New Mexico chile
{{Short description|Cultivar group of chile peppers from New Mexico, United States}}
{{Use MDY dates|date=October 2023}}
{{Infobox cultivar
|name = New Mexico chile
|image = Hatch green chile.jpg
|image_caption =
|image_alt =
|species = Capsicum annuum
|hybrid =
|cultivar =
|marketing_names = Hatch chile, green chile, red chile, Anaheim pepper, Pueblo chile
|breeder = Fabián García
|origin = New Mexico
|subdivision =
|module = {{Infobox pepper
|embed = yes
|heat = Hot
}}
}}
New Mexico chile or New Mexican chile (Scientific name: Capsicum annuum 'New Mexico Group
New Mexico chile, which typically grows from a green to a ripened red, is popular in the cuisines of the Southwestern United States, including Sonoran and Arizonan cuisine, and it is an integral staple of New Mexican cuisine. It is also sometimes featured in broader Mexican cuisine. Chile is one of New Mexico's state vegetables, and is referenced in the New Mexico state question "Red or Green?".{{cite web |title=State Symbols |url= https://www.sos.state.nm.us/about-new-mexico/state-question/ |access-date=September 15, 2021 |publisher=New Mexico Office of the Secretary of State}}
The flavor of New Mexico green chile has been described as lightly pungent, similar to an onion, or like garlic with a subtly sweet, spicy, crisp, and smoky taste.{{cite episode |people=Host: Adam Richman |date=2011 |title=Travis on a Silver Platter |series=Man v. Food Nation |medium=TV}} The ripened red chile retains this flavor, but adds an earthiness and bite.{{cite web |title=Dried Chile |website=Cook's Thesaurus |url= http://www.foodsubs.com/Chiledry.html |access-date=February 16, 2015}} The spiciness depends on the variety.Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, Season 2, Episode 4, "New Mexico". (2013)
History
Various types of chile plants were first grown by the Puebloan peoples, who continue to grow their own strains, each with a distinct pungency, sweetness, taste, and heat. For example, the Zia Pueblo chile has a bitter-sweet flavor when it matures into its red color. When the Spanish arrived, they introduced European cultivation techniques to the chile plants, and eventually created cultivars in their towns.{{cite web |title=Chile Roasting in New Mexico |website=New Mexico History|publisher=Office of the State Historian |url= http://newmexicohistory.org/people/chile-roasting-in-new-mexico |access-date=February 15, 2015}}
The New Mexican type cultivars were developed by the horticulturist Fabián García,{{cite web |url= http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/new_mexico_chile_industry_value_1977_2009.pdf|title=New Mexico Chile Industry Value, 1977–2009|website=Chile Pepper Institute|publisher=Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, New Mexico State University |location=Las Cruces}}{{cite news |title=Hatch chile to be sold in Australia, Europe |website=KOAT |date=October 5, 2017 |url= https://www.koat.com/article/hatch-chile-to-be-sold-in-australia-europe/5070174 |access-date=December 3, 2020}}{{cite web |title=Japanese Company Takes Hold of Chile Business – New Mexico State University |website=Frontera NorteSur |date=May 13, 2011 |url= https://fnsnews.nmsu.edu/japanese-company-takes-hold-of-chile-business/ |access-date=December 3, 2020}}{{cite web |last=Bosland |first=Paul |title=Fabián García – Pioneer Hispanic Horticulturist |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/then-and-now/fabian-garcia/ |website=CPI.NMSU.edu |publisher=Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University |access-date=August 26, 2020}} whose major release was the 'New Mexico No. 9' chile pepper in 1913.{{cite web |url= http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/chilecultof-nmsu.pdf |title=The Chile Cultivars of New Mexico State University, Research Report 763 |access-date=December 12, 2014 |date=November 2008 |website=ChilePepperInstitute.org |publisher=Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University |location=Las Cruces |last1=Coon |first1=Danise |last2=Votava |first2=Eric |last3=Bosland |first3=Paul W. |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150923202817/http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/chilecultof-nmsu.pdf |archive-date=September 23, 2015}} Earlier work was done by Emelio Ortega (see section "Anaheim Pepper" below). These cultivars are "hotter" than others to suit the tastes of New Mexicans in their traditional foods. Selective breeding began with 14 lineages of 'Pasilla', 'Colorado', and 'Negro' cultivars, from throughout New Mexico and Southern Colorado. These first commercially viable peppers were created to have a "larger, smoother, fleshier, more tapering and shoulderless pod for canning purposes".Fabian Garcia as quoted in {{cite book |last1=DeWitt |first1=D. |last2=Bosland |first2=P. W. |date=2009 |title=The Complete Chile Pepper Book: A Gardener's Guide to Choosing, Growing, Preserving, and Cooking |publisher=Timber Press |isbn=9780881929201 |page=53}}
Paul Bosland, an expert on chile genetics, breeding, and germplasm evaluation, founded the Chile Pepper Institute in 1992 at New Mexico State University to study New Mexico's state vegetable and peppers from around the world.{{cite web |title=Paul W. Bosland |url= http://aces.nmsu.edu/academics/pes/paul-w-bosland.html |website=ACES.NMSU.edu |publisher=College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, New Mexico State University |access-date=May 10, 2015 |quote=the co-founder and director of the Chile Pepper Institute at New Mexico State University}} New Mexico chile is exported worldwide to Europe, Australia, and Japan, among other places.
Cultivation
Fruits of New Mexico chile plants are grown from seeds – and each individual strain is specifically bred and grown to be disease-resistant and provide consistent and healthy plants within their specific regions. Altitude, climate, soil, and acreage affects a crop's taste, making the New Mexican region, including the Rio Grande bosque, mountains, and high deserts, a favorable environment for plant propagation and growth. To ensure that a variety's lineage remains disease-resistant and maintains optimal growth within its heritage region, seeds from specific plants are carefully selected. An example of a New Mexican chile grown outside the state is the 'Anaheim' pepper which is extremely resilient in multiple altitudes. An aspect of the New Mexico chile plants regards reintroducing seeds from their heritage soil, since each successive generation becomes susceptible to disease and loss of flavor. Therefore, local chile farmers usually order seeds from their heritage soils, every few generations, to reinvigorate their crop. This allows New Mexico chile growers to perpetuate successful productions.{{cite web |url= http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/H64.full.pdf |title=NuMex Heritage 6-4' New Mexican Chile Pepper |first=Paul W. |last=Bosland |date=2012 |work=ChilePepperInstitute.org |publisher=Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University |location=Las Cruces |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150319181151/http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/H64.full.pdf |archive-date=March 19, 2015}}{{cite web |url= http://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/H230.pdf |title=Growing Chiles in New Mexico, Guide H-230 |website=ACES.NMSU.edu |publisher=Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University |location=Las Cruces |last1=Bosland |first1=Paul W. |last2=Walker |first2=Stephanie |date=May 2014}}
=Grown in New Mexico=
File:Red_Chile_Blue_Corn_Chicken_Enchilada_-_Restaurant_in_Santa_Fe_New_Mexico.jpg stacked enchiladas ({{lang|es|enchilada montada}}), red chile smothered, made with blue corn tortillas and chicken]]
New Mexico chile plants grown in New Mexico are valued for their flavor, texture, and hardiness due to their growing environment. The plants were originally grown by the Puebloans, and each of their distinct Pueblo plants grows best in its heritage soil. This same trend has continued with other New Mexico chile varietals grown by Spanish, Mexican, and American settlers. Among New Mexico-grown chile, the ones with the most accolades are grown along the Rio Grande, especially along the Hatch Valley.{{cite web |last=Cornish |first=Audie |title=It's Law: New Mexico Green Chilies Are Special |website=NPR.org |date=July 31, 2011 |publisher=National Public Radio |url= https://www.npr.org/2011/07/31/138805258/chile-pepper-capital-seeks-to-preserve-roots |access-date=February 15, 2015}} Multiple other locations in the Rio Grande Valley, outside of the Hatch Valley, also grow award-winning chile.{{cite web |title=Anaheim Peppers |url= https://www.red-or-green.net/anaheim-peppers/ |website=Red-or-Green.net |date= November 19, 2009 |access-date=March 9, 2022}}
Towns and cities across New Mexico have strong chile traditions, including Hatch, Chimayó, Española, Lemitar, and San Antonio; and in the Albuquerque metropolitan area from Albuquerque, Bosque, Corrales, Los Ranchos de Albuquerque, and Bosque Farms.{{cite magazine |last=Ashley |first=Biggers |title=Local Dirt |url= https://www.newmexicomagazine.org/blog/post/local-dirt/ |magazine=New Mexico Magazine |access-date=March 9, 2022}}
== Hatch chile ==
Image:Hatch Green Chile Hamburger.jpg]]
Hatch chile refers to varieties of species of the genus Capsicum which are grown in the Hatch Valley, an area stretching north and south along the Rio Grande from Arrey, New Mexico, in the north to Tonuco Mountain to the southeast of Hatch, New Mexico. The soil and growing conditions in the Hatch Valley create a unique terroir{{cite news |last=Herrera |first=Tilde |title=New Mexico green chiles headed to Bay Area |url= http://www.sfgate.com/food/seasonalcook/article/New-Mexico-green-chiles-headed-to-Bay-Area-3255199.php |work=San Francisco Chronicle |date=August 22, 2010}} which contributes to the flavor of chile grown there. Most of the varieties of chile cultivated in the Hatch Valley have been developed at New Mexico State University over the last 130 years.
Hatch chile can be purchased locally in many parts of the Southwest. Some distributors use the "Hatch" name, but do not actually grow and process their chile in the Hatch Valley.{{cite web|url= http://www.freshfruitportal.com/2013/08/08/u-s-the-hatch-green-chile-identity-crisis/ |title=U.S.: the Hatch green chile identity crisis |publisher=FreshFruitPortal.com |date=August 8, 2013 |access-date=July 29, 2014}} To protect Hatch and other New Mexican growers, state legislators passed a 2012 law prohibiting the sale in New Mexico of chile described as "New Mexican" unless grown in New Mexico or came with a prominent "Not grown in New Mexico" disclaimer.{{cite web|url= http://www.koat.com/news/new-mexico/New-law-requires-full-chile-disclosure-in-New-Mexico/19656662 |title=New law requires full chile disclosure in New Mexico |publisher=KOAT |date=April 7, 2013 |access-date=July 29, 2014}} Chile grown around the town are marketed under the name of the town, and are often sold fresh-roasted in New Mexico and nationwide in late summer and early autumn.{{cite web |title=The Hatch Chile Festival, A Visit to the Chile Capital of the World! |url= http://www.focusnewmexico.com/places/hatch.htm |website=FocusNewMexico.com |access-date=May 9, 2015 |quote='Hatch Chile' is not actually a variety of pepper, but is a term used to describe fruits of several different varieties grown in the area.}}{{cite web |title=Hatch Chile Finder |url= http://www.ihatchchile.com/in/ |website=IHatchChile.com |access-date=August 9, 2019}}
== Pueblo chile ==
Pueblo chile plants have been cultivated by the Puebloan peoples of New Mexico for centuries. The Acoma Pueblo chile is mild, with a lightly flavorful pungency.{{cite web |title=Database of Chilli Pepper Varieties |website= The Chile Man| url=http://www.thechileman.org/results.php?chile=1&find=Any&heat=Any&origin=Any&genus=Annuum |access-date=February 16, 2015}} The Isleta Pueblo chile develops a fruity sweet flavor as it grows into its red chile state. The Zia Pueblo chile develops a bitter-sweet flavor when it matures into its red color, and its heat is similar to the 'Heritage 6-4'.{{cn|date=August 2022}}
These ancient Pueblo varieties should not be confused with a chile grown in Pueblo, Colorado, also called "Pueblo chile", which is the green Numex Mirasol chile, another cultivar of the {{no selflink|New Mexico chile}}.{{cite news |url= http://www.post-gazette.com/life/travel/2011/11/20/Hot-in-Pueblo-Mirasol-green-chiles-give-this-Pittsburgh-like-town-its-flavor/stories/201111200202 |newspaper=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette |title=Hot in Pueblo: Mirasol green chiles give this Pittsburgh-like town its flavor |date=November 20, 2011|author1=Owen, Rob}}
=Outside of New Mexico=
== California ==
{{Infobox pepper
|name = Anaheim pepper
|image =
|caption =
|alt =
|heat = Low
|scoville = 500–2,500
}}
{{anchor|Anaheim pepper}}
The Anaheim pepper is a mild variety of the cultivar 'New Mexico No. 9' and commonly grown outside of New Mexico. It is related to the 'New Mexico No. 6 and 9', but when grown out of state they have a higher variability rate. The name 'Anaheim' derives from Emilio Ortega, a farmer who brought the seeds from New Mexico to the Anaheim, California, area in 1894.{{cite web |title=Ortega, Questions and Answers |url= http://www.ortega.com/faq/ |website=Ortega.com |publisher=B & G Foods |access-date=May 10, 2015}}{{cite web |title=Ortega History |url= http://www.ortega.com/history/ |website=Ortega.com |publisher=B & G Foods |access-date=May 10, 2015}}{{cite book |last=Walsh |first=R. |title=The Hot Sauce Cookbook: Turn Up the Heat with 60+ Pepper Sauce Recipes |publisher=Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed/Harmony |date=2013 |isbn=9781607744276 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ohPM3F0JOPYC&pg=PA13 |access-date=February 10, 2015 |page=13}} The chile "heat" of 'Anaheim' chile varies from 500 to 2,500 on the Scoville scale.{{cite encyclopedia |url= http://www.truestarhealth.com/Notes/3577000.html |title=Anaheim Pepper |access-date=October 17, 2007 |date=2007 |encyclopedia=Truestar Health Encyclopedia |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070928123625/http://www.truestarhealth.com/Notes/3577000.html |archive-date=September 28, 2007 |url-status=dead}}
==Colorado==
In Colorado, 'Numex Mirasol' chile peppers are grown near the city of Pueblo, where they are known as "Pueblo chile". These should not be confused with the ancient chile varieties grown by the Puebloan peoples.
==Outer space==
File:ISS-66 Fresh chile peppers grown on the International Space Station.jpg
On July 12, 2021, NASA astronauts aboard the International Space Station started growing New Mexico chile from seeds packaged in soil on Earth, in the Advanced Plant Habitat (APH). 'Numex Española Improved' was chosen from more than two dozen varieties for its performance in testing environments. The peppers were grown aboard the spacecraft utilizing specially formulated fertilizers, with the fruit later evaluated for flavor, texture, and piquancy. These were the first Capsicum plants grown off of Earth.{{cite web |last1=Herridge |first1=Linda |title=Chile Peppers Start Spicing Up the Space Station |url= https://www.nasa.gov/feature/chile-peppers-start-spicing-up-the-space-station |website=nasa.gov |date=July 13, 2021 |publisher=National Areonatics and Space Administration |access-date=July 20, 2021}}
In October, after tending and pollinating the plants for three months, the astronauts harvested the chile and prepared "space tacos".{{cite news |last=Daniels |first=Victor |title=NASA's Latest Breakthrough: 'Best Space Tacos Yet' |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/04/science/nasa-space-tacos.html |access-date=December 2, 2021 |work=The New York Times |date=November 4, 2021}}
Uses
=Food=
{{nutritionalvalue
|name = Half cup of hot green chile peppers
|serving_size = 75 grams
|water = 65.8 g
|kJ = 30
|protein = 1.5 g
|carbs = 7.1 g
|fiber = 1.1 g
|sugars = 3.82 g
|fat = 0.15 g
|satfat = 0.016 g
|monofat = 0.008 g
|polyfat = 0.082g
|calcium_mg = 14
|iron_mg = 0.9
|magnesium_mg = 19
|phosphorus_mg = 35
|potassium_mg = 255
|sodium_mg = 5
|zinc_mg = 0.22
|vitC_mg = 181.9
|thiamin_mg = 0.068
|riboflavin_mg = 0.068
|niacin_mg = 0.712
|pantothenic_mg = 0.046
|vitB6_mg = 0.209
|folate_ug = 17
|vitA_ug = 884
|vitE_mg = 0.52
|vitK_ug = 10.7
|betacarotene_ug = 503
|lutein_ug = 544
|note = [http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/Nutritional%20Information08.pdf Nutritional Information from the Chile Pepper Institute]
}}
File:New Mexico green chile.jpg
Green chile is served roasted and peeled, whole or diced, as a powder, and in various sauces. The most common uses are often served diced, or in sauces and is elemental to dishes such as enchiladas, burritos, burgers, french fries, or rice. Chile is also served whole raw, fried, or baked {{lang|es|chiles rellenos}}. New Mexican-style {{lang|es|chile rellenos}} follow the much more traditional Mexican technique of being covered with egg batter and fried, although variations and casseroles do exist.
The red chile (the matured green chile) is frequently dried and ground to a powder. These dried or powdered fruits are turned into a red chile sauce. The dried peppers are rehydrated by boiling in a pot, and then blended with various herbs and spices, such as onion, garlic, and occasionally Mexican oregano. Red chile powder is usually simply blended with water, herbs, and spices; the addition of flour or other thickening agents is often considered to be non-traditional or non-purist.{{cn|date=May 2024}}
Serving both red and green chile on a dish is sometimes referred to as "Christmas" style. Both green and red chile can be dried and turned into a powder, though this is more common with red chile.{{cite magazine |last=Gleydura |first=Steve |title=Nick Maryol: Feeding the Soul |url= https://www.newmexicomagazine.org/blog/post/nick-maryol-tia-sophias-santa-fe-new-mexico/ |magazine=New Mexico Magazine |access-date=January 1, 2022 |date=September 1, 2020}}
= Vernacular art =
Chile is used in the state to construct both decorative and functional ristras (arrangements of drying pepper pods) and chile wreaths. Some varieties have colorful fruit and are used as ornamental plants.
= Industry =
Economy
Ongoing drought, unpredictable weather, and environmental concerns have strained New Mexico's production of chile peppers, the state's primary agricultural produce.{{Cite news |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/16/dining/hatch-chiles-new-mexico.html |title=Hard Times for a Hot Commodity, the Prized New Mexico Chile |last=Nierenberg |first=Amelia |date=December 16, 2019 |work=The New York Times |access-date=December 17, 2019 |issn=0362-4331}}
In 2019 average chile sales price was $793 per ton, and accounted for $50M in sales within New Mexico. Of the {{cvt|1,644,000|scwt}} of peppers produced in the United States in 2019, {{cvt|1,261,000|scwt}} were produced in New Mexico, or about 77% of US chile pepper production.
= Harvest =
Chile is planted in New Mexico in March and April, and harvested between July and October for green chile, and between October and December for red chile.{{cite web |title=2019 New Mexico Agricultural Statistics |url= https://www.nass.usda.gov/Statistics_by_State/New_Mexico/Publications/Annual_Statistical_Bulletin/2019/2019-NM-Ag-Statistics.pdf |work=New Mexico Department of Agriculture; USDA |access-date=February 5, 2021}}
class="wikitable"; align="right" style="width: 10%" | ||
Year
! Acres planted ! Acres harvested | ||
---|---|---|
2010 | 9,150 | 8,700 |
2011 | 10,000 | 9,500 |
2012 | 9,900 | 9,600 |
2013 | 9,000 | 8,600 |
2014 | 8,100 | 7,700 |
2015 | 8,300 | 7,700 |
2016 | 9,200 | 8,700 |
2017 | 8,100 | 7,600 |
2018 | 8,400 | 7,900 |
2019 | 9,100 | 8,700 |
Harvest is done by both local farmhands and hired help; and in the Mesilla Valley by seasonal Mexican farmworkers who harvest the chile, and then travel back into Mexico.{{cite news |last=Contreras |first=Russell |title=New Mexico green chile growers pushing guest workers program |url= https://www.abqjournal.com/627614/new-mexico-green-chile-growers-pushing-guest-workers-program.html |access-date=February 5, 2021 |work=Albuquerque Journal |date=August 13, 2015}} Because the plants are delicate and produce fruits continuously until the frost, and because the pods are easily damaged, machine harvesting of chile is especially difficult. Currently, development, breeding, and engineering is being done to produce a successful chile harvester and machine-harvestable breeds.{{cite news |last=Soular |first=Diana Alba |title=Strides made toward mechanical harvesting of New Mexico chile crop |url= https://www.lcsun-news.com/story/news/local/agriculture/2018/02/06/mechanical-harvesting-strides-new-mexico-chile-crop/313431002/ |access-date=February 5, 2021 |work=Las Cruces Sun News |date=February 6, 2018}}{{cite news |last=Soular |first=Diana Alba |title=Green chile harvester trial wraps up first phase |url= https://www.alamogordonews.com/story/news/local/2015/08/08/green-chile-harvester-trial-wraps-up-first-phase/32456139/ |access-date=February 5, 2021 |work=Alamagordo Daily News |date=August 8, 2015}} This puts a limit on the amount of chile that can be economically harvested in New Mexico even if water were unlimited.{{cite news |title=Labor shortage impacts harvest for Hatch and Mesilla Valley farmers |url= https://kvia.com/news/new-mexico/2019/09/07/labor-shortage-impacts-harvest-for-hatch-and-mesilla-valley-farmers/ |access-date=July 22, 2021 |date=September 7, 2019 |work=KVIA.com |publisher=KIVA ABC 7}}
Of {{convert|9,100|acre}} of chile crops planted in 2019, 8,700 were harvested; {{convert|5,000|acre}} were harvested as "all red". In 2019, New Mexico led the nation in chile production with {{convert|63,075|ST}} harvested.{{cite web |title=Chile Pepper Institute |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/ |work=New Mexico State University |access-date=February 5, 2021}}
= New Mexico Certified Chile =
A certification program was started in 2014, New Mexico Certified Chile,[https://www.nmchileassociation.com/certification.html New Mexico Certified Chile] which certifies the growing and sale of New Mexican chile; restaurants and other vendors may display a "New Mexico Certified Chile" placard or window sticker. The program protects New Mexico chile consumers from falsely labeled products, while protecting farmers from potential diminished demand, which allows larger amounts of New Mexico chile to be grown within the state. When the program was first introduced, it had garnered some criticism, especially in regard to restrictions on farmers who have been growing chile plants from seed lineages more than 400 years old.{{cite web |last=DeWalt |first=Rob |title=Chile Wars|url= http://www.sfreporter.com/santafe/article-9120-chile-wars.html|website=Santa Fe Reporter |access-date=May 10, 2015 |date=August 26, 2014}}{{cite web |last=Green |first=Eric |title=Coalition pokes holes in New Mexico's new chile certification program |website=KOAT.com |date=August 22, 2014 |url= http://www.koat.com/news/coalition-pokes-holes-in-new-mexicos-new-chile-certification-program/27689340 |access-date=February 15, 2015}}
Cultural impact
New Mexico chile has had a significant impact on New Mexico's cuisine, art, cultures, and even its legislature. Just as with the Zia sun symbol, the chile pepper and its shape, the red and green coloration, and even the silhouette of the fruit, has become a symbol of New Mexican cultural identity, and is featured prominently in both food and nonfood corporate logos, in public artworks, media, infrastructure (i.e. bridges, lamp posts, etc.) and traditions around the state.{{cite web |last=Peeples |first=Matt |title=Red or Green: a Bit on the History of Chile in the Southwest |url= https://www.archaeologysouthwest.org/2013/09/03/red-or-green/ |website=Archeology Southwest |date=September 3, 2013 |publisher=Archaeology Southwest |access-date=February 4, 2021}}
New Mexico is the only state with an official State Question: "Red or green?" and a State Answer: "Red and green" or "Christmas".{{Cite web |url= http://www.netstate.com/states/symb/answers/nm_red_or_green_or_christmas.htm |title=New Mexico State Answer, Red and Green or Christmas |website=NetState.com |publisher=NState |access-date=September 30, 2018}} "Red or green?" refers to the choices of chile sauce typically offered at local restaurants and is usually asked as quoted. To answer "Christmas" is to choose both red and green on the same dish, an option originally suggested by waitress Martha Rotuno at Tia Sophia's restaurant in Santa Fe.{{cite magazine |last=Gleydura |first=Steve |title=Nick Maryol: Feeding the Soul |url= https://www.newmexicomagazine.org/blog/post/nick-maryol-tia-sophias-santa-fe-new-mexico/ |access-date=January 9, 2022 |magazine=New Mexico Magazine |date=September 1, 2020}} Chile is also one of the official state vegetables of New Mexico and the scent of "roasting green chile" is the official state aroma.{{cite news |last=McKay |first=Dan |title=Sweet smell of success |url= https://www.abqjournal.com/2586004/sweet-smell-of-success-state-law-now-declares-an-official-state-aroma-in-new-mexico.html |access-date=June 3, 2023 |work=Albuquerque Journal}} One of the official license plate designs in New Mexico, the Chile Plate, features red and green chile, and the tagline "Chile Capital of the World" in yellow type.{{cite web |title=License Plates |url= https://www.mvd.newmexico.gov/vehicles/license-plates/ |website=Motor Vehicle Division NM |publisher=New Mexico Department of Revenue, State of New Mexico |access-date=February 4, 2021}}
The lamp posts on Elephant Butte Dam's crest road were lit red and green, a reference to the dam and its reservoir being the source of irrigation and electricity for the chile-growing Hatch region.{{Cite news |url= https://www.abqjournal.com/1472562/elephant-butte-looks-the-part-but-a-long-storied-history-is-at-the-center-of-how-the-dam-got-and-kept-its-name.html |title=Elephant Butte looks the part, but a long, storied history is at the center of how the dam got and kept its name |last=Briseño |first=Elaine D. |date=July 5, 2020 |work=Albuquerque Journal |access-date=February 2, 2021}} The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish's "Special Trout Waters" fishing water designations are listed as "Red Chile Waters", "Green Chile Waters", or "Xmas Chile Waters", depending on the restrictions in place at the trout fishing location.{{cite web |title=New Mexico Fishing Waters |url= http://www.wildlife.state.nm.us/fishing/maps-and-accessibility/ |website=New Mexico Department of Game and Fish |publisher=State of New Mexico |access-date=February 4, 2021}}
The village of Hatch, New Mexico, in the Hatch Valley is the center of chile farming in the southwest, and bills itself as the "Chile Capital of the World".{{cite news |last=Steep |first=Abe |title=The Chile Capital of the World |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/14/magazine/the-chile-capital-of-the-world.html |access-date=February 4, 2021 |work=The New York Times}}{{cite web |title=Hatch Chile Peppers: All About Them |url= https://www.chilipeppermadness.com/chili-pepper-types/sweet-mild-chili-peppers/hatch-chili-peppers/ |website=ChilePepperMadness.com |date=July 30, 2019 |access-date=February 4, 2021}} The village has hosted an annual "Chile Festival" every summer since 1971.{{cite web |title=Hatch Valley Chile Festival |url= http://www.hatchchilefest.com/ |website=Hatch Valley Chile Festival |access-date=February 4, 2021}}
File:Ristras (3109338714).jpgs of varying pod types and ripeness]]A ristra is an arrangement of drying chile pods. It is a popular decorative design in the state of New Mexico, and in media nationwide as symbol of New Mexican culture. Some households still use ristras as a means to dry and procure red chile.{{cite web |title=Petroglyph National Monument: Chile Ristras, tradition, beauty, and utility |url= https://www.nps.gov/petr/learn/historyculture/chile.htm |website=NPS.gov |publisher=National Park Service, United States Department of Agriculture |access-date=February 4, 2021}}
In addition to local restaurants, many national food chains such as Applebee's, Domino's Pizza, McDonald's, and Jack in the Box operating in New Mexico offer green chile on many of their menu items, bowing to local demand.{{cite web |last=Denniston |first=Jennifer |url= http://www.lonelyplanet.com/usa/southwest/taos/travel-tips-and-articles/2473 |title=Some like it hot: green chile tour of New Mexico |publisher=Lonely Planet |date=August 26, 2014 |access-date=May 9, 2015 |quote=even McDonalds offers green chile on its burgers}}
= "Chile" versus "chili"=
In modern everyday English in most of the world, chile, chili, and chilli all refer to the fruit of C. annuum; in Spanish, {{lang|la|chile}} (chee-le), from Nahuatl {{lang|nah|chīlli}}, is used for the pepper.{{cite web |title=Chili, Chilli, and Chile: Explaining the Difference |url= https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/usage-chili-chilli-chile |website=Merriam-Webster.com |access-date=February 5, 2021}} In New Mexican English, however, chile (chill-ee) refers to the fruit, while chili refers only to a meat-based dish known as Texas chili con carne.{{cite web |title=What's the Difference Between Chile, Chili, and Chilli? |url= https://www.thespruceeats.com/different-spellings-of-chile-2342844 |website=TheSpruceEats.com |access-date=February 5, 2021}}{{cite web |title=Is It Chili or Chile? A Burning Question |url= https://www.savoryspiceshop.com/blog/difference-between-chili-and-chile |website=SavorySpiceShop.com |date=March 2020 |access-date=February 5, 2021}} "Green chile chili" is chili con carne made with green chile. The word chile, as used in "green chile", "red chile", or by itself, is also used in lay terms to refer specifically to the New Mexico variety, while other varieties are referred to as peppers (e.g. jalapeño pepper, ghost pepper).{{cite news |agency=Associated Press |title=Chili or Chile? The Dispute Never Seems to Cool Off |url= https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2000-nov-19-me-54396-story.html |access-date=February 5, 2021 |work=Los Angeles Times |date=November 9, 2000}}
Many organizations, including farmers, breeders, consumers, and even the New Mexico Department of Tourism make efforts to educate the general public about the differences in spelling within the state, as using chili while referring to New Mexican chile may be taken as an insult to some locals.{{cite web |title=Taste The Difference: The Food of New Mexico |url= https://skinewmexico.com/taste-the-difference-the-food-of-new-mexico/ |website=SkiNewMexico.com |access-date=February 5, 2021}} US Senator Pete Domenici of New Mexico made this spelling official as chile for the fruit, by entering it into the Congressional Record.{{cite book |last1=Jamison |first1=Cheryl A. |last2=Jamison |first2=Bill |title=The Rancho de Chimayo Cookbook: The Traditional Cooking of New Mexico |publisher= Rowman & Littlefield |date= 2014 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=knlBBAAAQBAJ&q=congressional+record | isbn = 9781493009206}}{{rp|61}}
None of these spellings should be confused with the nation of Chile (pronounced: CHEE-lay), which has a separate, unrelated etymology. (See: Etymology of Chile)
=Roasting season=
File:Roasting Chili Peppers.jpg
File:Roasting Hatch Green Chile in Santa Fe (cropped).jpg
The first crop of chile of the year usually arrives at retail in New Mexico and surrounding areas by August, which signals the start of "roasting season".{{cite web |last=Robbins |first=Ted |title=That Smoky Smell Means Chile Roasting Season In New Mexico |website=NPR.org |publisher=National Public Radio |date=October 6, 2013 |url= https://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/10/06/229276496/chiles-pungent-perfume-marks-the-season-in-new-mexico |access-date=February 16, 2015}}{{cite web |title=Chile Roasting Time in New Mexico |url= https://www.chilltravelers.com/chill/chile-roasting-time-new-mexico-santa-fe-style/ |website=ChillTravelers.com |date= August 14, 2014 |publisher=MH Magazine |access-date=February 4, 2021}} Retail establishments around the state, including national chains such as Albertsons and Walmart,{{cite news |title=Start of Chile Roasting Season |url= https://www.lcsun-news.com/story/news/local/las-cruces/2016/08/10/start-chile-roasting-season-delights-las-crucens/88542798/ |work=Las Cruces Sun |access-date=February 4, 2021}} set up apparatuses called 'chile roasters' outside, and display signage advertising the availability of the fruit. A chile roaster consists of a drum with the long side of heavy gauge steel diamond mesh and the ends of thick plate steel discs, mounted horizontally on a frame over powerful propane burners. A shaft usually runs through the center of the drum to act as an axle, a design pioneered by Emilio Ortega while in California.{{cite news |last=Figelsaworth |first=Joel |title=New Mexico's ever-present symbol of fall — the chile roaster — originated in California |url= https://www.abqjournal.com/643311/spark-of-history.html |website=Albuquerque Journal |access-date=March 9, 2022}}
A customer's chile purchase (usually a standard-size produce box-full) is loaded into the cylinder by the retailer, who usually assumes a role also called a "chile roaster", via a hatch in the mesh side. The drum is then turned, either by motor or hand crank, and the chile tumbles within over the flames, ensuring the chile pods are heated on every side as they shed their skins; this ensures the chile skins blister appropriately to allow for easier peeling of the chile. Skins, seeds, and other debris falls through the bottom of the drum. This process is the most popular method since it offers a physical display of the chile; it offers the sound of the chile crackling, and the sight of the blistering and falling skins, accompanied by the widely distributed smell of the roasting peppers which has become a staple during the early New Mexican autumn, as well as the state's official aroma.{{cite web |last=O'Catherine |first=Aileen |title=Smell that Green Chile Roasting! |website=About.com Travel: Albuquerque |date=January 1, 2010 |url= http://albuquerque.about.com/od/fooddrink/a/Chile_Roasting.htm |access-date=February 11, 2015}}{{cite web |last=Robbins |first=Ted |title=That Smoky Smell Means Chile Roasting Season In New Mexico |url= https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2013/10/06/229276496/chiles-pungent-perfume-marks-the-season-in-new-mexico |website=NPR.org |publisher=National Public Radio |access-date=February 4, 2021}} The skins of the roasted peppers are inedible, and peeling the chile to prepare them for freezer storage is a traditional family communal activity. Some people eat the fresh roasted chile as a snack, but the Chile Pepper Institute recommends cooking them to {{convert|165|F|C}} before consuming to reduce the risk of foodborne pathogens.{{cite web |last1=Florez |first1=Nancy C. |last2=Davies |first2=Cindy Schlenker |title=Processing Fresh Chile Peppers |url= https://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_e/E324/welcome.html |website=ACES.NMSU.edu |publisher=Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University |access-date=February 4, 2021}}
{{lang|es|Horno}}-roasting chile, while done less often, is a more traditional method. A more common method is simply roasting over an open flame on gas stove-tops and grills.{{cite news |last=Schwarc |first=Sandy |title=Cook's Guide: Tips for Preparing New Mexico Green Chile |url= https://www.austinchronicle.com/food/2002-08-23/100662/ |access-date=March 9, 2022 |work=The Austin Chronicle |date=August 23, 2002}}
The chile roasting season in New Mexico lasts until the first freeze of the year, which usually occurs in late October. Sacks of green chile often contain many red chiles as it gets later in the season. This mixed chile is called autumn roast, or chile pintado in Spanish, and is a local favorite for many people.{{Cite web |last=Jhett |date=2024-03-31 |title=The Hatch Chile Season: A New Mexico Tradition |url=https://www.farmerschilemarket.com/the-hatch-chile-season-a-new-mexico-tradition/ |access-date=2024-05-22 |website=Farmers Chile Market |language=en-US}}
Cultivars and landraces
Though most New Mexico type peppers are long pod-type peppers, that ripen from green to red, the multitude of New Mexico type cultivars have a slight variance in taste, and widely varying appearances and heat levels.{{cite web |url= http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/GrowCPNM.pdf |title=Growing Peppers in New Mexico Gardens, Guide H-240 |work=ChillePapperInstitute |publisher=Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University |date=June 1997 |location=Las Cruces |access-date=February 9, 2015 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150923202802/http://www.chilepepperinstitute.org/content/files/GrowCPNM.pdf |archive-date=September 23, 2015 |url-status=dead}}{{cite web |title=Just How Hot Are My Chiles?|url= http://ushotstuff.com/Heat.Scale.htm |website=Uncle Steve's Hot Stuff |date=2010}}{{better source needed|date=August 2022}} Some varieties may turn yellow, orange, or brown.
The most common New Mexico chile plants are the 'New Mexico 6-4', 'Big Jim', 'Sandia', 'No. 6', and 'No. 9' cultivars. The improved 'Heritage 6-4', 'Heritage Big Jim', and 'Sandia Select' cultivars provide a better yield and uniformity. Peppers like the 'Chimayó', 'Velarde', 'Jemez', 'Escondida', 'Alcalde', 'San Felipe', 'Española', and several others, represent what is known as New Mexico's unique landrace chile, which provide their own unique tastes and usually command a higher price.
class="wikitable" |
Cultivar
! style="width:60%;" |Description ! Length ! Width ! Pod type ! Scoville heat units |
---|
6-4
| An heirloom variety developed by Fabián Garcia in 1957 by reducing the heat of 'New Mexico No. 6'.{{cite web |last1=Coon |first1=Danise |last2=Votara |first2=Eric |last3=Bosland |first3=Paul |title=The Chile Cultivars of New Mexico State University Released from 1913 to 2008 |url= https://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/research/horticulture/RR763/ |website=NMSU |publisher=New Mexico State University |access-date=February 2, 2021}}{{cite journal |title=Numex Heritage 6-4 |url= https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/47/5/article-p675.xml |journal=HortScience |date= May 2012 |volume= 47 |issue= 5 |pages= 675–676 |doi= 10.21273/HORTSCI.47.5.675 |access-date=March 9, 2022 |last1= Bosland |first1= Paul W. |doi-access= free }} | {{convert|6.6|in|cm}} | {{convert|3.8|in|cm}} | New Mexican | ~1,500 |
6–9
| An heirloom variety developed by Fabián Garcia. | | | New Mexican | |
Acoma
| Pueblo chile grown in Acoma Pueblo. | | | New Mexican | |
Alcalde
| New Mexico landrace chile.{{cite web |title=The Landrace Chiles of Northern New Mexico |url= https://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_circulars/CR679/welcome.html |website=ACES.NMSU.edu |publisher=New mexico State University |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | | | New Mexican | |
Anaheim
| Mild relative of 'NuMex no. 9', grown outside the state of New Mexico. Flavor and heat varies greatly. | | | New Mexican | 500 ~ 2,500 |
Barker's Hot
| The 'Barker's Hot' chile pepper is an exceptionally hot chile of the New Mexico pod type. The peppers ripen from green to red, with the red fruits being hotter than the green ones.{{cite web |title=Berker's Hot Pepper |url= https://www.cayennediane.com/peppers/barkers-hot-chili-pepper/ |website=CayenneDiane.com |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|5–7|in|cm}} | | New Mexican | 15,000 ~ 30,000 |
Bailey Piquin
| Heat level similar to habanero peppers. 'NuMex Bailey Piquin' is the first chile piquin cultivar that is machine-harvestable. They are used mainly for chile powder production. Released in 1991. | | | Piqiun | 90,000 ~ 100,000 |
Big Jim
| Jim Lytle worked with Nakayama and New Mexico State University (NMSU) to develop a hatch chile that was fondly named 'Big Jim'. This variety holds the record for the longest chile to date, which measured in at {{convert|17|in}} in 2012. | {{convert|7–17|in|cm}} | {{convert|7–17|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 500 ~ 3,000 |
Centennial
| Primarily an ornamental variety; fruit are purple, then mature to yellow, orange, and red. Used in the potted plant industry. Released in 1998.{{cite web |title=NuMex Centennial Guide: Heat, Flavor, Uses |url= https://www.pepperscale.com/numex-centennial/ |website=PepperScale |date= September 14, 2016 |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | ~{{convert|1|in|cm}} | | Piquin | 1,000 ~ 5,000 |
Chimayó
| A medium pepper, green before ripening to a dark, red color. This variety is a landrace historically grown in the foothills of the Southern Rockies near Chimayó, New Mexico. The peppers are small and curled, and have a complex flavor described as sweet and smoky.{{cite web |title=Chimayo Pepper Guide: Heat, Flavor, Uses |url= https://www.pepperscale.com/chimayo-pepper/ |website=PepperScale.com |date= December 10, 2014 |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|4.5|in|cm}} | | New Mexican | 4,000 ~ 6,000 |
Conquistador
| A very mild nonpiquant "paprika" pepper, green before ripening into a red color. 'NeMex Conquistador' is used to for mass-produced chile rellenos. They descended from a population of open-air pollinated '6-4' plants.{{cite web |title='NuMex Conquistador' Paprika Pepper |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/_assets/documents/Conquistador.full_.pdf |website=New Mexico State University |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|6.18|in|cm}} | {{convert|2.76|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 0 |
Eclipse
| Part of the 'Sunrise, Sunset, and Eclipse' pepper line released in 1998. They were created by crossing '6–4' with a green bell pepper, and are New Mexican pod type peppers that mature into colors other than red. 'NuMex Eclipse' matures into a brown color.{{cite web |title='NuMex Sunrise', 'NuMex Sunset', and 'NuMex Eclipse' Ornamental Chile Peppers |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/_assets/documents/SunriseHSArt.full_.pdf |website=New Mexico State University |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|5.1|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.9|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 300 ~ 500 |
Escondida
| New Mexico landrace chile from one of two places called "Escondida" (Spanish for 'hidden') near Socorro, New Mexico, making it the southernmost landrace chile in New Mexico, however, it no longer grows in its home soil. | {{convert|2.18|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.65|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 15,057 |
Española
| An old chile pod, has a slightly stronger pungent and bitter flavor and matures early to red, first grown by the Spanish settlers in the San Juan Valley, near modern-day Española.{{cite web |title=Española Chili Peppers |url= https://www.chilipeppermadness.com/chili-pepper-types/sweet-mild-chili-peppers/espanola-chili-peppers/ |website=Chile Pepper Madness |date= September 22, 2013 |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|4.9|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.5|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 1,500 ~ 2,000 |
Española Improved
| Hybridization of Sandia and Española. Provides Española's taste and early maturation, with a better yield, and larger peppers. 'Numex Española Improved' was the first chile pepper cultivar to be grown and harvested in space. | {{convert|6.0|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.75|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 1,500 ~ 2,000 |
Fresno
| Related to Santa Fe Grande, fruit grows upright and matures to orange and red. Moderately spicy.{{cite web |author=Paul W. Bosland |author2=Alton L Bailey |author3=Jaime Iglesias-Olivas |url= http://contentdm.nmsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/AgCircs/id/12518 |title=Capsicum Pepper Varieties and Classification |publisher=New Mexico State University}} | {{convert|2.0|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.0|in|cm}} | Santa Fe Grande | 2,500 ~ 10,000 |
Garnet
| Insect-proof machine-harvestable candidate paprika with low heat and high extractable pigment, used mainly for dye production. Released in 2004.{{cite web |title='NuMex Garnet' Paprika |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/_assets/documents/Garnet.pdf |website=New Mexico State University |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|6.2|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.5|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 150 ~ 160 |
Heritage 6-4
| A 200-seed sample of the original 'New Mexico 6-4', obtained from the Plant Germplasm Preservation Research Unit (PGPRU) at the National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation, in Ft. Collins, Colorado. The PGPRU received the seed in 1962 and placed it in cryogenic storage. The flavor of the plant was rehabilitated from these seeds. | {{convert|6.7|in|cm}} | {{convert|3.7|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 1,559 |
Heritage Big Jim
| Grown from seeds obtained from the National Seed Storage Lab, 'NuMex Heritage Big Jim' are more uniform in form and piquancy than current 'Big Jim' varieties.{{cite web |title='NuMex Heritage Big Jim' New Mexican Chile Pepper |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/_assets/documents/HBJ.full_.pdf |website=New Mexico State University |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|7–12|in|cm}} | | New Mexican | 9,482 |
Holiday Ornamentals
| Upright Ornamental peppers. Released in 2004. Includes 'NuMex Valentine's Day,' 'NuMex St. Patrick's Day,' 'NuMex Memorial Day,' 'NuMex Halloween,' 'NuMex Thanksgiving' and 'NuMex Christmas'.{{cite web |last=Eddy |first=David |title=Holiday Inspired Chile Peppers |url= https://www.growingproduce.com/vegetables/holiday-inspired-chile-peppers/ |website=Growing Produce |date=January 2009 |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | Various | Various | Piquin | Various |
Isleta
| Pueblo chile grown near the Rio Grande Bosque around the Pueblo of Isleta.{{cite web |title=Isleta |url= https://www.thechileman.org/results.php?page=113&chile=1&find=&heat=Any&origin=Any&genus=Any |website=Chile Pepper Database |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|4–5|in|cm}} | | New Mexican | |
Jemez Pueblo
| New Mexico landrace and pueblo chile with a high red-to-green ratio, grown near Jemez Pueblo. About a teaspoon of seeds are planted in a single hole and mixed with manure. They mature early compared to other landrace varieties. | | | New Mexican | |
Joe E. Parker
| Thicker walled '6-4', with a heat variance based on growing conditions; 149 days to maturity. Named after NMSU Graduate Joe E Parker, it was released in 1990.{{cite web |title=NuMex Joe E. Parker Chili Peppers |url= https://www.chilipeppermadness.com/chili-pepper-types/sweet-mild-chili-peppers/numex-joe-e-parker-chili-peppers/ |website=Chile Pepper Madness |date= September 22, 2013 |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|6.5|in|cm}} | {{convert|2.0|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 800 ~ 900 |
Luci Fairy{{citation needed|date=March 2022}}
| | | | | 30,000 ~ 50,000 |
Mirasol
| Named for the upright posture of the fruit that "points" to the sun; {{lang|es|mirasol}} is Spanish for "looking at the sun". 'Numex Mirasol' was created by crossing 'La Blanca' and 'Santaka' peppers and selecting for upright fruit; also grown in Colorado where they are marketed as "Pueblo chile".{{cite web |title=NuMex Mirasol |url= https://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/83412/ |website=Dave's Garden |access-date=March 9, 2022}} Released in 1993. | {{convert|2.17|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.75|in|cm}} | Mirasol | 0 ~ 30,000 |
Nematador
| 'NuMex Nematador' is an open-pollinated, nematode resistant, cayenne-type chile that was released in 2003. | {{convert|5.8|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.6|in|cm}} | Cayenne | 15,500 ~ 16,000 |
No. 6
| An heirloom variety developed in 1950 by Roy Harper. 'New Mexico No. 6' was bred from "a selection made in 1947 from an undesignated local chile".Harper, 1950{{cite web |title=New Mexico No. 6 |url= http://64thstreetspecialties.com/NMSU_cultivars/NuMex_6.html |website=Chile Cultivars of New Mexico State University Released from 1913 to 2008 |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|6–8|in|cm}} | {{convert|2|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 700 ~ 900 |
No. 9
| An heirloom variety developed by Fabián García. They were bred to be milder to increase consumption by Anglo settlers. Garcia selected 14 varieties from tree pod types, pasilla, colorado, and negro, to create new varieties. After nine years of breeding, only 'No. 9' remained. It was the very first New Mexican pod type chile. | | | New Mexican | 1,000 ~ 1,500 |
Piñata
| A cultivar of the 'early jalapeño', it spontaneously originated in the field due to a single recessive gene resulting in coloration changes to the plant and its fruit. Matures to yellow, orange, and red. Released in 1998. | | | Jalapeño | 35,000 ~ 50,000 |
Primavera
| Relatively yet uniformly mild jalapeño variety introduced in 1998. | {{convert|2|in|cm}} | {{convert|1|in|cm}} | Jalapeño | 8,500 ~ 9,000 |
R Naky
| Developed by Roy Nakayama in 1985, from a mix of the 'Rio Grande', '6-4', and 'Bulgarian Paprika', and "an early-maturing native type". | {{convert|5.5|in|cm}} | {{convert|1–2|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 260 ~ 760 |
Rio Grande
| | {{convert|4–6|in|cm}} | | New Mexican | 2,500 ~ 5,000 |
Rio Grande 21
| Large mild pepper, created from a cross between 'No. 6' and 'Anaheim', 'Rio Grande 21' is not as widely grown as other cultivars. Released in 1967. | {{convert|6.7|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.73|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 500 ~ 700 |
San Felipe
| New Mexico landrace chile from San Felipe Pueblo. | {{convert|1.94|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.68|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 15,370 |
Sandia
| Released by Roy Harper in 1956 by cross breeding a 'NuMex No. 9' type with a Californian Anaheim-type chile. Originally named "Sandia A". Released in 1956. | {{convert|6.6|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.7|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 1,500 ~ 2,000 |
Sandia Select
| Improved 'Sandia' pepper to provide a spicier fruit with better yield and uniformity. | {{convert|6–7|in|cm}} | {{convert|1–2|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 20,000 ~30,000 |
Santo Domingo
| New Mexico landrace chile grown in Kewa Pueblo. | {{convert|3|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.86|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 16,969 |
Suave Orange
| Part of the 'Numex Suave' line of mild C. chinense peppers released in 2004. Their ancestry is unknown, but it is inferred that they contain local landrace heritage based on size.{{cite web |title='NuMex Suave Red' and 'NuMex Suave Orange' Mild Capsicum Chinense Cultivars |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/_assets/documents/Suave.pdf |website=New Mexico State University |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|1–2.5|in|cm}} | {{convert|1–2|in|cm}} | Habanero | 774 |
Suave Red
| Part of the 'Numex Suave' line of mild C. chinense peppers. | {{convert|1–2.5|in|cm}} | {{convert|1–2|in|cm}} | Habanero | 335 |
Sunburst
| Part of the 'Sunglo, Sunflare, and Sunburst' pepper line released in 1991. They are peppers of de Arbol pod type and were created for ornamental use. They are used to make miniature wreaths and miniristras.'NuMex Sunburst' matures to orange color.{{cite web |title='NuMex Sunglo', 'NuMex Sunflare', and 'NuMex Sunburst' Ornamental Chile Peppers |url= https://cpi.nmsu.edu/_assets/documents/SungloSunflareSunburst.full_.pdf |website=New Mexico State University |access-date=March 9, 2022}} | {{convert|2.78|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.5|in|cm}} | de Arbol | (Mainly used as ornamental) |
Sunflare
| Part of the 'Sunglo, Sunflare, and Sunburst' pepper line. 'NuMex Sunflare' matures to a red color. | {{convert|2.87|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.4|in|cm}} | de Arbol | (Mainly used as ornamental) |
Sunglo
| Part of the 'Sunglo, Sunflare, and Sunburst' pepper line. 'NuMex Sunglo' matures to a yellow color. | {{convert|3.26|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.54|in|cm}} | de Arbol | (Mainly used as ornamental) |
Sunrise
| Part of the 'Sunrise, Sunset, and Eclipse' pepper line; 'NuMex Sunrise' matures into a yellow color. | {{convert|7.1|in|cm}} | {{convert|1.5|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 300 ~ 500 |
Sunset
| Part of the 'Sunrise, Sunset, and Eclipse' pepper line; 'NuMex Sunset' matures into an orange color. | {{convert|6|in|cm}} | {{convert|1|in|cm}} | New Mexican | 300 ~ 500 |
Sweet
| High yield, low heat cultivar selected from a single plant in a field of open pollinated '6-4', a spicy veriety. 'NuMex Sweet' was released in 1990. | | | New Mexican | 200 ~ 300 |
Taos
| Pueblo chile grown in the foothills of the Taos Mountains near Taos Pueblo. | | | New Mexican | |
Twilight
| Ornamental variety that matures purple, yellow, orange, and then red in 216 days. 'NuMex Twilight' is important to the potted plant industry for its ornamental value, and to breeders for its resistance to the cucumber mosaic virus. | | | Piquin | (Mainly used as ornamental) |
Valverde
| | | New Mexican | |
Vaquero
| Open pollinated jalapeño variety that "has good jalapeño flavor with sweet walls." Due to its susceptibility to Phytophthora capsici, 'Numex Vaquero' was released to farmers in 1991, but not as a "tolerant cultivar". | {{convert|2.5|in|cm}} | {{convert|0.9|in|cm}} | Jalapeño | 25,000 ~ 30,000 |
XX Hot
| Developed at New Mexico State University by The Chile Pepper Institute, 'NuMex XX Hot' Peppers are slim with thin walls and smooth skin.{{cite web |title=NuMex XX Hot Pepper |url= https://www.cayennediane.com/peppers/numex-xx-hot-pepper/ |website=Cayenne Diane |access-date=January 13, 2020}} | {{convert|3–5|in|cm}} | | New Mexican | 60,000 ~ 70,000 |
Zia
| Pueblo chile grown near Zia Pueblo. | | | New Mexican | |
In popular culture
According to Taos academic and writer Larry Torres, green chile is referenced in an old New Mexico poem: "Roses are red. Chile is green. Our love will never vanish, just like tortillas and beans."{{cite news |last=Torres |first=Larry |author-link=Larry Torres |date=March 16, 2022 |title=Mother Goose in love (Part 2: Saint Anthony helps out lovers) |newspaper=Taos News |url= https://www.taosnews.com/vecinos/comunidad-hispana/mother-goose-in-love/article_d681eebc-53e8-5749-a8db-75f6ccddcc0d.html |access-date=March 16, 2022}}
References
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External links
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- [https://cpi.nmsu.edu/ The Chile Pepper Institute, New Mexico State University]
{{Capsicum cultivars}}
{{Herbs & spices}}
{{New Mexico}}
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