I’m never going back to store-bought salsa verde! This salsa verde is fresh, bright, and not too salty like those store-bought versions.
Sometimes I have to remind myself that simple is best. This salsa was originally a component in a seven-layer dip concept, but the salsa blew the dip out of the water. One part, on its own, was so much better than the other six combined. This salsa verde is so fresh and irresistible.
Then, I made it a couple more times, with the same ingredients, but each time, it tasted a little different. That’s just what happens with a simple recipe made with natural ingredients. You can pick up each tomatillo, squeeze it to gauge ripeness and peel back the husk to look for bright green skin, but you don’t know how flavorful it really is until you taste it.
Add eleven more tomatillos to the mix, plus jalapeño that may or may not be crazy spicy, plus onion and cilantro of varying freshness, and you’ll never make a batch of salsa that tastes quite like another.
Your salsa will be delicious, fresh and so much better than the salty jarred varieties. I can guarantee that much. That’s the beauty of simple recipes made with fresh, natural ingredients—they’re inevitably awesome. Don’t over think it. Trust the recipe. Adjust to suit your taste buds.
Salsa Verde Notes
Tomatillos look like small green tomatoes with husks, but they aren’t tomatoes—they’re cousins. I’ve had an easy time finding them at grocery stores lately. I tried making this salsa with raw tomatillos, but they’re borderline sour. Roasting them really brings out their best side.
Some roasted tomatillo salsas I’ve tried taste too roasted or smoky, but not this one. You can also control just how roasted those tomatillos get when you roast them yourself. I think it turned out just right with the times specified in the recipe below.
Uses for Salsa Verde
Salsa verde is great with pretty much anything that goes well with regular tomato salsa. I think it’s especially fantastic with sweet potatoes (check out these burritos and this burrito bowl) and eggs (like chilaquiles verdes, huevos rancheros, frittatas and breakfast tacos).
I also really love creamy avocado salsa verde, which you can make by throwing some diced avocado into the mix. I decided to divide my salsa in two and blend one avocado into one-half of the salsa. I’ve included instructions below.
Or, serve it alongside my favorite guacamole recipe with tortilla chips for the best of both worlds!
Please let me know how you like this recipe in the comments! I hope you love it as much as I do.
Are you building a salsa bar or taco spread? Don’t miss my favorite red salsa, guacamole, pico de gallo, corn salsa or mango salsa.
PrintHomemade Salsa Verde
- Author:
- Prep Time: 10 mins
- Cook Time: 10 mins
- Total Time: 20 minutes
- Yield: 2 ½ cups 1x
- Category: Salsa
- Method: Food processor
- Cuisine: Mexican
This roasted salsa verde recipe is so easy to make. Just roast the tomatillos and pepper(s) and blend with a few basic ingredients for the best salsa verde you’ve ever tasted! Recipe yields about 2 ½ cups salsa.
Ingredients
- 1 ½ pounds tomatillos (about 12 medium), husked and rinsed
- 1 to 2 medium jalapeños, stemmed (omit for mild salsa, use 1 jalapeño for medium salsa and 2 jalapeños for hot salsa, note that spiciness will depend on heat of actual peppers used)
- ½ cup chopped white onion (about ½ medium onion)
- ¼ cup packed fresh cilantro leaves (more if you love cilantro)
- 2 tablespoons to ¼ cup lime juice (1 to 2 medium limes, juiced), to taste
- ½ to 1 teaspoon salt, to taste
- Optional variation: 1 to 2 diced avocados, for creamy avocado salsa verde
Instructions
- Preheat the broiler with a rack about 4 inches below the heat source. Place the tomatillos and jalapeño(s) on a rimmed baking sheet and broil until they’re blackened in spots, about 5 minutes.
- Remove the baking sheet from the oven, carefully flip over the tomatillos and pepper(s) with tongs and broil for 4 to 6 more minutes, until the tomatillos are splotchy-black and blistered.
- Meanwhile, in a food processor or blender, combine the chopped onion, cilantro, 2 tablespoons lime juice and ½ teaspoon salt. Once the tomatillos are out of the oven, carefully transfer the hot tomatillos, pepper(s) and all of their juices into the food processor or blender.
- Pulse until the mixture is mostly smooth and no big chunks of tomatillo remain, scraping down the sides as necessary. Season to taste with additional lime juice and salt, if desired.
- The salsa will be thinner at first, but will thicken up after a few hours in the refrigerator, due to the naturally occurring pectin in the tomatillos. If you’d like to make creamy avocado salsa verde, let the salsa cool down before blending in 1 to 2 diced avocados (the more avocado, the creamier it gets).
Notes
Recipe adapted from Rick Bayless, Serious Eats and Simply Recipes.
Storage suggestions: This salsa verde should keep well in the refrigerator, covered, for at least 1 week. If you added avocado, it will keep well for about 3 days—be sure to press plastic wrap against the top surface to prevent oxidation.
Change it up: Feel free to substitute red tomatoes for a more traditional roasted tomato salsa.
Peggy Cockerill
Last year a friend gave me a bunch of tomatillos. I found your recipe, made it and loved it! This year I am growing my own tomatillos and I have a bumper crop! I will be canning the salsa, for sure. Thank you for this recipe.
★★★★★
Kate
You’re very welcome, Peggy! Thank you for your review.
Ken Law
How will does this recipe can ?
Kate
Unfortunately, I’m not a canning expert and didn’t create this recipe with that in mind.
ann
It cans well if you have the right amount of acid and salt. Fresh limes aren’t reliable acidity-wise so I would use citric acid instead. You can always add fresh lime juice when serving. I don’t know what your altitude is but that will affect water-bath times. Do a bit of research. I have canned my own salsa verde.
Aimee Adams
I made this for our Labor Day beach party and it was a huge hit! Thanks. I am wondering if I can can this. We have loads of tomatillos in our garden and would love to open up a jar of this in the winter.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy to hear that, Aimee! Thank you for sharing.
Jean Daigle
Seems fine to me. Just that the onions etc cook during the canning. Mine tastes great.
★★★★★
Richard
It can be frozen. I’ve had homemade salsa in the freezer for a year and it is still great.
Denise Prince
Thanks! I was looking through the comments with that exact question in mind! AWESOME! Making this today.
Crystal Carey-Heckel
Thanks. I’m not a canning girl I’m more of a freezer queen. I love salsa Verde but it’s hard to find a good hot one in Ohio. I’ll be making this!
Kacy Trojcak
Can you tell me How you canned this recipie?
Susan
So easy to make and so delicious! I made this for our taco bar potluck and it was fantastic.Thank you!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Susan! Thanks so much for the review.
t porter
I made tons of this last summer! Family and friends just love it and I grow my own tomatillos. So this summer I want to make some to last in the winter months too…looking on how to can them
…you and others mention freezing…will the cilantro get mushy this way? Or is canning an option?
★★★★★
Kate
Homegrown would be wonderful! Sounds do fresh. I’m not as versed in freezing. Sorry I can’t help you here!
Barbara
I use this recipe and it freezes beautifully. I put it in small glass or plastic freezer-safe containers. Freezing doesn’t really affect the texture of any of the ingredients but I’ve noticed it’s not as spicy after freezing.
Sandy
I’ve enjoyed reading your recipe and the comments. I make salsa verde weekly, but in large amounts. The family inhales it, I think. I decided to try growing tomatillos myself, but didn’t know where to find the seeds or plants. Chanced on a hint regarding growing tomatoes and followed it for tomatillos. When preparing the tomatillos I just saved any little bits I trimmed off, spots, bruises, etc, and planted them. They came up beautifully. No ripe fruit yet, but the plants are thriving.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Sandy for sharing and for the review!
Janice Anderson
I love salsa verde but have never made it before today. I grew my own tomatillos, onions, hot pepper and garlic. This has turned out to be the best salsa verde I’ve ever tasted! And I’ve tasted a lot! I used more onion, cilantro and garlic and no salt. So so good! Thank you so much!
★★★★★
Kate
I bet it even tastes better with fresh, homegrown produce! Thanks for sharing, Janice. I appreciate the review.
Jimmene Patterson
I have all the things to make it, my question is can I cook a meat with it after I make the salsa, meat such as pork or chicken well let’s say beef as well. really all I want to know is can I eat it like chips and salsa and cook with it all at the same time?…lol
Kate
I’m not sure. I don’t see why not. I’m a vegetarian so meat is not my area of expertise. :)
Nick
Hi Kate… with regard to your question, you can make chili verde using pork butt. I just made it using this recipe (link below) although rather than stove top, I did steps 1-6 in my Instant Pot for 25 minute and then added the pureed salsa into the uncovered pot on the saute setting. It was delicious.
Adrianne M Oglesby
Just made this and it was so yummy! Threw in a couple of fresh radishes for some added colour. Thanks for the great recipe! We loved it!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome! Thanks for your review.
YF
I’ve been making salsa like this for years, but a year or so ago I surfed up some recipes just to see how close I was getting to “mainstream” style(s). Yours was in the first few hits and was so close to mine I instantly bookmarked it. I add about a teaspoon of cumin, and sometimes add or substitute other kinds of oniony things (spring onions, shallots, leeks, etc). I also sometimes use a bit of garlic. Looking back through my bookmarks today, I noticed the invitation to comment and decided to do so.
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing! I’m glad you like it. I do love to hear your experiences so thanks so much!
Ericka Powell
I love this recipe! First time I made it, it was a hit. I had so much I was able to pop some in the crockpot with some chicken breasts and had salsa Verde chicken tacos! Making it again and adding roasted garlic. Hopefully it’s as good as the original one I made.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Ericka!
Veronica Petty
Can you freeze this recipe?
Kate
Hi Veronica! I don’t freeze all my recipes, but I believe other readers have had success. You can always search through comments to get tips from others! :)
Brenda Hall
I had several volunteer tomatillo plants in my garden this year and lots of peppers. This recipe was easy, makes a ton, and VERY tasty. My only concern was turning the tomatillos over while roasting. They pop, spewing liquid. I tried to catch them in between pops and as soon as I pull the pan out they stopped. Great recipe! Cookie & Kate is one of my Go To recipe sites.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you! I’m glad this recipe let you put use to all your tomatillos. :) I appreciate the review!
Mark
Hi C & K!
I ventured into the unknown and made the Salsa Verde, with a couple twists. I processed about 1/4 of the tomatillos to the food processor and ‘chopped’ those to the right consistency. I then added the baked goodies and blended those in. I also added 1/2 of a Serrano pepper. OMG, this was fantastic! I brought 2 pints to my friend who is Mexican and she said that it is the best Salsa Verde she had ever had! Complements are not easy to come by from her, especially with Mexican cuisine! Thank you for a great recipe and sorry I did not take a photo; next time, which is soon as my friend gave me a volcanic Molcajete to use next time! Here we go!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Mark! I appreciate you taking the time to comment about what you did. I’m glad your friend liked it!
Mark
This is a very great tasting straight forward recipe without a lot of extras which is one reason I like it, I believe that a lot of times simpler is best and this pretty much hits the mark. We eat a lot of salsa verde but like it hotter so I added a serrano pepper to it to kick it up a notch and not impact the flavor…
★★★★★
JAKaran
Thank you for the recipe. I made it today and it was super yummy!
★★★★★
Kate
Great! Thank you for your review, JAKaran.
Meredith
I made about 10 batches of this over the weekend to give away And I’m hooked! Everybody I made it for ate their whole batch that day as well! So delicious and quite sweet! Thank you so much. It was just so easy and incredibly delicious! Can’t wait to grow tomatillos again next year.
★★★★★
Kate
That is a lot of salsa! But totally worth it too!
Brooke Burns
Yum! Turned out great! Eating it warm with chips now!
★★★★★
Kate
Great! Thank you, Brooke.
Jamie W.
My husband and I just want to THANK YOU for this recipe! We make and eat it all the time. It’s AMAZING! P.S. We always make the creamy version.
★★★★★
Kate
Well, tell him he is very welcome! Thank so much, Jamie.
Sarah Grant
I love this recipe! So tasty and easy. I’m wondering if you can then preserve this salsa by boiling the filled jars in water for 20 mins to make it shelf stable. Has anyone done this? Are any changes required to the recipe?
Kate
I’m not sure, sorry to not be of more help!
Dee
Hi Kate & Cookie,
Just wondering if I could make this with tinned tomatillos, as that’s all we get in Australia (& they are hard to find!) Do you think they be “roasted” ??
Much love from Oz.
Many thanks,
Dee
Jl
As a fellow Aussie: I have grown my own! They are so easy to grow (I live in Melbourne)! I have so many to use—- they say you need to plant two bushes!!
Marissa s Bolinger
Hi! I am a huge salsa lover, but im only making this for myself. I was wondering if you could freeze this, and if so, for how long?
Kate
I would think this would freeze well for a few months, although I don’t freeze all my recipes.
Sandie
This is the best tasting tomatillo salsa I have ever tasted. It has the right amount of tang.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy to hear that, Sandie! Thanks for sharing.
Nina Stewart
I just made the salsa and it is perfect!! The Tang, the heat..wow love it
Kate
Great to hear, Nina!
Erica
This is wonderful! The only I change I made was to roast the onion along with the tomatillos and the peppers. I don’t care for the taste of raw onion, but roasted makes it a bit sweeter and less pungent. Worked for me. Thank you for the recipe.
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Erica!
Caber68
Love this salsa verde recipe! Made it last weekend and I’m making it again this weekend, my husband says it’s the best salsa he’s ever had! Thanks for the great recipe and I will be watching for new recipes.
★★★★★
Kate
Best ever, that’s awesome! Thanks for the feedback.
Julie
Made this yesterday and it turned out amazing. I’ve eaten a lot of salsas with tomatillos but never used them myself so I appreciated the simplicity of this one. Thanks for the super easy and delicious recipe! Will be making it again without a doubt.
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome! I’m glad to hear you loved it, Julie.
Elizabeth
Yum!!! I got several tomatillos at our monthly produce market. This was quick, easy, and delicious!
Kate
Great to hear, Elizabeth!
Cee
Can this be made into a green enchilada sauce?
Dave
Truly spectacular! Best salsa I’ve ever had by a long shot but that is probably because I controlled the amount of cilantro, salt, and most importantly jalapeno (I like it spicy so doubled the peppers even from her generous amount of 2/hot, I also kept the seeds in–you gotta love to sweat if you take it to that level). And roasting the jallies and tommies are the only way to go (I have known that fact for ages and yet I still always seem to forget to do it unless the recipe specifically states as such). I live in a small place and so heating up my oven isn’t ideal (in SW US so it’s hot even in the winter much of the time) so I used the broiler on my toaster oven and it worked like a charm. Thanks for sharing!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Dave! I’m happy you loved it so much. Thanks for sharing your process, too.
Traci
I made this yesterday. It was delicious! We like our salsa with a little more kick, so I added some cayenne pepper. I also did add an avocado, which made it creamier. Will make again!
★★★★
Kate
Sounds delicious, Traci! Thanks for sharing.
Jessica Dabney
Amazing! I’ll never buy store bought again! Added the avocado. Wow!
Melissa
Why not roast the onion too! I do! :-)
Kate
Thanks for sharing!
Janet Hopman
I purchase the Guacamole salsa ( medium ) but find it a bit spicier then I like, is the a product I can use to lower the spicymess. I know they make a binder item but since I have the medium I would like to dilute the spicynes if possible.
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Janet!
Rebecca
I will be making it but I can’t do hot so just to have the taste of the pepper I will only add 1/2 of the pepper.
Allan
I will be making this today. Wife and I have been wanting to make our own salsa verde for awhile.
To the question about spice. I always look for the jalapeños that have the vertical lines on the pepper, as those tend to be really spicy, or “angry”. The inverse are those peppers that are lighter shade of green and a smooth pepper. Not always the mildest, but if the pepper looks angry, it’s generally hot as well.
★★★★★
Hilda Schörghofer
Thank you for your delicious recipes and I will try to make it hummm yummy
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for your feedback, Hilda!
Jack
Just wanted to say how much I love this salsa verde recipe. I’ve been making it for a few months now, and have tweaked it according to some of the reviews below, so that I add 1 tsp cumin and roast the onions with the tomatillos. It’s just so good! I make a large batch and freeze some, so that I have it ready for a weeknight meal. Just take it out of the freezer the night before and it’s thawed by the next evening. The avocado salsa verde doesn’t seem to taste as well after being frozen, so I only freeze the regular salsa verde.
I use it in a baked chilaquiles verde breakfast casserole, enchiladas verde, and as a base for tomatillo chicken chili in winter. One of my favorite ways to use it is to add chopped green olives to it, a green olive salsa verde. It’s delicious! I could eat an entire container of that at one sitting. Thanks for the great recipe!
★★★★★
Kate
Love to hear that! Thanks for sharing all the ways you use it, Jack.
Carol
Have you ever subbed cilantro with parsley? To me cilantro tastes like soap
Kate
I don’t as I love cilantro. Parsley might be strange here. You could omit it?
Vicky
My Mexican mother-in-law approved of this salsa! It came out delicious. Just the right kick and greenness. I roasted my tomatillos so they were quite blackened on top which amped up their flavor, and I substituted one jalepeño for a serrano pepper. Wonderful recipe, will make again!
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great to hear, Vicky! Thanks for taking the time to review.
Chiquita
Love this salsa! So easy to make and so delicious. Can I use this as a base for enchilada sauce?
★★★★★
Kate
Sure! Or, you could try my enchilada sauce: https://cookieandkate.com/enchilada-sauce-recipe/
Tom
I have a large quantity of canned tomatillos that I would like to use up. Can I use them instead of the fresh? How would the recipe change, if at all?
Thanks, Tom
Jackie
I made this recipe a while ago and it was very fresh and delish! It was also super easy to make. I made less than the recipe called for since I didn’t need that much and froze the rest. I just let the frozen portion get back to room temp and it was just as good the second time around!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Jackie!
Ann
I love raw tomatillos! To me, they have a green apple flavor that gets lost after roasting. Just my take, btw. Tomatillos and jalapenos are a perfect match. Thanks for sharing!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Ann! Thanks for your review.
Billy
Made it loved it.I added one half of a red ghost pepper, that adds to the color n flavor.
★★★★★
Kate
That sounds spicy! I love it. Thanks for sharing, Billy.
DD
I just made this. Love the simplicity. It’s still warm and a bit sour which I suspect is from the tomatillos not lime juice since I only added 2T. I will add a little plain yogurt once it’s cooled. I will definitely make again but will hold off on the lime until I’ve tasted the roasted mixture!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, DD!
Gabby A
I don’t usually comment on blogs.
However, i felt i needed to leave a comment. This recipe for salsa verde is the ONLY recipe i use. The lime juice is the game changer without it the salsa becomes too sweet! I add more jalapenos because we love spicy food. I use this on my chilaquiles and my veggie enchiladas. Absolutely wonderful recipe!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m so happy you did! Thanks for sharing, Gabby!
Amy
So good. And so easy. Made pretty much as written-just added a little fresh garlic. We are obsessed. Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Amy!
Victoria Morehead
I just harvested 7 1/2 pounds of tomatillos. I’m making a lot of this salsa! I’ll be canning the majority and sharing with friends. Thank you!!!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Victoria!
Bridget Brewer
I’m interested in canning this as well. Would you please let me know what you did to can it. Thanks. Bridget Brewer
★★★★★
Erin
Hi Kate! I’ve been using your recipes for awhile but haven’t commented. I just finished making this with fresh from my garden tomatillos and peppers (I used a onion from the farmstand — now I know I should have grown onions) and it’s delicious! I grilled rather than roasted so my salsa has a wonderful smoky flavor!
Who knew tomatillo plants got so big! I have so many tomatillos and so many more are still coming. I made a raw tomatillo salsa yesterday because I didn’t have time to roast or grill. This one is so mc better!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for commenting! I’m happy you are enjoying my recipe.
Iowa Girl
I made this salsa last night for a salsa party at work and it is fantastic! Hands down the best salsa of the bunch. Not only was it easy, the tang and freshness are to-die-for. I only roasted 2 jalapenos because I prefer less heat and because my grocery store didn’t have enough tomatillos for the full recipe. Last night it definitely had heat, but today it’s mellowed into perfection. Thanks, Cookie + Kate. Can’t wait to try your other simple recipes that taste hard-won!
Shirley Zuvlis
Roasting the tomatillos is the secret! We love this recipe!
The only change we made was I roasted two cloves of garlic (with the tomatillos) and added them to the mix.
Kudos!!!
Jan
Have just made this and it’s great. I didn’t have jalapeños so I used a scotch bonnet…….I’ll never buy shop bought salsa verde again. This is going to be my go to recipe from now on. Thanks for sharing.
★★★★★
Kaitlin
Made this tonight… delicious!
★★★★★
Matt
I had a massive crop of tomatillos this year, so was searching for a fresh salsa verde recipe. I made this exactly like recipe. It is absolutely fantastic. I make it for parties and I never bring any home. My go to salsa verde.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Matt!
Amber Carlson
I had green tomatoes that I added to the tomatillos. I roasted them together and added them to the remainder of the recipe. I added more spice and sugar, just a little that took the bitter taste away. I then canned the salsa making two pints!
Amber Carlson
Alex B
Hi Kate (and Cookie),
I had never touched a tomatillo in my life before yesterday – I had to ask the store attendant where they were in the grocery store! They were sticky and weird but WOW! This recipe is amazing! So simple too! Never should have doubted because all your recipes are amazing. I’m hoping one of your commenters suggests how adjust the recipe to safely can this recipe to make it shelf stable.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy you tried it and liked it, Alex!
Thomas
Stellar recipe. Quick, easy, better, cheaper, and healthier than store bought by a mile. Well done.
richard morgan
Awesome and easy
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Richard!
Liz Cavanaugh
I’ve been wanting to make Salsa Verde for awhile and I’m so glad I finally did! Wow! This was better than my local taqueria. Thank you for this simple and delicious recipe! Saving for next time.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy you did too, Liz! Thank you for your review.
Charles Fisher
Delicious!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Charles!
Susi
Fabulous!! Made half the batch with avocado. Half regular.
★★★★★
Desiree
I made this using a whole onion, 3 jalapenos, 3 cloves of garlic all roasted in addition to the tomatillas. I used all the other ingredients listed in the original recipe. It is, by far, the BEST salsa I have ever had. So fresh and DELISH!!! Thank you for making it so easy!!!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing how you made this, Desiree!
Elizabeth Simpson
The best recipe ever. I changed up a few things such as using Serrano chilies we like heat. I roasted 4 serranos and 1.5 onions with the tomatillos and garlic. I then added 3 serranos and 1/2 of a raw onion to the roasted veggies as well as a few raw garlic cloves pulsed in the food processor and added the juice of 3 limes. Will make this always.
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear, Elizabeth!
Peter Field
Made it. It is winter here south of Chicago, but I love grilling in the winter months. Fired up the charcoal along with mesquite chips. Peeled husks off tomatillo’s cut an onion in half and used half a head of garlic. Seeded serrano’s and jalapeno’s, grilled all the veggies. Roasted everything, took off the grill, let it sit outside to cool. Blended it all together, nice thick green salsa. Delicious!!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Peter!
Carol
I have never had salsa verde before. I made this and I’m not sure if I like green salsa? It was kinda snotty and not much flavor? Is it supposed to be like that or did mine not turn out right?
Kate
Hi Carol, this should have a lot of flavor. I’m not sure what you mean by snotty. It could be the inputs you used just were lacking in overall flavor to start with. Sorry you didn’t love this one!
Alena Clark
This was amazing – my husband loved it and it’s one of my favorite recipes on the blog!
★★★★★
Meredith
I used a pablano pepper, left out the onion, added extra cilantro and a hit of garlic infused oil. It was amazing.
★★★★★
Rennie
An easy recipe to make. I also roasted the onion and half a lime. I added poblanos and a jalapeño, also roasted under the broiler. This recipe freezes well too.
★★★★★
Laurie A
Made your recipe today to stave off the boredom that has engulfed us all! It was a big hit – we ate 1/2 & froze the rest in an airtight freezer bag. Will update on how well it faired after being frozen once we get back to it!
★★★★★
Rebecca
So right of the bat, yes to this recipe!! We have a jarred salsa verde that we buy on the regular that we love but it’s $6 for a 16 oz jar! A couple of things I did…I roasted my onion along with the tomatillos and peppers (I just cut thick slices from half an onion). I like the roasted flavor of the onion, but I actually think I’d up the onion next time (there will definitely be a next time). Mine definitely needed two jalapenos and I still felt like it could have been a little spicier (probably my preference, or the jalapenos we get in the PNW, but I think they mostly come from Mexico). I may add a third jalapeno or sub one for a spicier chile next time. I started with the juice of one lime (about 2 tbsp) and that was more than enough. The acidity from the tomatillos and the lime juice was almost too much. I think I might start with just a tbsp next time and adjust. The salt amount recommended was about right (meaning I only had to add a little more, since I almost always have to significantly increase the amount of salt in a given recipe). The salsa thickened nicely as it cooled. Love the flavor added by charring the tomatillos, peppers, and onions. Super solid recipe.
★★★★
Tanya Raz
Try serranos, they are a bit spicier sometimes and the flavor is so much better than jalopenos in my opinion. Leaving some of the seeds in would also kick it up a notch. My friend from Mexico suggests using chile de arbol as it adds a really nice smoky flavor and is medium spicy. I didn’t add any lime, and typically not necessary as the tomattillos are so acidic.
★★★★
Susan Alves-Rankin
I have now made this salsa verde 2 nites in a row. I will never buy again. It is delishish! Thank you!
★★★★★
Dana
EXCELLENT RECIPE! Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Dana!
Hayley
My mom and I made this together this week and it was a fun easy cooking project. We both loved it. The storebought salsa verde I’ve been buying is good but what I love about this one is it’s SOO much thicker! The one I buy is so thin it’s almost a salad dressing! This is super thick, perfect for scooping & dipping! I’m glad I decided to try making it from scratch.
★★★★★
Joni
Ugh! I forgot limes and it is a million degrees outside! Can I use lemons?
Kate
Hi Joni! Try your salsa without the lime first—tomatillos are naturally tangy and you might think it’s great without! Otherwise, I’d probably do a tiny splash of white wine vinegar if you have it, or maybe lemon juice would be nice—just start small and add to taste. Hope that helps!
Lisa
I’m not sure what went wrong here. I had to dig out pieces of the Tomatillo skins from my food processor. I processed for a while but they just wouldn’t break down. Otherwise it’s beautiful and tasty, still a little sour to me even after roasting. Maybe the tomatillos were too green?
★★
Kate
Hi Lisa! That’s odd. I’m sorry to hear that! Do you have issues with your food processor with other things? It could have been the power of the food processor or to what you said, just not ripe enough.
Lisa
No, it’s a great processor, I’ve never experienced any problems. Maybe the tomatillos were just too green. Not sure.
Janice
Just making the green salsa using home grown tomatillos. Tasting super!
Not quite green as I use red onions, but so tasty and fresh nonetheless
Thank you from England!
★★★★★
Lori M
I have an Intolerance to onions, can I leave them out?
Kate
Hi Lori, I guess you could, but I can’t guarantee the result. The onions provide a nice flavor here.
TONYA SAWYER
OMG
This was super easy to make as i just made a very small batch using only 6 tomatillos. I will never buy this in a jar again!!!!
★★★★★
Suzanne
Thanks so much for a great and super easy salsa verde recipe! Quick and fresh and perfect every time!
★★★★★
Tanya Raz
Try serranos, they are a bit spicier sometimes and the flavor is so much better than jalopenos in my opinion. Leaving some of the seeds in would also kick it up a notch. My friend from Mexico suggests using chile de arbol as it adds a really nice smoky flavor and is medium spicy. I didn’t add any lime, and typically not necessary as the tomattillos are so acidic.
★★★★
Jeff W
Hi Tanya, just curious, have you tried this recipe with roasted Hatch Chilis? Its the heart of the season right now, and for my wife and I, its the only way to go. Hatch come in so many heat levels that I’m sure you can find the heat level you desire. Right now I just finished making a batch of this salsa with the Hatch chilis after roasting and freezing about 25 lbs of the peppers (season only lasts so long and that’s the end of September). I have to have my fix year round and this is the only way I can guarantee that there will be some in the freezer by this time next year. For the salsa I also roast some onion with the tomatillos as well as about 3 good sized garlic pods and throw them all in the blender with the chilis and cilantro. Yumm, enchiladas verdes tomorrow.
★★★★★
Becky W
Made this with our homegrown tomatillos and nadapenos. Best thing I’ve ever tasted. I could eat this with a spoon and be so happy. I’m growing an acre of everything next year.
★★★★★
Sara
This is amazing – I didn’t have a jalapeño, so I subbed in a soaked, dried chili. Really tasty with the empanadas I had on hand.
★★★★★
April
We have tomatillos coming out our ears this year! Yours is the third salsa verde recipe I’ve made and it is my favorite! The first was with boiled tomatillos and avocado, and it was too mild and like a version of guacamole with filler. The next one also was roasted, but not the peppers. I think roasting both the tomatillos and peppers is what makes this so bright L, sassy and delicious! Thank you for sharing!
★★★★★
Margaret K.
Tastes bright and fresh, thick but not too thick, and looks beautiful!
★★★★★
sandy
Not bad did you leave skins on peppers ?? how about seeds in peppers ?
★★★
Kate
Hi Sandy, I’m sorry I don’t understand your question. 1 ½ pounds tomatillos (about 12 medium), husked and rinsed
1 to 2 medium jalapeños, stemmed (omit for mild salsa, use 1 jalapeño for medium salsa and 2 jalapeños for hot salsa, note that spiciness will depend on heat of actual peppers used). You can omit the seeds if you like.
Laura
I made this with 1.5 jalepenos and it was a little too spicy for me on its own, but once cooked with the sweet potato and beans enchiladas it was perfect. I also broiled the onion as well as the tomatillos and jalapenos
★★★★
Laurie A
Delicious! So fresh and vibrant. I had a huge tomatillo crop this year from just two plants. The biggest obstacle was the size difference in my tomatillos, but I watched them closely during the broiling process and adjusted accordingly. Did a double batch and froze half.
★★★★★
al
I’ve been looking for a roasted salsa verde recipe & this one sounds delicious, thank you! Can you tell me if this could be frozen when making multiple batches?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi! Salsa typically freezes well. I haven’t tried it myself, but I don’t see why not.
al
okee dokee i will give it a try!
i quadrupled the recipe & it turned out great
thanks again!
★★★★★
Kelly C.
I made this the first time last month, to go w/ the sweet potato and black bean enchiladas. We found the whole dish delicious. So I’m making the salsa for the second time. Still just as delicious!! No substitutions either time, which is a record for me. :) Oh, and I’m making it the second time so we can put it on the enchiladas again. Thank you for the recipes; I’m working toward making more of our meals vegetarian and these are a new favorite!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you loved it! Thank you for your review, Kelly.
Richard
Similar to what I make (tomatillos are in the oven RIGHT NOW). I add garlic. I roast the onions too. Our tomatillos are home grown – a great investment!
Kate
Sounds delicious!
Ellen
I riffed on this to make a Turkey verde chili with Thanksgiving leftovers. I roasted the onion, garlic, tomatillos and jalapeños a 425. Then proceeded to make the salsa as directed. It was good but needs more salt to make the flavors pop. I threw that in with the chopped Turkey and a can of roasted chilies, a teaspoon of cumin, and served over rice. Easy and Delicious.
★★★★
Judy Stewart
Dear Kate, I have tried your recipe and others. I just can not make good salsa verde. Each time there is a thick sticky taste. One time too garlicky, but all of them have that sticky taste. I have never rinsed the tomatillos! Could that be my problem?
Mini mouse
Delicious! I added 3 jalapeños because we like it spicy!
★★★★★
Kate
Love it! Thank you for sharing, Mini.
Joni Graham
If I add avocado how long will it keep please?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi! Avocado tends to brown quickly and not sure about adding avocado to this.
Katie Bult
Yummy, have made salsa verde before but used serrano peppers, this is really good. Used tomatillos and jalapenos from my garden will be making lots more with this receipe, thank you for sharing!!
Ashley Drohan
I usually roast my peppers then peel off the skin before blending. How would this impact the flavor if I left the burnt skin on?
Kate
Hi Ashley, it adds a nice chard flavor, but if you prefer to take it off that will work too.
Andrea
Hi, I am in Australia and I have never seen tomatillos what could I substitute this with?
Thanks Andrea
Kate
Hi! You need tomatillos to make this recipe. I would suggest my best red salsa recipe!
Larry
I’ve made this recipe several times and am going to make another batch today. The only change I made was to add several cloves of garlic. I could eat garlic ice cream. Thanks Kate.
Jenica Egan
My salsa turned out sour. Was this because the tomatillos were not ripe?
Kate
Hi! I’m sorry to hear that. Sounds like you may have not had great tomatillos.
km
I make this all the time. Love it! I never knew that I was roasting the onion and that was why it was too sweet!
I do add two garlic cloves to the tomatillo jalepeno broil, but it’s perfect as is.
thank you!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, KM!