My local grocery store carries piquillo peppers, they have them right next to the jars of regular roasted peppers. Trader Joe’s has them right now too, but I noticed that they’re imported from Peru rather than Spain, so I can’t vouch for the quality. You can also order them online. Unlike most jarred products, these peppers don’t have a very long shelf life. I usually end up freezing whatever I have left over after the jar has been open for a week.
You can use these peppers in any way that you would normally use your standard roasted red peppers. I like to put them in pasta, on pizza, or stuff them with a variety of fillings. One of my favorite preparations is to stuff the peppers with goat cheese, raisins and pine nuts. There’s no real recipe for this – I mix softened goat cheese with some toasted pine nuts, golden raisins that have been plumped in hot water, salt and pepper. If the mixture seems too thick, you can thin it slightly with a touch of milk or cream. I fill the peppers using a piping bag – you can use a spoon, but it’s a little messier. These are good at room temperature or just slightly warmed.
Another great way to use piquillo peppers is to make a marmalade. I use the marmalade for lamb chops, but it would also be great on pork or chicken.
Makes 3-4 servings
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/2 medium onion, thinly sliced
8 piquillo peppers, thinly sliced
1 clove of garlic, crushed
2 teaspoons lemon zest
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 fresh rosemary sprig
1 teaspoon sherry vinegar
salt and pepper to taste
Heat the olive oil in a pan at medium heat. Add the onion and cook until soft and browned, 5-7 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for one minute. Add the piquillo peppers, lemon zest, lemon juice and rosemary and cook for another 5-7 minutes. Add a little water if the pan gets too dry. Remove and discard the rosemary sprig. Stir in the vinegar and season to taste with salt and pepper.
Heat the olive oil in a pan at medium heat. Add the onion and cook until soft and browned, 5-7 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for one minute. Add the piquillo peppers, lemon zest, lemon juice and rosemary and cook for another 5-7 minutes. Add a little water if the pan gets too dry. Remove and discard the rosemary sprig. Stir in the vinegar and season to taste with salt and pepper.
49 comments:
Yum, your pictures are wonderful. love stuffed peppers.
I have to confess that I never liked peppers as a kid and I haven't tried them since. I've been tempted to try roasted red peppers for a while now. Maybe I'll have to give these a shot too! Your pictures are gorgeous.
Wow.. these are lovely!
I have been wanting to make a piquillo-crab dip for years but never come across the peppers. Your dish looks delish!
I am so excited to try this. I could eat piquillo peppers by the jar and I haven't bought them in a while.
It'sa pity I can't find these peppers here... A beautiful post with gorgeous food!
Cheers,
Rosa
Wow, those dishes with piquillo peppers look like 5-star dishes to me! i especially love the stuffed one!
I always make it a point to have some of this on hand. I love cooking spanish food :)
Ooh, both dishes just look to dye. (avoiding the correct spelling :) I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for these, thanks! :)
ehhmmm... mouthwatering... want to try this.... ;) yummy picture^^
Fabulous! I am going to look for these peppers. We often buy cheese-stuffed tiny red peppers at the market, but I love your blend.
And that marmalade looks amazing.
Thank you so much for the information. I have seen this peppers in store here in Abhudhabi but I don't know How to use then now i tyr to do some thing with them. beautiful pic.
Sara:
I saw these peppers at T Joes and walked past it.I like the stuffed peppers you have here.
These sound great...they are some peppers that I haven't tried. I'll keep my eye open (well, both actually) now!
I'm with you! Once I tried piquillo peppers no other roasted peppers will do. But, for me, rather than a smoky taste, I find them very sweet. I've been buying Goya's whenever I see them in the store - they're delicious and only about $1.59/jar.
I've never tried these peppers but we're getting a Trader Joe's near us and I'll be looking for them as one of the first items I try. I love the stuffed peppers with goat cheese idea. Do you serve them as appetizers, eat them for dinner/lunch?
Both recipes looks delicious!
I love piquillo peppers - they are the main reason I drive all the way across the city to the specialty food store on a regular basis (well, that and preserved lemons).
I LOVE peppers. I don't think I have ever had piquillo peppers but I already know I would love them.
Your pictures are wonderful and I would like the stuffed variety!
Have a great day!
wow!!! so amazingly created and captured... cheers to you... :)
I like the marmalade idea. Thanks for sharing.
sara - thanks for introducing these piquillo peppers to me. i'll keep a look out for them. :)
OMG, this "Piquillo pepper marmalade" sounds so good Sara!
I have never tried piquillo peppers before but boy do I want to now - you bet I do! Both recipes looks delicious!
Rosie x
This sounds so delicious, I love peppers in general, I will have to look for these. Love your uses for them also!
How beautiful! That steak atop the maramalade looks so delicious! And the stuffed ones sound really good, too!
I adore stuffed peppers. Love the picture...colorful!
The stuffed peppers are to die for. Mmm mmm mmm.
I'm a HUGE fan of these peppers. Love what you used them in!
Did you get these at the Spanish Table? So funny, my next blog post is going to be about a spice a picked up there last week.
I can spend hours in there, just browsing around their shelves. I haven't tried these yet, but will pick up a bottle on my next visit.
Your stuffed piquillos look so great! I love them with goat cheese, and your marmalade is a great idea.
Ciao Chow Linda - I usually serve them as a tapas or appetizer, but they make a great meal with a salad too.
Allison - That's where I bought my first jar, now I buy them at my local grocery store.
Great way to showcase those peppers Sara! Those stuffed peppers look amazing!
those are so colorful and delicious! i love your pictures (and these peppers sound so good).
Thanks for sharing. I have seen those but never buy them. I know, I am a scaredy cat! Sounds like I could incorporate these in my regular recipes for my kids. I am super excited to try them!
Beautiful, I love stuffed peppers.
I'll have to be on the lookout for these... they look great stuffed with cheese like that. thanks for the tip pn freezing them too- I never think to freeze leftovers, and I'm always having roasted red peppers mold on me. :(
They're so colorful! Your photos are fantastic.
Yummy Sara! This looks great!
Thanks for introducing these great ingredients to us, I hadn't ever heard of these peppers, but now I'll look for them! The variety packed in oil sounds especially appealing to me :)
Thanks, I learned about piquillo peppers. Your dish are so nice. Love the pics.
I love piquillo peppers, too. They are so versatile, just as you've shown on your post. Plus, they're just so impossibly lovely with their bright lipstick red color.
I haven't tried these guys but love the sound of them. The ones stuffed with cheese sound marvelous.
I am in love with the pics of the stuffed peppers - I like stuffed peppers, stuffed olives, you name it, those guys are mine on the antipasti platter.
You should share some tips of taking pix !!
This is one of you truly best photos, the contrast in colors are amazing and the menu- girl you have me salivating.
Delicious! I would love to try this!
I love the color of these peppers! I love stuffed peppers, but have not used these in that way, but now I will have to try it...
TJ's piquillos are awesome!
Much beter flavorthat your standard roasted peppers.
ahem... piquillo peppers are originally from south america (peru/andean area specifically).
i know they're traditionally used in spanish cuisine but the conquistadors took a lot of native fruits and veggies from the new world back to europe. that was part of the whole colonialism issue: take their stuff, appropriate it and then dismiss the culture where it came from.
so my point is, the peruvian piquillos from TJs might be even better than those imported from spain :)
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