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. New Mexico is the only state with an official
State Question: "Red or green?" and a
State Answer: "Red and green" or "Christmas". "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. Chile is also one of the official
state vegetables of New Mexico and the scent of "roasting green chile" is the official
state aroma. 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. 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. 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. 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". The village has hosted an annual "Chile Festival" every summer since 1971. s of varying pod types and ripenessA
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 a symbol of New Mexican culture. Some households still use ristras as a means to dry and procure red chile. 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.
"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, (chee-le), from Nahuatl , is used for the pepper. 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. "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). 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. US Senator
Pete Domenici of New Mexico made this spelling official as
chile for the fruit, by entering it into the
Congressional Record. 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 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". Retail establishments around the state, including national chains such as
Albertsons and
Walmart, 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. 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 fall 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. 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 before consuming to reduce the risk of
foodborne pathogens. -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. 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. ==Cultivars and landraces==