Smoky Homemade Chili Paste

Make chili paste as spicy as you like by featuring a single variety of fully ripened red chilies or a mix of heat and color. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Homemade hot sauces have become all the rage, because they’re simple to make, last for months, and customizable to an ever-widening variety of chilies at a range of heat levels. I included several in my pickling cookbook, from long-fermented red hot sauce and garlicy sriracha, to quick green and red vinegar-based hot sauces with red chilies and tomatillos, to thicker spicy pastes popular in Southeast Asia and North Africa. A home-smoked chili paste, the result of my first exploration into making hot sauce, didn’t make it into the book, but I share it this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon.

Like other hot sauces, you can make this paste as spicy as you like. My batch varies every year because I typically make it as the growing season is winding down. I usually grow a half-dozen types of hot peppers, from mild pepperoncini to spicy Thai chilies, and whatever is left on the plants in small enough quantities not to pickle or dry on their own ends up mixed together on a grill tray over a smoke tube.
Learn to make Smoky Homemade Chili Paste

Home-Smoked Chili Peppers

Smoke vegetables in a charcoal grill using briquettes and wood chips or in a charcoal or gas grill using a smoke tube and hardwood pellets. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
When I first explored the idea of smoking food at home, I thought I was going to need to spend several hundred dollars on a large pellet smoker. I quickly learned that the typical smoker, while ideal for smoking meats, runs too hot for the food I was interested in smoking: vegetables, nuts, and especially cheese. So George and I started playing with the idea of smoking vegetables, like homegrown chili peppers, in a charcoal kettle grill.

As I explain this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, our first smoking setup was affordable and low-tech but finicky. It was challenging to light just a handful of briquettes in a charcoal chimney, and we had to replenish the wood chips regularly. With charcoal heat, it could also be a challenge to keep the temperature low enough to smoke cheese, especially in summer. We loved the results but kept searching for a more straightforward process.

Then I stumbled onto smoke tubes, inexpensive perforated cylinders that hold hardwood pellets and burn slow and low for hours. We’ve been using one for the last year of home-smoked food projects, and this summer I tested several additional brands and sizes for The Spruce Eats. Keep an eye on my work for that website to read my reviews when the product roundup goes live.
Learn to make Home-Smoked Chili Peppers