Non-spicy substitute for chili peppers when making a Thai curry paste from scratch
I'm making a green Thai curry paste from scratch. I'm very happy with the recipe, and I've made it with much success in the past, but today I am cooking for someone who can't take much heat. Or well, only very little; I can put a single capsicum annuum ('standard' red chili pepper?) in a dish for 4, let's say.
But the recipe calls for 3 tablespoons of green bird's eye chilies. That's definitely going to be too hot, even if I de-seed and trim the insides. However, a significant part of the paste comes from these (there's about 11 Tbsp of ingredients in total, so 1/3th to 1/4th is the chilies) and leaving them out entirely probably doesn't do it any favour.
So my question is, what would you replace them with? I could get a green bell pepper, but I imagine that'd be quite watery. I also have access to jalapenos, which are a bit milder (and green, as far as that matters) but I imagine could still get quite spicy. Or perhaps I do leave them out after all. What would you go for?
Best Answer
Let me take a wild swing -
I think trying to generate the volume required by using jalapeños would be too hot for your friend & you're right that a regular capsicum/bell pepper wouldn't have enough flavour to water ratio. Also 'bell peppers' don't taste like chillies.
How about Hungarian or Banana peppers?
Now, this is quite a variable & may depend on where you live as to which type you can access. Here in North London I can choose from 3 varieties without going more than 50m from my front door - from the the fat 'triangular' ones like giant fresnos with very smooth skin which are very cool, to the skinny ones about 20cm long with a 'lumpy' skin, which would be the type I would aim for.
Though they are generically known as Hungarian, [& of course, could actually be grown anywhere] they are likely to be commonly found in Turkish stores - local availability of course not guaranteed.
They taste like 'chilli' not like 'bell peppers' but they really don't have too much kick to them. They would generate the flavour without too much heat, but not sufficient colour, so you could perhaps trick some extra coriander [cilantro] into your paste to deepen the green.
From comments - though I wouldn't bother for myself, you can keep the heat down still further by not using the seeds or inner 'whiter' membranes.
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What can you use instead of Thai Chili Peppers?
The best substitute for Thai chili peppers are cayenne peppers. As an alternative, you can also substitute Thai chili peppers with Bird's eye chilies, malagueta peppers, or habanero peppers.How do you make chili paste without chili?
I suggest combining the tomato paste with either a few dashes of hot sauce, or with a teaspoon or two of chili powder or crushed red pepper flakes. Mix them together and you have a spice filled chili paste. Or, process the tomato paste with chopped hot peppers in a food processor.What can I substitute for hot chili paste?
6 Best Substitutes For Chili PasteHow do you make spice without peppers?
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Answer 2
I do this a lot (mostly red curries though) using oven-dried bell peppers, or the variety that is sold here as "sweet pointy peppers". To dry the peppers, I halve and deseed them and put them in a convection oven at 90°C for about 3 hours. They don't have to be dehydrated completely, just semi-dry (like sun dried tomatoes) is enough.
Answer 3
You should get our hands on Kashmiri Red Chilli which is easily available in powder form at Indian stores, however it shouldn't be impossible to find whole dried ones. It has the typical red chilli flavor without any considerable heat.
Alternatively, you can try tomato puree but it will not tasye the same.
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