Flavor profile

Pasilla ("little raisin" in Spanish) chiles are dried chilaca peppers — a variety distinct from poblano and ancho — with a narrow, dark brown-black body, mild heat (1,000–2,000 Scoville), and one of the most complex flavor profiles of any dried chile. The flavor suggests raisins, licorice, dried fruit, and earth simultaneously, with a depth that enriches any sauce or braise it enters. In mole negro, pasilla contributes the dark, almost tannic depth that grounds the brighter, fruitier chiles. Toast briefly in a dry pan before rehydrating — the heat activates volatile compounds and adds a subtle nuttiness. Confusion around chile nomenclature is rampant: in Mexico, pasilla refers exclusively to dried chilacas; in California, the term is sometimes incorrectly applied to fresh poblanos, which are completely different chiles with different flavor profiles.

Flavor relationships

mole

mole

Mole complements chile peppers, pasilla (dried chilacas) by adding contrast, support, or aromatic depth to chile peppers, pasilla (dried chilacas)'s character.

sauces

sauces

Sauces complements chile peppers, pasilla (dried chilacas) by adding contrast, support, or aromatic depth to chile peppers, pasilla (dried chilacas)'s character.

mole
sauces