One of the key aspects of my ongoing chile growing adventure is to grow chiles from around the world that are integral to certain cuisines. One of my favourites so far has been the Ethiopian berbere coffee chile, which is a coffee-colour version of the standard berbere chile. I only got a small handful from my first bush but I dried and ground them and the aroma was out of this world.
I wanted to use them to make a traditional berbere spice mixture to be used in traditional Ethiopian dishes like doro wat (spiced chicken). But finding a recipe was not that easy as there are so many with such a huge variety of ingredients. So after much searching and discussions, including with the lovely proprietors of Killo Meat Shop in Toronto where I got a number of the other traditional Ethiopian ingredients, this is my version.
Many of those traditional ingredients (*) have a variety of names, which I’ve tried to include so you can find them. If you’re lucky enough to have a large Ethiopian/Somali/Eritrian population, you should be able to find them quite easily. Many are also available in Indian/Pakistani groceries.
Makes about 1 cup
Fresh Ethiopian berbere coffee chiles from my garden |
3g garlic powder
7g ground ginger
1 tbsp Bessobela (Sacred basil)*
3 g Korarima (Ethiopian cardamom)*
7 g fenugreek, whole
½ tsp Tena Adam/Rue (herb of grace)*
1 g black cumin seeds (tikur azmud or Ethiopian nigella)*
4 g Ethiopian black pepper (kundo berbere)
1 tsp salt
¼ tsp ajiwain
7 whole cloves
2 allspice berries
7 g onion powder
Method:
If you have whole chiles: wipe clean, remove stem and seeds. Dry roast for a few minutes in an ungreased frying pan – no more than a minute on each side. Set aside to cool.
If you only have ground chiles, then add a ½ tsp or so of smoked paprika to get that slightly smokey flavour that comes from the dry roasting.
Korerima (Ethiopian black cardamom) |
Take all the whole spices (peppercorns, allspice, fennel, korerima, tikur azmud, ajiwain, cloves) and gently toast them in the dry frying pan. Just a few minutes until they turn a little brown and fragrant. Too dark and they’ll be bitter. Also set aside to cool.
Ground berbere chiles |
Once cooled, grind the chiles into a powder in a spice or coffee grinder. Set aside.
Add all the cooled whole spices to the grinder and grind for a few minutes until fine.
Add the rest of the spices and herbs (sacred basil, Tena Adam, salt, onion, garlic, ginger) plus salt and waz for a few seconds until it’s all mixed.
If there’s space in the grinder, add the ground chile powder to the mix and again just waz for a few seconds to mix. If there’s not space, put the ground spices and chile powder in a bowl and give it a good stir.
Give it a good whiff so you can smell all that delicious aroma.
Store in an airtight glass container. It’ll keep super fresh
for about 6 months but in reality will last a long time but lose some of its
strength.
© Gail J. Cohen 2022