Oaxaca, Michoacan, Mexico

Pasilla chile

1k-2.5k

Scoville heat

low but complex

15-25 cm

pod length

long wrinkled black

1571

recorded by Hernandez

Mexican court physician

6000 BP

domesticated

central Mexican highlands

Profile

Pasilla is the dried form of the chilaca pepper, a long, slender Capsicum annuum cultivar that turns from dark green to near-black on the plant and then, once sun-dried, develops the deeply wrinkled skin and leathery flex that earned it the diminutive pasilla, from the Spanish pasa meaning raisin. The fresh chilaca is thin-fleshed, ten to twenty-five centimetres long and barely two centimetres wide, with a gentle curve and a pointed tail. Heat sits between 1,000 and 2,500 Scoville units, which is to say barely more than a mild poblano -- the point of this chile was never capsaicin but rather complexity of flavour after drying. The dried pod is almost black, supple enough to bend without snapping when properly stored, and carries a flavour architecture of dried plum, raisin, cocoa, licorice and a whisper of tobacco that no other dried chile in the Mexican pantry quite duplicates. In Oaxacan cuisine pasilla is one of the holy trinity of dried chiles for mole negro alongside chilhuacle negro and mulato; in central Mexico it anchors salsas borrachas and enriches adobos. Confusion reigns outside Mexico because pasilla and ancho are frequently mislabelled in US retail, but the two are botanically and culinarily distinct: ancho is a dried poblano, broad and heart-shaped, where pasilla is the dried chilaca, narrow and elongated.

Origin

Oaxaca, Michoacan, Mexico.

Mexico

Oaxaca, Michoacan · Michoacan highlands (Mexico)

Process

01February–March

Seedling nurseries

Chilaca seeds are started under shade cloth in the Bajio; 8-week-old plants move to fields before the May rains.

02May–June

Transplant and flowering

Rows 80 cm apart on terraced highland plots 1,800–2,100 m above sea level; white star flowers open within six weeks.

03August–October

Green harvest for chilaca

Glossy dark-green pods 20 cm long picked fresh for rajas and soups; what is left on the plant goes black for pasilla.

04November

Field ripening

Pods darken from green-black to blackish-brown on the plant; sugars concentrate and skins wrinkle as water leaves.

05December–January

Sun-drying on petates

Pods laid on reed mats for 10–14 days of winter sun; wrinkled skin turns matte black with violet highlights.

06Your jar

Whole, toast before use

Keep whole in cloth or glass. Toast 20 seconds per side on a dry comal, then soak in hot water to rebuild the sauce.

Inside the berry

The molecules that make it taste like Kampot — and not like anything else.

GC-MS of pasilla negro shows modest capsaicinoids (1,000–2,500 SHU) and a surprising concentration of 2-methoxy-3-isobutylpyrazine, beta-damascenone and guaiacol — the dried-plum, cocoa and gentle smoke signature that makes mole work.

2,000

Scoville

average heat

0.03%

Capsaicinoids

of dry flesh

13%

Moisture

after sun-drying

80+

Volatile compounds

identified

Volatile compound profile

  • Capsaicin55.0%

    Burn in the throat — the low pasilla heat.

  • Dihydrocapsaicin30.0%

    Longer-lasting cousin — the slow finish.

  • 2-methoxy-3-isobutylpyrazine6.0%

    Green pepper, earthy — pasilla's bass note.

  • Beta-damascenone4.0%

    Dried plum, stewed apple — the raisin signal.

  • Guaiacol3.0%

    Sweet smoke, bacon-tobacco — the comal print.

  • Furaneol2.0%

    Strawberry jam, caramel — softens the bitter.

Versus other peppers

PepperCapsaicinoidsOil
Pasilla de Mexico (Michoacan)
Highland field · benchmark raisin-cocoa profile
2,000 SHU0.03%
Pasilla de Oaxaca (smoked)
Mixe Sierra · oak-smoked, three times hotter
4,500 SHU0.06%
Pasilla Bajio
Guanajuato · cleaner, less smoky
1,800 SHU0.03%
Chilaca (fresh green)
Pre-dry stage · grassy, pepper-like
1,200 SHU0.02%
Chile negro (US trade)
California label · same chilaca, different name
2,200 SHU0.03%

Cuisines

How the world cooks with it.

3 signature dishes

Pasilla is the bass note of mole negro and mole poblano — toasted on a comal until fragrant, then soaked and blended with ancho and mulato, plus chocolate, nuts and dried fruit.

  • Mole negro de Oaxacagrade: pasilla-oaxaca

    Seven-chile mole with pasilla, chilhuacle, mulato, ancho — blackened tortilla for depth.

  • Mole poblanograde: pasilla-mexico

    Puebla state dish — pasilla supplies the dark raisin layer behind the chocolate.

  • Pipian negrograde: pasilla-mexico

    Pumpkin-seed sauce with pasilla and hoja santa — Yucatan classic.

Around the world

What it's called, from Phnom Penh to Palermo.

10 languages
🇸🇦 Arabicar

فلفل باسيا

filfil basiya

🇨🇳 Chinesezh

帕西亚辣椒

paxiya lajiao

🇬🇧 Englishen

Pasilla chile

🇫🇷 Frenchfr

Piment pasilla

🇩🇪 Germande

Pasilla-Chili

🇮🇳 Hindihi

पसिया मिर्च

pasiya mirch

🇮🇹 Italianit

Peperoncino pasilla

🇯🇵 Japaneseja

パシージャ唐辛子

pashiija tougarashi

🇵🇹 Portuguesept

Pimenta pasilla

🇪🇸 Spanishes

Chile pasilla

Seasonality

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Peak dryingField ripeningStored, available

Pairings

Protein

  • Duck breast
  • Pescado a la talla

Plant

  • Roasted tomato
  • Huitlacoche

Story

Frequent questions

Yes. Chilaca is the fresh green pod; sun-dried on the plant or on mats it becomes pasilla (little raisin); US markets often sell it as chile negro. Do not confuse with pasilla de Oaxaca, which is a different Mixe chile that happens to share the name.