Costco Hatch Green Chile

Servings: 3 Total Time: 1 hr 20 mins Difficulty: Easy
pinit

This Costco Hatch Green Chile is the sauce I make when I want a spoonable green chile for eggs, burritos, rice bowls, or grilled chicken. It is not heavy, but it has enough body from the flour and stock to sit on food instead of running straight off the plate.

I like Hatch chile because it has more personality than plain canned green chiles. Some batches are mild and grassy; some have a real kick. I taste before I add extra salt because heat can fool me into seasoning too aggressively.

The method is small and practical: onion, garlic, flour, stock, cumin, tomato, chile, oregano, and a short covered simmer. I thin it only at the end. The first time I poured in too much stock early, I had a tasty soup instead of a sauce.

Before I start Costco Hatch Green Chile, I take a minute to think about what the recipe is really asking for. Some of these Costco-style recipes are more about careful heating, chilling, or assembly than complicated cooking.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • It turns simple eggs or tortillas into a meal without much work.
  • The flour cooks for 2 minutes, so the sauce thickens without tasting pasty.
  • Tomato and sugar balance the chile heat without making the sauce sweet.
  • It works with fresh or canned chopped tomato.
  • I can thin it with water or more stock depending on how I am serving it.
  • The batch is small enough for a few meals, not a giant pot.

What I use and why it matters

  • 1/2 clove minced garlic.Garlic gives the sauce its sharp first layer, and I keep it brief in the pan so it does not scorch.
  • 1/4 cup chicken stock.Stock loosens the chile and gives the sauce a savory base.
  • salt.Salt is where I adjust at the end because chile heat can change from batch to batch. to taste
  • 3/8 teaspoon ground cumin.Cumin adds warmth without covering the Hatch chile flavor.
  • 1/2 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil.Oil starts the onion and carries the flour into a smooth base.
  • 1/2 tablespoon all-purpose flour.Flour thickens the sauce just enough to cling to eggs, tortillas, or meat.
  • 1 cup chopped green chile.This is the main flavor, smoky and vegetal with whatever heat the chiles bring.
  • 1/2 teaspoon Mexican oregano.Mexican oregano tastes citrusy and earthy, which I like better here than Italian oregano.
  • 1/2 cup chopped tomato.Tomato gives acidity and a little sweetness. fresh or canned
  • 1/4 teaspoon granulated sugar.A small amount rounds off sharp tomato and chile edges.
  • 1/4 cup chopped onion.Onion gives the sauce a mellow base once it softens.

I do not treat the ingredient list as a place to casually rewrite the recipe. The quantities are here for a reason, even when the original source was a little awkwardly parsed. When I want a different result, I change the handling first: I cut pieces smaller, drain something better, warm a sauce more gently, or give the food a few extra minutes to settle before I change the amount of an ingredient.

How I make it

Step 1 — Soften onion and garlic

I warm the olive oil in a small saucepan and add the chopped onion first. Once it starts to soften, I add the minced garlic and cook just until it smells fragrant. Garlic can go bitter quickly, so I do not walk away here.

Step 2 — Cook the flour

I sprinkle in the all-purpose flour and stir for 2 minutes. This step matters because raw flour can taste dusty. The mixture will look a little pasty, but it smooths out once the stock goes.

Step 3 — Add stock and seasonings

I stir in the chicken stock, ground cumin, chopped tomato, chopped green chile, Mexican oregano, sugar, and salt. I scrape the bottom of the pan as I stir so none of the flour clings and turns lumpy.

Step 4 — Simmer and adjust

I cover the pan and simmer for 10 minutes. After that, I check the thickness. If I want a looser sauce, I add a splash of water or more stock. If I want it thicker for tacos, I leave the lid off for a few minutes.

Timing and texture cues I watch

The times in this Costco Hatch Green Chile method are the frame, but I still pay attention while I cook. I look for the cue that matches the food: fruit should look glossy but not bruised, sauce should thicken enough to coat a spoon, chicken should reach its safe temperature, pasta should stay al dente, and baked desserts should set before I slice them. That habit keeps me from overcorrecting a simple recipe.

I also set up the serving pieces before the final step whenever I can. A hot skillet dish loses its best texture if it waits around, while a chilled salad or pie needs enough cold time to taste settled. Having the plates, bowl, knife, sauce, or side dish ready makes the last few minutes calmer, and the food gets to the table the way I intended.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Cook the flour for the full 2 minutes.I can taste it when I rush this step.
  • Use low heat after the stock goes in.A hard boil can make the sauce catch on the bottom.
  • Salt at the end.Hatch chile heat varies, and final seasoning is easier after simmering.
  • Thin slowly.I add liquid a tablespoon at a time because the sauce loosens quickly.

Mistakes I avoid

  • Changing the quantities too soon.I make the recipe once close to the listed amounts before deciding what needs adjusting.
  • Crowding the pan or bowl.When food needs browning, folding, or chilling, extra space usually gives me a better texture.
  • Skipping the final check.I taste sauces, check the center of hot dishes, and look for set edges on desserts before I call anything done.
  • Serving without a pause.A short rest, chill, or gentle toss often fixes texture in a way more seasoning cannot.

The other mistake I try to avoid is making the dish harder than it needs to be. If the recipe is a shortcut, I let it be a shortcut and focus on the details that matter most: even pieces, clean heat, enough salt, a dry surface when browning is the goal, and a serving plan that keeps the texture from fading before anyone eats. I would rather do a simple thing carefully than add noise that does not improve the plate.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Vegetarian version:I use vegetable stock instead of chicken stock.
  • Smokier version:I add a pinch of smoked paprika when the cumin goes in.
  • Breakfast version:I keep it thicker and spoon it over fried eggs.
  • Taco version:I simmer uncovered longer so it clings to tortillas.
  • Creamy version:I stir in a spoonful of sour cream after the pan is off the heat.

When I make a variation, I keep the main method steady. I swap one flavor at a time, then pay attention to whether the texture changes. That keeps the recipe dependable, and it also tells me which change actually helped instead of turning dinner into a guessing game.

Storing and make-ahead notes

I cool the sauce, cover it, and refrigerate it for a few days. It thickens as it sits, so I reheat it gently with a splash of stock or water. I freeze it in small portions when I know I will want a quick topping for eggs or burritos later.

What I serve with it

I spoon it over scrambled eggs, breakfast potatoes, tacos, grilled chicken, rice bowls, or a plain quesadilla. If the chile batch is spicy, I add something creamy on the plate, like avocado or sour cream.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use another kind of green chile?

Yes. I use poblano for a smokier mild sauce or jalapeno for more heat. The flavor changes, but the method still works.

Can I make it vegetarian?

Yes. I swap the chicken stock for vegetable stock and keep the rest the same. The sauce is still savory because the chile, onion, and cumin carry plenty of flavor.

Why is my sauce lumpy?

Usually the flour grabbed the liquid too fast. I stir constantly when the stock goes in and scrape the corners of the pan. Small lumps can be whisked out while the sauce simmers.

How do I make it less spicy?

I use mild chiles, add a little extra tomato, and serve it with dairy or avocado. I avoid adding more sugar because that can make the sauce taste odd.

Can I make it ahead?

Yes. I think the flavor is even better after a night in the fridge. Reheat gently and thin with stock if it has tightened up.

If you use this sauce on something unexpected, tell me because I am always looking for another place to spoon it.

Costco Hatch Green Chile

Prep Time 35 mins Cook Time 45 mins Total Time 1 hr 20 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 3 Calories: 21 kcal Dietary:
Pin Recipe
0 Add to Favorites

Description

A small-batch Hatch green chile sauce with onion, garlic, tomato, cumin, oregano, and chicken stock. I cook the flour briefly, simmer the chile for body, and thin it only at the end if it needs loosening.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Warm the olive oil in a saucepan, briefly saute the chopped onion, then add the minced garlic and cook until softened.
  2. Stir in the all-purpose flour and cook for 2 minutes, stirring constantly.
  3. Add the chicken stock, ground cumin, chopped tomato, chopped green chile, Mexican oregano, sugar, and salt.
  4. Cover and simmer for 10 minutes, then thin with water or more stock if the sauce is thicker than you want.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 3


Amount Per Serving
Calories 21kcal
% Daily Value *
Sodium 4mg1%
Potassium 127mg4%
Total Carbohydrate 4g2%
Dietary Fiber 1g4%
Sugars 2g
Protein 1g2%

Calcium 13 mg
Iron 0.6 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

Cook the flour for 2 minutes so the sauce does not taste raw.

Hatch chiles vary in heat, so I season after simmering.

Use vegetable stock for a vegetarian version.

Thin the sauce slowly at the end.

Keywords: costco hatch green chile, hatch green chile sauce, green chile, mexican oregano, cumin tomato chile, southwest sauce

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I use another kind of green chile?

Yes. I use poblano for a smokier mild sauce or jalapeno for more heat. The flavor changes, but the method still works.

Can I make it vegetarian?

Yes. I swap the chicken stock for vegetable stock and keep the rest the same. The sauce is still savory because the chile, onion, and cumin carry plenty of flavor.

Why is my sauce lumpy?

Usually the flour grabbed the liquid too fast. I stir constantly when the stock goes in and scrape the corners of the pan. Small lumps can be whisked out while the sauce simmers.

How do I make it less spicy?

I use mild chiles, add a little extra tomato, and serve it with dairy or avocado. I avoid adding more sugar because that can make the sauce taste odd.

Can I make it ahead?

Yes. I think the flavor is even better after a night in the fridge. Reheat gently and thin with stock if it has tightened up.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About Author

Recipe Tweets

A Leading Website To Make Your Cooking Way Easier
And Help You How to Cook and Live A Healthy Lifestyle!

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *