This homemade enchilada sauce made of dried New Mexico chilies has bold, beautiful flavors. Once you make it like this, you’ll never buy the store-bought stuff again. Ever since I discovered the beautiful world of dried chilies when I made homemade chili, I have wanted to try my hand at making enchilada sauce from scratch. During my sabbatical at the beginning of the year to create this new blog space, I was able to try my hand at enchilada sauce using chilies.
The homemade enchilada sauce I made before called for chili powder. Usually, chili powder is a blend of ground chile pods and other spices like cumin, peppercorn, and salt. There is absolutely nothing wrong with my old sauce recipe, but my curiosity was going to get the best of me if I didn’t try it just once with real chilies.
How to Make Homemade Enchilada Sauce
The Chili Puree:
When handling chilies put on a pair of disposable gloves.
You can skip this step if you like heat. If not, open up the chili lengthwise with kitchen scissors, then remove the stems, seeds, and light-colored veins inside the chilies. This step will remove most of the heat from the fruit. If you like spicy food, set aside some of the seeds to add a little extra heat. You can add a lot or just a little of the seeds to make things hotter.
Toast the chilies in a dry pan or skillet for 30 to 40 seconds on each side.
Place the chilies into a bowl or jar with a lid; soak the chilies in very hot water for about 30 minutes.
If the chilies float too much in the bowl, use a clean heavy object to hold them down into the hot water. This will ensure that both sides of the chili become pliable.
I found that using my KitchenAid Immersion Blender beaker to be the perfect tool for the job.
Remove the chilies from the soaking water. Ensure that stems are removed, and add the chilies plus and some of the soaking water to a blender and puree. Make a half cup of chili sauce by adding a little of the soaking water at a time.
Pour the puree into a sieve. Using the back of a spoon, stir and push the liquid through to strain the puree. This will catch any large bits of skin or seeds that did not grind up.
You should now have ½ cup of chili puree to make your enchilada sauce.
The Enchilada Sauce:
In a medium saucepan heat oil, add flour, smoothing and stirring with a wooden spoon. Cook for 1 minute.
Add chili puree and cook for 30 seconds.
Add stock, tomato paste, oregano, and cumin. Stir to combine.
Bring to a boil, reduce heat to low and cook for 15 minutes. The sauce will thicken and smooth out. Adjust the seasonings as needed.
Method Substitution: If you are in a time crunch, use ¼ cup of the chili powder in place of the chili puree. This is a delicious time-saving alternative.
Using the chiles instead of the chili powder provided a much richer sauce. Totally worth the effort! Stay tuned to find out about the two recipes I used this sauce for…
Homemade Enchilada Sauce
Ingredients
Chili Puree (SEE RECIPE NOTES)
- 4 New Mexico chilies
- hot water to heat and cover chilies
Enchilada Sauce
- 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
- ½ cup chili puree (recipe to follow) (SEE RECIPE NOTES)
- 2 cups vegetable stock (you could use chicken stock if preferred)
- 10 ounces tomato paste
- 1 teaspoon dried oregano
- 1 teaspoon ground cumin
- ½ teaspoon sea salt
Instructions
The Chili Puree
- When handling chilies put on a pair of rubber gloves.
- You can skip this step if you like heat. If not, open up the chili lengthwise with kitchen scissors, then remove the stems, seeds and any light-colored veins inside the chilies. This step will remove most of the heat from the fruit. If you like spicy food, set aside some of the seeds to add a little extra heat. You can add a lot or just a little of the seeds to make things hotter.
- Toast the chilies in a dry pan or skillet for 30 to 40 seconds on each side.
- Place the chilies into a bowl and soak the chilies in very hot water for about 30 minutes.
- If the chilies float too much use a clean heavy object to hold them down into the hot water. This will ensure that both sides of the chili become pliable.
- Remove the chilies from the soaking water. Ensure that stems are removed and add the chilies plus some of the soaking water to a blender and puree. Make a half cup of chili sauce by adding a little of the soaking water at a time.
- Pour the puree into a sieve. Using the back of a spoon stir and push the liquid through to strain the puree. This will catch any large bits of skin or seeds that did not grind up. You should now have ½ cup of chili puree to make your enchilada sauce.
The Enchilada Sauce
- In a medium saucepan heat oil, add flour, smoothing and stirring with a wooden spoon. Cook for 1 minute.
- Add chili puree and cook for 30 seconds.
- Add stock, tomato paste, oregano, and cumin. Stir to combine.
- Bring to a boil, reduce heat to low and cook for 15 minutes. The sauce will thicken and smooth out. Adjust the seasonings as needed.
Rachel says
My GOODNESS. I want to take a bath in this. You’re really inspiring me with this dried chile thing…
The Mountain Kitchen says
Girl, that would be quite a sight to see…lol! This was smack your grandma good!!
dogear6 says
A bath in it sounds good! It does look that good.
Nancy
The Mountain Kitchen says
Nancy, it sure was!
Dana@ IveGotCake says
Nom nom nom Debbie!!
Nothing tops sauces from scratch. Mmmm
The Mountain Kitchen says
Way nom nom nom!!
Cheryl "Cheffie Cooks" Wiser says
Slap me silly! Go girl!
The Mountain Kitchen says
Wackup! 😉
Anna Buckley says
And you say you’ve never been to Mexico? This looks delicious. I have a chili bush producing heaps of little red chilies. Could I use fresh chilies and what would I need to change to make your recipe?
The Mountain Kitchen says
Nope, never been but I admire the cuisine and l love it as much as I do Italian food. I am not sure about fresh chilies… Good question and worth investigating! I will be in touch if I learn anything, Anna.
Melissa Birdsong says
I just love sauces and such made from scratch. Do you think it could yield a large enough batch to can?
The Mountain Kitchen says
Well, the recipe is for 2 1/2 cups… multiplying the current yield for enough to can would be a lot of work, especially prepping the chilies, but would be worth it. If I canned, I would try it! Having this sauce on hand without the work would be fantastic!
Debbie
Annie says
I HAVE to try this – looked delish!
The Mountain Kitchen says
Thanks Annie! You will love it!!
Kiki says
So so good and an excellent way to use some of our dried peppers from our garden!
The Mountain Kitchen says
Great, Kiki! So glad you liked the recipe. Thanks for commenting!