Salsa Verde or “Green Sauce”
Salsa verde is a staple in every Mexican kitchen. It’s great for making enchiladas verdes or for topping carne asada tacos. We also think it is great on eggs. It is a simple to make, versatile salsa.
Use it on just about anything. The taste of fresh homemade salsa puts the bottled salsas to shame. Give this one a try!
What to Expect From this Recipe
Boiled Salsas vs. Roasted Salsas
There are generally two ways that Mexican salsas are prepared, with boiled ingredients or fire roasted / pan roasted ingredients. These two methods create distinctive flavor profiles.
This is a recipe for a classic boiled salsa.
Boiled salsas tend to be milder in flavor where the taste of the vegetables are out in front. Roasted salsas are bolder in flavor where the smoky flavors from charring add a deeper element.
A Healthy Recipe
Mexican food gets a bad rep for being greasy, heavy and, unhealthy but stop and think for a second. Salsa is nothing but concentrated vegetables.
It’s the tastiest way ever to get your daily veggies. You can eat as much as you want guilt-free. It’s rare that your favorite food can be the healthiest food too. So enjoy.
How to Make Salsa Verde
Our Salsa verde recipe is really easy to make and the ingredients are available at almost every supermarket.
We prepared ours with tomatillos which look like small green tomatoes and are covered in a papery husk. You can also use larger green tomatoes, called tomates verdes. Both make excellent salsas.
The recipe calls for three serrano peppers but you can use fewer if you want to reduce the heat. We like it on the hot side. You can substitute jalapeño peppers for the serranos The flavor won’t be as bright and the heat will be milder but it will still be tasty.
HOW TO MAKE SALSA VERDE | 1-MINUTE VIDEO
Prep the Tomatillos First
First, remove the papery husks from the tomatillos.
Then rinse them under warm water to remove the sticky residue.
The preparation is really simple. Add all of the ingredients to your pot except the cilantro and just cover with water.
Bring to a boil then reduce the heat to medium and cook for 10 minutes. Notice how the ingredients change color. This lets you know that the ingredients are fully cooked.
For the next step, blend the ingredients with the cooking water for 30 seconds to 1 minute. You can use a blender or food processor for good results.
When blending, you want the salsa to keep a little bit of texture. It shouldn’t be liquified. Use the picture of the prepared salsa to guide you. Notice the bright green color.
The Salsa Making Secret
The next thing you are going to do is fry the salsa. This is the magic step that is used in making almost all cooked salsas in Mexico. Do not skip this step. It gives a superior result.
Heat two tablespoons of oil on high.
Slowly pour the blended salsa into the pan. This develops a deeper richer tasting salsa. This step is called “seasoning.”
Reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer for 20 minutes.
The Importance of Salt
Add 1 ½ tsp. salt to your salsa stir well and taste. You will probably want to add more. The salsa is perfectly salted when it is just a little bit too salty when tasted by alone.
Remember that you will be adding salsa to your food to season it and once mixed with the food the salt in the salsa will bring out the flavor of the food without seeming overly salty.
Notice how the salsa darkens in color when cooked.
Now you have the perfect salsa verde!
Problems with your salsa? How to Fix It
Sometimes your salsa doesn’t come out exactly to your liking. Keep in mind that the ingredients are all-natural products and can vary in freshness and flavor due to seasonal differences and how the ingredients have been handled. One time when you buy peppers they may be super hot and the next time you buy the exact same pepper is very mild.
Here are a few methods to correct your salsa:
- Too runny? Simmer until it has reduced to the desired consistency.
- Too thick? Add water 2 tablespoons at a time until the desired consistency is reached.
- Too hot or acidic? Add only one of the following to reduce heat or acidity: ½ teaspoon baking soda, 1 to 2 teaspoons sugar, 1 to 2 teaspoons agave syrup.
- Too bland? Try adding more salt ¼ of a teaspoon at a time until you get the desired taste.
- Pale color? Try simmering for 10 extra minutes to deepen the color.
When you make adjustments, add ingredients a little at a time. A small modification can have a surprisingly large effect. Some people like to add a squirt of lime juice.
What are you going to use it on?
Chicken enchiladas, tortilla chips, pork, chops, chilaquiles, burritos, and many more dishes pair well with this salsa. Be adventurous.
Salsa Verde Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 ¼ lb. tomatillos or green tomatoes
- 1 white onion
- 4 serrano chiles
- 4 cloves garlic
- 12 sprigs cilantro
- 2 tbsp. cooking oil
- 1 ½ tsp. salt + to taste
Instructions
- Remove the papery husks from the tomatillos and rinse to remove the sticky residue.
- Quarter the onion.
- Add all of the ingredients except the cilantro and salt to a large pot and just cover with water.
- Bring the water and ingredients to a boil and then simmer for 10 minutes.
- Blend the cooked ingredients and the cilantro with the cooking water until smooth. (About 30 seconds)
- Heat 2 tablespoons of cooking oil in the pot.
- Pour the blended salsa back into the pot with the hot cooking oil.
- Reduce the heat and simmer for 20 minutes.
- Add the salt and adjust if necessary.
Notes
- Too runny? Simmer until it has reduced to the desired consistency.
- Too thick? Add water 2 tablespoons at a time until the desired consistency is reached.
- Too hot or acidic? Add only one of the following to reduce heat: ½ teaspoon baking soda, 1 to 2 teaspoons sugar, 1 to 2 teaspoons agave syrup.
- Like it hot? You do not have to seed the serrano chiles. You can seed them if you want to reduce the heat of the salsa.
- You can substitute jalapeño chiles for the serranos but the flavor won’t be as bright but it will still be tasty.
- The salsa will keep in the refrigerator for 3 days.
- This salsa freezes very well. Make a double batch so that you always have some on hand.
- You may also know this salsa as green salsa, green sauce, verde salsa, salsa verda, or tomatillo salsa.
Nutrition
Alternate Names & Common Misspellings
You may also know this salsa as green salsa, green sauce, verde salsa, salsa verda, verde sauce, or tomatillo salsa. Whatever you call it, it’s still delicious :)
Julie says
Can this recipe be canned?
Sharon Alvarez says
This is so good. The best green salsa I have tried. I do it this way and sometimes in place of the salt I use Knorr chicken bouillon. So good. Do not skip.the seasoning part it enhancers the flavor so.much.
sala verde cambe says
Muchas gracias x la ayuda, me ha sido de gran utilidad.
Robert says
(Seasoning) chances the salsa verde from ok to the bomb! Hot oil make everything better.
Dianne Leon says
This recipe makes the best salsa. I garden, so l’ve been making extra large batches of this for a couple of years. I also use this salsa for chicken and shrimp enchilada sauce and add to many soup recipes to add flavor. I freeze in quart bags to use through out the year. Thank you so much 💓
Bruce says
I had fun making this salsa and it tastes great. The recipe says to add all the ingredients except the cilantro to the pot. Might want to say “except for the cilantro and the oil.” Adding water to just cover the ingredients is confusing since several of them float. Maybe specify a certain amount to start with and then adjust it later, if needed.
Tyler says
It isn’t super important how much you cook with even with “too much water” the food still cooks fine and you can pour it off at the end. I fill until everything is just a bit floating and can move in the pot.
About half way through simmering though i sort of stirred what was in the pot and flipped a few tomatillos that had some bright green spots on top still.
I am curious though how much of the cooking water was in the blender. Mine was 4 cups and that felt like too much.
I used a 2.8qt pot, i think, to cook the ingredients.
Next time I will pour out some amount of water and try with less in the blender. Maybe the recipe author can chime in though to eliminate a couple rounds of guess and check.
Caren barnes says
Hi I want to make and substitute for 2 jars of ready made salsa . How much sauce is there in 1 recipe ?
Pat Seyfferle says
When do we add the cilantro? And if cilantro tastes like soap to me, can I substitute parsley plus lime juice? Or something else?
BILL HOOD says
Please, Please, PLEASE take all the resource-sucking ads off your site.
HollyB says
We grow our own tomatoes and serrano pepper here in our North Louisiana yard garden. This is my second time to make your Salsa Verde recipe. First time I was too scared of it being too spicy, so I only used 2 seeded serranos. This time I followed the recipe exactmente! It is SO GOOD, and So Easy! Thank you very, very much. And keep up the delicious “work! “
HollyB says
Tried to type “Tomatillos” -NOT tomatoes, dang autocorrect!
BikeWalkBakeBarb says
How much is a “sprig” of cilantro as you would use it? I made this once already and loved it. Sort of guessed at the cilantro quantities and kept it a bit low, since not everyone in my household loves it when it’s strong. Making it again (my tomatillo plants are growing like the plant in Little Shop of Horrors, but yay for that!) and thought I’d ask.