Smoke Molasses
Chipotles in Piloncillo
The chile chipotle is the soul of this jar — chīlpōctli in Nahuatl, “smoked chile”, the mature red jalapeño of Veracruz and Puebla after seventy-two slow hours over pecan, oak or mesquite smoke. The transformation is total: a green-grass jalapeño becomes leather-dark, oil-rich, deeply phenolic, carrying the canonical Mexican smoke aromatic that no other chile delivers. Two grades make their way to the kitchen — meco (oak-tan-grey, large, dry, the more intense) and morita (smaller, mulberry- brown, with a fruity-resinous edge). The chipotle is the lead here, not the seasoning. The cane sugar is the slow-cooking medium, softening the dried flesh into a spoonable conserve and converting to dark caramel as it goes; onion lends allium body; bay laurel threads a green-aromatic Mediterranean signal that grounds the Mexican smoke; sea salt structures; citric and ascorbic acid stabilise. The result is dense, dark-mahogany, three-layered — smoke first, then sweet, then heat — with each layer holding the next.
Nutrition declaration
Per 100g
- Energy: 344 kJ / 82 kcal
- Fat: 0.8 g, of which saturates 0.1 g
- Carbohydrates: 15 g, of which sugars 15 g
- Protein: 1.6 g
- Salt: 2.8 g
Storage and format
Glass jar · 325 g Store at +14°C in a cool, dry place, away from direct light. Once opened, refrigerate and consume within 30 days
Ingredients and allergens
Water, onion, chipotle (14.8%), cane sugar, sea salt, citric acid, vitamin C, and bay leaf.
Gluten-free · Free from mandatory declaration allergens.
Pairing / How to enjoy it
Slow-roast pork shoulder — glaze in the last hour of cook · Manchego viejo from Pérez Arquero. Black bean stew with chorizo — the bass-note teaspoon at the end. Cream cheese on rye toast. Hot grilled pineapple with crema fresca and a flake of fleur de sel. Grilled corn on the cob with crema and lime — Mexican street canon. Mezcal espadín añejo, Tempranillo from Toro, Pedro Ximénez Reserva, Islay single-malt.
Origin and Producer
Spain, Miapuccia.