and serranos.These bring sharper heat. I seed them when I want a gentler sauce.
- Green onion and cilantro.I add them for freshness after the chiles have softened.
- Extra-melt American cheese, 1 1/2 cups.It melts reliably and gives that restaurant-style body.
- Lime juice, salt, and pepper.I add these at the end so I can correct the sauce after the cheese is in.
How I make it
Step 1 — Soften the tomatillo
I scrub the tomatillo well, prick it with a knife, and microwave it in a sealed bag for 2-3 minutes. It should feel soft and juicy. If I already roasted it with the peppers, I skip the microwave and go straight to the pan.
Step 2 — Simmer the chile base
I bring the chicken broth to a simmer, then add the Hatch chiles, jalapeño, serranos, tomatillo, green onion, and cilantro. I give the mixture a few minutes so the vegetables loosen into the broth and the sharp raw edges calm down.
Step 3 — Blend until smooth
I transfer the hot mixture carefully to a blender and vent the lid with a towel. The goal is a smooth green base, not a chunky salsa. If the blender struggles, I add a splash of water rather than forcing it.
Step 4 — Melt in the cheese
I return the sauce to low heat and stir in the American cheese a handful at a time. Low heat is important. Once the sauce is glossy, I add lime juice, salt, and pepper, then thin it with a little water if it is thicker than I want.
Tips from my kitchen
- Keep the cheese heat gentle.Boiling after the cheese goes in can make the sauce separate.
- Blend hot liquids carefully.I vent the lid and cover it with a towel so steam can escape.
- Drain watery chiles.Extra liquid can make the flavor thin before the sauce thickens.
- Season after melting.American cheese is salty, so I wait before adding the final salt.
- Thin, do not scorch.If the sauce tightens up, I add water or broth instead of turning up the burner.
Variations I have actually tried
- Milder:I remove the seeds from the jalapeño and serranos or use only one serrano.
- Brighter:I add another teaspoon or two of lime juice right before serving.
- Smokier:I use fire-roasted tomatillo and char the chiles more deeply.
- Vegetarian:I swap the chicken broth for vegetable broth.
- Thicker dip:I simmer the blended chile base a few extra minutes before adding cheese.
How I store and reheat it
I store cooled sauce in an airtight container in the refrigerator and use it within 7 days. It thickens as it chills, which is normal.
To reheat, I warm it slowly in a saucepan with a splash of water or broth. I do not microwave it aggressively because cheese sauces can separate when overheated.
What I serve with it
My favorite use is over chicken enchiladas, but I also spoon it onto tacos, nachos, breakfast potatoes, or a bowl of rice and beans. If I serve it with chips, I keep it warm in a small heavy pot.
Frequently asked questions
Is Boom Boom Sauce the same as Yum Yum Sauce?
No. I think of this version as a Tex-Mex chile cheese sauce, while yum yum sauce is usually mayo-based and sweeter.
How spicy is it?
It depends on the peppers. Hatch chiles vary, and serranos can be punchy. I seed the hot peppers when I want a medium sauce.
Can I make it dairy-free?
I would choose a different sauce rather than forcing this one. The American cheese is central to the texture and flavor.
Why did my sauce turn grainy?
The heat was probably too high after the cheese went in. I melt the cheese over low heat and pull the pan off the burner as soon as it is smooth.
Can I freeze it?
I do not freeze cheese sauces like this because the texture often breaks after thawing. The refrigerator is the better option.
If I have leftover sauce, breakfast tacos are usually where it disappears first.
I treat this chuy’s boom boom sauce as a flexible house recipe, not a museum piece. The measurements give me a reliable starting point, but I still check texture, aroma, and browning because pans, ovens, fruit, cheese, and dough all behave a little differently from kitchen to kitchen.
I also keep a small cleanup bowl next to the cutting board when I make this. It sounds minor, but it keeps me from rushing, and rushing is usually when I forget a garnish, overwork dough, or let a sauce go one minute too far.
If I am serving this to guests, I make the recipe once for myself first. That tells me how my oven, blender, skillet, or baking pan behaves with these exact amounts, and it makes the second round feel much calmer.
I treat this chuy’s boom boom sauce as a flexible house recipe, not a museum piece. The measurements give me a reliable starting point, but I still check texture, aroma, and browning because pans, ovens, fruit, cheese, and dough all behave a little differently from kitchen to kitchen.
I also keep a small cleanup bowl next to the cutting board when I make this. It sounds minor, but it keeps me from rushing, and rushing is usually when I forget a garnish, overwork dough, or let a sauce go one minute too far.
If I am serving this to guests, I make the recipe once for myself first. That tells me how my oven, blender, skillet, or baking pan behaves with these exact amounts, and it makes the second round feel much calmer.

Chuy’s Boom Boom Sauce
Description
I make Chuy's Boom Boom Sauce with a practical, tested method and the source amounts preserved. The recipe is written in my kitchen voice with the details I watch for while cooking.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Scrub the tomatillo, prick it in a few places, and microwave it in a sealed bag for 2-3 minutes until softened.
- Bring the chicken broth to a simmer in a saucepan. Add the roasted chiles, jalapeño, serranos, tomatillo, green onion, and cilantro.
- Blend the mixture until smooth, then return it to the pan and warm it over low heat.
- Stir in the American cheese until melted. Season with lime juice, salt, and pepper, thinning with water if needed.
- Serve warm over enchiladas or chill in an airtight container for later.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 1
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 4kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Potassium 18mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 1g1%
- Calcium 2 mg
- 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.
Note
Keep the cheese heat gentle. Boiling after the cheese goes in can make the sauce separate.
Blend hot liquids carefully. I vent the lid and cover it with a towel so steam can escape.
Drain watery chiles. Extra liquid can make the flavor thin before the sauce thickens.
Season after melting. American cheese is salty, so I wait before adding the final salt.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. I think of this version as a Tex-Mex chile cheese sauce, while yum yum sauce is usually mayo-based and sweeter.
It depends on the peppers. Hatch chiles vary, and serranos can be punchy. I seed the hot peppers when I want a medium sauce.
I would choose a different sauce rather than forcing this one. The American cheese is central to the texture and flavor.
The heat was probably too high after the cheese went in. I melt the cheese over low heat and pull the pan off the burner as soon as it is smooth.
I do not freeze cheese sauces like this because the texture often breaks after thawing. The refrigerator is the better option.