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Month: July 2022
How to get to Farmers Chile Market
Your source for New Mexico chile products
Whether you want fresh roasted green chile, Hatch red chile ristras, local fruits, chicos, beans, or some other New Mexican specialty, we can be your connection to that at 2010 Eubank Blvd NE. We carry lots of local food products, specializing in chile every chile season. From here, we have many different directions depending on where in the city you are. Click on this map for the most convenience, or read on to get more detailed instructions.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from Santa Fe
This one is pretty easy. From Santa Fe, take I-25 southbound until you get to the Big I, which is the I-25 and I-40 interchange. Go eastbound on I-40 towards the mountains. Continue on I-40 until you see the Eubank exit. You will want to go left onto Eubank, and proceed to go northbound. When you arrive at 2010 Eubank Blvd NE, you have arrived at the best place to get green chile in Albuquerque during the chile season.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from Las Cruces, Hatch, Truth or Consequences, and the Socorro Valley
The main thing to do is take I-25. North of Las Cruces, you will pass through Hatch, New Mexico. Hatch is a great spot for a green chile cheeseburger at Sparky’s, and there are plenty of chile roasters over there too. Continue north and you will see Truth or Consequences, a charming artsy town with craft beer and hot springs you can soak in. Further north of Truth or Consequences is San Antonio, New Mexico. San Antonio is a small town with lots of chile farms and two fantastic green chile cheeseburgers. The Owl and Buckthorn are both great stops on the green chile cheeseburger trail. North of San Antonio, you will Pass through Socorro, and then Lemitar. Many people love chile from Lemitar, and we think the whole Socorro valley has amazing terroir. Passing Lemitar, you will travel north until you get to the Big I, where I-25 meets I-40. Go eastbound on I-40 towards the mountains. Continue on I-40 until you see the Eubank exit. You will want to go left onto Eubank, and proceed to go northbound to 2010 Eubank Blvd NE.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from the Balloon Fiesta
Depending on the year, this may be different as the Balloon Fiesta is a massive event, and traffic conditions can be tricky. If you are at the main parking lot near the northeast gate, take Balloon Fiesta Parkway east to San Mateo and turn right, going southbound. Continue on San Mateo and turn left on Alameda going east towards to mountains. Get on I-25 going south until you get to the Big I, which is the I-25 and I-40 interchange. Go eastbound on I-40 towards the mountains. Continue on I-40 until you see the Eubank exit. You will want to go left onto Eubank, and proceed to go northbound. When you arrive at 2010 Eubank Blvd NE, you have arrived at the best place to get green chile in Albuquerque during the chile season.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from Old Town
From the Old Town Plaza, go north on San Felipe Street and turn left on Mountain, going westbound. Take the first right on Rio Grande Blvd going North, then take another right onto I-40 going east towards the mountains. Continue on I-40 until you see the Eubank exit. You will want to go left onto Eubank, and proceed to go northbound. When you arrive at 2010 Eubank Blvd NE, you have arrived at the best place to get a red chile ristra for you and another ristra for your friend during your trip in Albuquerque this chile season.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from Downtown, UNM, Nob Hill, and Expo NM
From Downtown, take Central, also known as Route 66 eastbound towards the mountains. You will pass by the University of New Mexico. Across from UNM is Frontier restaurant, a local landmark, and a must stop for green chile stew. North of there, you will see lots of different restaurants and bars in the Nob Hill area. Keep going north, and you will see Expo New Mexico, the state fairgrounds, which hosts a large flea market every weekend. Keep going north until you arrive at Eubank Blvd. Turn left on Eubank and proceed north, passing over I-40. hen you arrive at 2010 Eubank Blvd NE, you have arrived at Albuquerque’s Original Chile Roaster.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from North Domingo Baca Park
Go Southbound on Wyoming all the way to Menaul Blvd. Turn left on Menaul and go east, the direction of the Sandia mountains. From here go east until Eubank Blvd, where you can turn right before the light. Look for Mister carwash, the carwash which appeared in Breaking Bad, and turn right there. Continue on this road and merge onto Eubank, trying to get into the left lane as soon as you safely can. Pass by Snowheights, and turn left immediately after at 2010 Eubank Blvd NE. You have arrived at to place to go for many different New Mexican delicacies like chicos, beans, and red and green chile. Maybe you can find a nice chile ristra as well.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from the Sandia Peak Tramway
Go Southbound on Tramway Blvd until you get to Menaul Blvd, and turn right going west. Continue on Menaul until you get to Eubank and turn left, going south again. Pass over Snowheights, the next stoplight and immediately turn left when you see the big tent. You have found your destination, now go get your chile fix.
How to get to Farmers Chile Market from Albuquerque Sunport
Follow the road signs to I-25, and go northbound with the Sandia mountains on your right side. Continue north until you get to the Big I, where I-25 meets I-40. Go eastbound on I-40 towards the mountains. Continue on I-40 until you see the Eubank exit. You will want to go left onto Eubank, and proceed to go northbound to 2010 Eubank Blvd NE. Now get some spicy chile.
2022 Hatch chile season
It’s July now, and that means green chile is almost ready! Although some farmers have already started harvesting chile, we believe it isn’t up to our standards yet. We will start roasting on August 4th, 2022 starting with Medium and Hot varieties, and more to come later as more chile matures. In case you are on this page in 2024, we will start roasting on Friday August 2nd 2024!
If you can’t wait and need chile now, here is a guide to make sure you get the best chile possible, wherever you buy!
No matter where you are, the chile season is a great time to get some spicy chile peppers from the chile capital of the world, New Mexico. The season starts with a few varieties of chile which range in a medium to hot heat level. Mild is not grown in large quantities, so it generally will be available later as a result. The hotter the chile is, the more difficult it is to grow to a level where it roasts well, so extra hot and lumbre chile usually arrives two or three weeks after our first shipment. More than just that, green chile is only one side of the flavor experience you can get during the New Mexico chile season. Green chile ripens to red chile as the season progresses, and lets people have access not only to Autumn roast chile, but also fresh red chile.
Red chile
We will start getting fresh red chile in the month of September. We can roast it for those who like the sweet roasted flavor of fresh red chile. It is also great for tying your own chile ristra, and we will be glad to teach you how to do it.
As always, we will have a great variety, including special shape pequin ristras and muti-colored ristras, in addition to the traditional sandia red chile ristras. You can be sure that our prices will be competitive with any seller in Albuquerque and definitely better priced than any other chile stores in the northeast heights.
Our 45th chile roasting season
Although we have been selling Hatch chile since the early 1960s, we started roasting chile in 1977. That means this year marks our 45th year roasting chile in Albuquerque. Thank you for continuing to make Farmers Chile Market your choice for the 2022 New Mexico chile season. Follow us on Facebook if you want more information or up to date information on our chile roasting operation this year.
Chicos Food
Few foods outside of red and green chile will evoke such a comfortable and homey feeling as chicos and pinto beans. Pinto beans are a staple in New Mexican cuisine, with people getting very excited for new crop beans in late September. Chicos are another thing that New Mexicans go wild for, and are typically ready a few weeks after the corn harvest. When you pair beans and chicos together, magic happens, and it tastes far better than beans with ham hocks or any other addition, though extras like that can also be included in a bowl of chicos & beans and taste wonderful. Beyond just beans, chicos are a great ingredient to add into many dishes, particularly soups.
What are chicos?
Chicos are a wonderfully delicious New Mexican food item. They are essentially a slow roasted and dried corn. Chicos del horno as they are called refer to the method of cooking and drying. Horno means oven in Spanish, but in New Mexico, it often refers to a traditional adobe oven that you will see a lot of in Native American reservations and small farming communities in New Mexico. Adobe is a large part of our architecture in New Mexico, even down to our ovens. While cooking in the oven, it will get a very nice savory and smoky flavor profile. Adding chicos to any soup will kick the flavor up a notch, but chicos are quite hard and need to be cooked for a while to become tender. They also don’t puff up while cooking like posole does.
These hornos are made by many families in Northern New Mexico How are Chicos Made?
They are packed into hornos like the one above and roasted with the husk on, typically overnight. After that, they are removed and tied up to hand and sun dry, similar to chile ristras. After they have dried completely, they are shucked from the corn and bagged up to be used in cooking throughout the year.
How to use chicos in cooking?
Chicos are amazing for just about any strongly flavored soup. They are quite flavorful, and might overpower a more simple soup base. Be sure to soak chicos overnight, as they are VERY dense, and need time to absorb water and soften up. Chicos should be cooked for about 4 hours to achieve an ideal texture, though they are acceptable after boiling for two hours, if they were properly soaked before. Because they take much longer than most dried foods, I recommend to start boiling chicos when you begin preparing other ingredients in your soup. That way, the dense dried corn can get the extra cooking time it needs, while not slowing down your cooking process too much. The most common way we use chicos in New Mexico is cooking them with pinto beans. The flavors synergize incredibly well together, and and the sum is certainly greater than its parts.
New Mexican food
New Mexican cuisine is unique related to other cuisines like Tex-Mex and Mexican food, primarily because of the unique ingredients we possess. Although Mexico has many different chiles available, none of them really compare to our New Mexican chile. First of all, our chile is much bigger an meatier. Another thing is that we roast chile in a very different way. In Mexico, many restaurants might offer a flattop grill roasted jalapeno or serrano pepper with your meal. In New Mexico, although plenty of Mexican food trucks sell food this way, we also have a large chile roasting industry, using mostly fresh green chile from Hatch or other growing regions in the Rio Grande valleys of New Mexico.
Beyond just chile, we also have a big corn tradition similar to Mexico. Although flour tortillas are more commonly used here than our Southern neighbors, we also have a great fondness for corn in every way. Enchiladas, whether red or green, need corn tortillas because they keep a nice texture even when smothered by a chile sauce!
Corn in New Mexican food
A bowl of posole is just one of many ways that New Mexicans enjoy corn! In various central and northern regions in New Mexico, there are a good amount of corn farms, growing yellow, white, blue, and multicolored corn. We also have plenty of different local cornmeal, masa, and nixtamalized corn, posole. With all these different varieties of corn commonly used in our food, it should be no surprise that we also have our own specialty corn products like chicos as well. Few products express the depth of corn flavor as strongly as chicos however. The process to make them imparts a smoky flavor, but the sugars in the corn also reduce into savory flavors as well. It gives a really unique but very strong corn flavor.
Where to get chicos and beans in Albuquerque
During the chile season, we will have New Mexican chicos and pinto beans available at 2010 Eubank Blvd NE in Albuquerque. We will also have them on our online shop, which should be up and running by September 2022. Unlike prior years, it seems like chicos will be more readily available in New Mexico beginning this year. Pinto beans are never in short supply, and we work with the best bean farmer in the state, Ness Farms. Unfortunately, other New Mexican delights such as piñon will continue to be sparse, as the last few years have had very few cones dropping.
Other New Mexican specialties
New Mexico has many great things besides chicos, and they mix well together too! Chile ristras are a decoration that is as New Mexican as it gets. New Mexicans are proud of all things chile, and ristras a both a great decoration and a fantastic way of storing red chile for when you need it in a red chile sauce. Few things make the state come alive more than the chile season! Other than that, piñon is something we go wild for at the end of the year, when it is cold enough for developed cones to start dropping. We are very proud of chile rellenos, the stuffed and fried chile peppers, most commonly using Big Jim chile. Red chile pork tamales are another corn and chile based New Mexican dish that we are quite proud of. The red chile and pork base is also quite common for things like carne adovada and posole soup.
A chile relleno like this is something you could only find in New Mexico! Both of these dishes, although Mexican in origin, are made quite uniquely in New Mexico, even compared to Chihuahua and Sonora, the Mexican states we share borders with. These, along with many other New Mexican delicacies are due to New Mexico’s long legacy as a melting pot of many different peoples. We have a lot of tradition in our food which we are proud of. Although New Mexico isn’t the most well known state, and other Americans sometimes compliment my English, our food stands up to anywhere in terms of flavor and quality. Whether it is chicos, pinto beans, posole, red chile enchiladas, a green chile cheeseburger, or something else, we have flavor in spades. See for yourself when you visit New Mexico if you don’t believe me. We are a great destination for a fall vacation!
Buying Chicos online
In case you are from out of state and would like to try chicos in addition to other great New Mexican ingredients, you can buy them on our webshop!
Chicos
$13.99 – $24.99These chicos are made in the Northern New Mexico town of Espanola, with locally grown corn by farming families who have been doing it for generation. Chicos are very scarce, and we will often be sold out. These chicos are new crop 2024 season corn.. Chicos are a great thing to use in New Mexican […]