I used to buy all my bulk dried chiles from a guy named Gary Brooks aka The Chile Guy out of New Mexico. He no longer owns the business and although the site still exists, they do not seem to have a steady selection of things I’m looking for like dried chipotles and anchos.
I like to buy in 1 to 3lb. quantities and there is no retailer around here (NJ) who carries these types of products.
Any recos for a web merchant who can supply the goods?
Those packages are all limited to a couple of ounces.
I’m looking to buy a couple of pounds at a time. They go quick when you grind your own chile powder.
This was my old source, but they don’t seem to offer the types I’m looking for currently.
Anchos are easy. Super fresh ones (dried but still soft) are available in local Mexican supermarkets in bulk bins. PM me if you want me to buy a bunch for you and ship them. Chipotles are also sold there, but they tend to be the ones that are dried in the smoker for a long time till they are brittle. Are you looking for the soft ones? I often put fresh red jalapenos in the cold smoker for a few hours.
Any way, have you tried smoking ripe red jalapeños? The dried imported chipotles are smokey and hot, but the delicious flavor of the chile can be muted or lost altogether. I split the fresh ones open, remove some or all of the seeds, and then place them in the smoker for a few hours. This drives off enough of the moisture to concentrate the delicious jalapeño flavors. I’ve never made chile powder from these like Mark does, but I suppose you could leave them in the smoker longer or dry them out in a dehydrator.
Bill,
I’ve given up on store bought chile powder altogether. I toast 60/40 anchos to chipotles, seed and stem them, and grind them in a dedicated spice grinder. I toast my cumin seeds and grind them and them keep them separate. That chile powder is also killer on fresh fruit like sweet pineapple or melon or watermelon with some sea salt flakes and lime juice.
I’ve got to try that. I was shocked when I first learned of the Mexican penchant for putting chile powder and salt and lime juice on fruits and vegetables. It took a long time for me to understand the brilliance. I’m totally with you on toasting and grinding cumin - sweet fragrance totally different from store-bought ground cumin.
Amateur. I needed some dried guajillos for the last Berserkerfest at my house so I got a 10 pound bag at Restaurant Depot. 10 pounds there cost as much as six two-ounce packages at Fairway. I used a pound or two so far and gave away bags at the Berserkerfest and I still have a lifetime supply. Just find someone in the food business who has a membership.
Last time I bought them I bought 10lb. quantities. That was 18 years ago.
There wasn’t any spoilage, but I’d rather not have them hanging around quite that long.