HotPepperIndex
Capsicum annuum

Ancho

Puebla, Mexico
Mild
Also known asAncho Pepper · Ancho Chile · Chile Ancho · Dried Poblano · Ancho Chile Pepper
Scoville
0SHU
Heat0%
1k–2k SHU · PepperScale, Specialty Produce, Wikipedia (Poblano)

The Ancho Pepper is the dried ripened red poblano chile, one of the cornerstone dried chiles in authentic Mexican cuisine. It delivers mild heat paired with a rich, complex sweet-earthy flavor featuring raisin, coffee, and subtle chocolate notes that shine in moles and sauces.

Ancho peppers are large, flat, heart-shaped dried pods averaging 4–6 inches long and 3–4 inches wide, with deeply wrinkled, leathery skin ranging from dark reddish-brown to almost black (mahogany). They are produced by allowing poblanos to fully ripen to red before sun-drying. The flesh is semi-thick and chewy when rehydrated. Heat is mild (1,000–2,000 SHU).

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Backstory

Ancho chiles originate in Puebla, Mexico—the same region that gives the fresh poblano its name. Poblanos are traditionally harvested green for fresh use (chiles rellenos), but when left to ripen to deep red and then sun-dried over weeks, they transform into the broad, flat ancho (“wide” in Spanish). This ancient Mesoamerican preservation method concentrates flavors into a sweet, earthy profile prized for centuries in Mexican gastronomy, most famously as the backbone of mole poblano. Anchos form one-third of the “holy trinity” of Mexican dried chiles alongside guajillo and pasilla and remain essential for authentic sauces, coloring, and depth in both traditional and modern dishes.

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Flavor

Rich and complex with deep sweetness and earthiness, prominent raisin/prune and coffee notes, subtle chocolate undertones, and a faint smokiness. The mild heat lets the nuanced flavor dominate without overpowering.

earthysweetraisincoffeechocolatesmoky

Culinary uses

mole sauces (especially mole poblano)enchilada saucessoups and stewssalsasmarinades and adobochili con carnerubs and spice blendschocolate dessertschili pastes

Substitutions

Mulato (richer, sweeter dried poblano)Pasilla (slightly hotter)Guajillo (milder but brighter)Ancho powder

Related variants

Appearance

Size
4-6 inches long, 3-4 inches wide
Skin
deeply wrinkled, leathery
Color
dark reddish-brown to almost black/mahogany
Flesh
semi-thick, chewy when rehydrated
Shape
large, flat, heart-shaped with curved shoulders and slightly pointed tip

Growing

Sun
full sun (6-8+ hours)
Soil
well-drained, fertile, slightly acidic
Notes
Grown like standard poblanos: warm-season annual. Prefers hot summers. Allow fruit to ripen fully on the plant to red for sweetest, most complex dried anchos.
Water
consistent, moderate
Harvest
pick ripe red poblanos, then sun-dry
Plant height
2-3 ft
Days to maturity
75-90 (for fresh poblano; ancho from fully ripened red fruit)

Nutrition

Per 100g approx
Fiber: high · Calories: 282 · Vitamin a: very high · Vitamin c: high · Vitamin k: high

Origin detail

Region
Puebla
Country
Mexico
Breeder
Traditional Mexican landrace (Puebla region)

Tags

mexicandriedpoblano-derivedmild-heatmoleearthy-sweetholy-trinityancho

Sources

Huge shout-out to the breeders, growers, researchers, and seed savers linked below — their independent work is what lets us fact-check our own. Go visit them.

These references are used to verify what we publish — not as the source of the content itself. Seed catalogs, breeder pages, research papers, and cultivar databases let us cross-check every fact before it lands here. Open any card to read the original or dig deeper.

3 sources · Added May 9, 2026, 15:46 UTC · Updated May 11, 2026, 13:55 UTC
Origins
A World of Capsicum
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