Green Chilies in UK based recipes - Ingredients - Eat Your Books

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#1 Posted : Sunday, September 11, 2016 3:09:40 AM(UTC)

What type of green chilies is this?   I'm not sure what to buy in the US.  Here in California, peppers are never labeled just green chilies or red chilies.    Is it like Anaheims (mild)?  Or hotter ones like Jalapenos or serranos? 

#2 Posted : Sunday, September 11, 2016 6:14:02 AM(UTC)

Hi Rinshin, I'm pretty sure it's the ones in picture 5 here: http://www.goodfood.com....-chillies-20130405-2hczq

#3 Posted : Sunday, September 11, 2016 1:40:30 PM(UTC)

Thank you.  I wonder what that is?  Does not look like anaheims or New Mexico Hatch.  The use of green chilies in British recipes have always been puzzling to me since I never knew what to buy.

#4 Posted : Saturday, September 17, 2016 12:17:34 PM(UTC)

We get these things in the supermarket labelled "green chillies" of no fixed variety. They are usually quite fleshy and a bit punchier than a jalapeno but still pretty mild.

#5 Posted : Tuesday, September 20, 2016 6:05:38 PM(UTC)

Would you say jalapenos would be an adequate substitution?  Jalapenos are more fleshier and hotter than anaheims.  Thank you!

#6 Posted : Saturday, September 24, 2016 11:08:41 AM(UTC)
Green Chillies in U.K supermarkets tend to be Dutch greenhouse grown and fairly mild. Jalapeño would be fine for most recipes. Indian or Thai recipes call for a smaller, hotter chilli. Depends on the type of recipe and how hot you like your food.
#7 Posted : Thursday, October 6, 2016 1:14:10 PM(UTC)

Thank you Bellacat!

#8 Posted : Monday, February 27, 2017 3:54:37 AM(UTC)

I am a bit late to this discussion but not sure I agree on jalapeno as sub. The generic green chillis in UK supermarkets tend to be green finger chillis - I have seen milder fleshier ones on sale as 'green chillis' too but they are less common so I'd go with finger chilli if unspecified in a UK recipe.Finger chillis are fairly spicy, certainly hotter than a jalepeno. I checked on a UK supermarket site and it put them at 10,000 schoville units vs 2,500 for a jalepeno.


In the UK it is not common to find a big variety of chillis in anything but specialist stalls/shops or ethnic supermarkets but other common supermarket varieties - birds eye, scotch bonnet etc - are labelled as such.


As bellaCat says you'd use a hotter variety in a Thai recipe, even if type was not specified in the recipe. Birds eye would be a good catch all in the UK for Thai food.


 

#9 Posted : Monday, February 27, 2017 3:57:17 AM(UTC)

The green ones in the link look like finger chillis to me.

#10 Posted : Monday, February 27, 2017 5:56:07 PM(UTC)

Thank you Frenchfoodie.  I've decided that for most Southeast Asian and Indian style cooking, I'll go buy Thai bird eye chilies sold at my nearby Chinese/Asian market and for Middle eastern, I'll try the Jalapeno/serrano combo.  

#11 Posted : Tuesday, April 25, 2017 4:36:45 AM(UTC)
These are the chillies I'm referring to. Commonly available in uk supermarkets and much milder than finger chillies which, if used in the average recipe for say, guacamole, will blow your socks off.

http://www.waitrose.com/...ctFlyout?productId=39701
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