• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

  • Privacy Policy

Multiculturiosity

Exploring food traditions through (mostly) healthy, gluten-free recipes, restaurants and travel

  • Recipes
    • Asian
    • African
    • American
    • Breads
    • Chinese
    • Canning and Preserves
    • Chicken & Poultry
    • Cooking With Booze
    • Desserts
    • Fish and Seafood
    • French
    • Fruit
    • Gluten-Free & Dairy-Free
    • Greek
    • Greens & Herbs
    • Honey & Maple Syrup
    • Indian
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Local
    • Main Dishes
    • Sides
    • Vegetarian
  • Restaurants
    • Fine Dining
    • Casual Dining
    • Gluten-Free & Gluten-Free Friendly
    • Vegetarian & Vegetarian-Friendly
  • My Montreal
  • About
  • Cookbooks I Love
  • Food & Travel Writing
  • Quarantine Cooking E-Book
  • 5à7 Podcast with Amie Watson

Hani Chile-Garlic Paste: “Beyond the Great Wall”

April 6, 2010 MissWattson Leave a Comment

The first thing I made when I got back to Newfoundland were my staples.

Guizhou Chile Paste
and Hani Chile-Garlic Paste

Needless to say I was coughing up a lung for the rest of the afternoon. I used a 250mL container of dried Birds Eye chiles. That’s enough to cause anyone who even walked into the room to be stricken by the inability to breathe properly. These things are pungent.

Ingredients:
1 head of garlic
2 shallots
1/4 tsp salt
4 dried bird chiles (I assume this means birds eye chiles. The recipe also says you can use serrano)

The nice thing about this recipe is that you don’t need to peel the garlic or shallots, just separate the cloves and place them with the un-skinned shallots on an oiled baking sheet in a 400 degree Fahrenheit oven for 20 minutes. It’s just a different way of roasting them. You could also do the more standard method of chopping off the top quarter of the head of garlic and wrapping it in aluminum foil, but since you’re only gong to half-roast it, you’ll have to separate the cloves later anyway to get the insides out. Also, why waste aluminum? The cloves of garlic and the shallots are actually supposed to be stuck directly in the coals of a fire or gas flame, but, alas…these things don’t exist in my kitchen. No smokey flavour for me.

After 20 minutes and another 10 let them cool, just peel off the skins of the garlic and shallots. Chop the shallots a little before tossing them in a mortar and pestle or a food processor (or blender) with the salt. I accidentally diced the shallots in advance, so I actually put them in aluminum foil to roast, instead of leaving them in their skin on the baking sheet. It worked fine…I think. I had nothing to compare it to. Next time I will read properly before dicing. It’s at the point where I just assume shallots are meant to be diced. I need to learn to be more lazy.

I also didn’t have fresh chiles, which the recipe called for, but I was soaking a bunch of dried birds eye chiles for the Guizhou chile paste, so I sneaked four of the soaked ones, chopped them roughly, and threw them into the food processor too. It really would be better to do this with a mortar and pestle, both to get a less-processed consistency and for authenticity, but life is short and my eyes were already stinging. Breathing is also important, I hear.

Compared to the Guizhou chile paste, this is a very mild condiment. The garlic flavour is sweetened and tempered by the roasting, and the amount of chiles was just right. I added this paste to mashed potatoes (in place of normal roasted garlic) that I had made to accompany spice-rubbed trout, but I forgot that I’d put it in until I had a sip of a Merlot and my mouth got set on fire. How was the wine so spicy???? It took me a good few minutes to remember the chiles in the potato. I couldn’t taste them at all until they were set off by the wine. Amazing…

All Recipes, Chinese, Small Bites and Spreads Beyond the great wall, hani chili-garlic paste, homemade chili garlic paste, homemade chili paste

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Sign up for my newsletter and all the food (writing) will come to you!








Flashbacks:

champagne-new-years-resolutions-montreal-restaurants

My New Years Resolutions in Montreal Food and Restaurants

December 29, 2020 By MissWattson Leave a Comment

I have the … [Read More...] about My New Years Resolutions in Montreal Food and Restaurants

Mezcal-bacanora-tequila-tucson-arizona-oaxaca-sonora-mexico

On a Hunt for Mezcal, Bacanora, Tequila, Tepary Beans, and Green Hatch Chili Powder in Tucson, AZ

April 13, 2022 By MissWattson Leave a Comment

I should … [Read More...] about On a Hunt for Mezcal, Bacanora, Tequila, Tepary Beans, and Green Hatch Chili Powder in Tucson, AZ

soif-terrasse-gatineau

Soif Wine Bar: The Hidden Gem of Gatineau in Any Season

December 13, 2022 By MissWattson Leave a Comment

I have a … [Read More...] about Soif Wine Bar: The Hidden Gem of Gatineau in Any Season

pistachio-gelato-with-amareno-cherry-compote

The Ultimate Dairy-free Vanilla Gelato and What Seattleites Don’t Know About Coffee

August 31, 2012 By Leave a Comment

The first … [Read More...] about The Ultimate Dairy-free Vanilla Gelato and What Seattleites Don’t Know About Coffee

Videos

June 2025
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  
« Mar    

Archives

Tags

alice medrich amie watson aux vivres becky selengut best montreal restaurants best restaurants montreal bonnie stern chicken & poultry cooking classes montreal crudessence dairy-free gluten-free gluten-free montreal gluten-free restaurants montreal gluten free good fish hari nayak healthy vegetarian recipes heartsmart cooking how to make sushi jean-talon market lima lufa farms made with love modernist cuisine montreal montreal en lumiere montreal farmers markets montreal gazette montreal highlights festival montreal restaurants montreal restaurant week my indian kitchen natural wine oenopole peru plenty raspipav rezin sustainable seafood montreal toque! toronto vegan vegan restaurants montreal yotam ottolenghi

Copyright © 2025 · Daily Dish Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in