Hatch Green Chile Stuffed Bell Peppers

Hatch Green Chile Stuffed Bell Peppers

Prep 15 min Cook 30 min Total 45 min Serves 6-8 Difficulty Medium 280-320 Cal Heat Medium 4.9 (47) Jump to recipe

These Hatch green chile stuffed peppers are whole bell peppers loaded with seasoned ground beef, rice, and plenty of roasted Hatch green chile, then baked until the cheese on top is bubbly and golden. Unlike a battered, fried chile relleno made from the chile pod itself, this is a sturdy stuffed bell pepper dish — the kind you can throw together on a weeknight, serve warm or even at room temperature, and feed a whole table with.

I grew up just 30 miles from the green chile capital of the world, and once I have a bag of the good stuff in the kitchen, stuffed bell peppers are one of the first things I reach for. They're forgiving, they're fast, and they let the smoky-sweet Hatch flavor shine without much fuss.

Bell peppers, not chile pods

The key difference here: we're stuffing whole bell peppers, not roasting and battering green chile pods. Bell peppers give you a big, sturdy boat that holds a generous filling and bakes up tender. If you want the classic battered, fried whole-chile version instead, that's our traditional Hatch chile relleno recipe — this one is the easy, no-fry cousin built around sweet bell peppers.

Why roasted Hatch chile makes the filling

The beef and rice are just the canvas. What makes these peppers worth making is roasted Hatch green chile stirred right into the filling — that clean, smoky heat is the difference between a generic stuffed pepper and one that tastes like New Mexico. I use roasted Hatch green chile straight from the freezer so it's already charred and peeled, or chop fresh Hatch green chile when it's in season. Medium chile is the sweet spot for a crowd; reach for hot if your table likes it bold.

Tips and substitutions

Cook the rice in chicken stock instead of water for more depth — it's a small swap that pays off. Ground turkey works in place of beef, and cooked quinoa stands in nicely for rice if you want something lighter. Slice just one side off each pepper to make a long boat, or halve them lengthwise for smaller portions. Don't overfill; the cheese on top needs room to melt and brown.

Serving and storage

Serve these hot from the oven, or let them cool to room temperature for easy back-deck entertaining — they hold beautifully. Leftovers keep in the fridge up to three days; reheat in a 350F oven for ten minutes so the peppers stay tender rather than rubbery. They also freeze well before baking: assemble, freeze, then bake from frozen with a few extra minutes.

The recipe

Hatch Green Chile Stuffed Bell Peppers

4.9 from 47 reviews
  • Prep15 min
  • Cook30 min
  • Total45 min
  • Yield6-8 stuffed peppers
  • Calories280-320
Mediummedium heat
Made with Roasted Hatch Chile (Frozen) — grown in the Hatch Valley.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Cook rice according to package instructions (I use chicken stock instead of water for more flavor).
  3. In separate skillet, brown the ground beef.
  4. When the beef is about half done, add green chiles, garlic powder and tomato paste. You may need to also add a splash of water in order to evenly distribute the tomato paste.
  5. When rice is done, add that to the ground beef mixture, and set aside.
  6. Grab a bell pepper, slice one side off, just enough that you can scoop out the ribs and seeds and fill those babies up. Repeat until all the bell peppers become little boats
  7. Fill mini boats with the beef mixture and top with cheese.
  8. Bake for about 10 minutes, or until cheese is bubbly and bell peppers are warm.
  9. Serve immediately! (As I mentioned before, I think you could get away with foregoing the baking altogether, if that works better for you)

Pantry

Shop the chile used in this recipe

Roasted Hatch Chile (Frozen)

$75.00

Fresh Hatch Green Chile

Sale price $29.99 Regular price $34.99

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between stuffed bell peppers and chile rellenos?
Stuffed bell peppers use whole sweet bell peppers as the vessel, filled and baked — no batter or frying. A chile relleno is a roasted green chile pod that's peeled, stuffed, dipped in egg batter, and fried. These Hatch green chile stuffed peppers are the easy, no-fry dish; rellenos are the traditional fried version.
Do you have to bake stuffed bell peppers?
Not necessarily. Baking for about 10 minutes melts the cheese and warms everything through, but you can skip it for a bit more crunch and serve the peppers at room temperature — a great option for entertaining. If you skip baking, just be sure the rice and beef filling is already fully cooked.
How much Hatch green chile should I use?
About a half cup of roasted, peeled, and chopped Hatch green chile per pound of beef gives a balanced, flavorful filling without overwhelming it. Use medium chile for a crowd, or hot if your table likes more heat. Roasted Hatch chile works best because it's already charred and peeled for you.
Can I make Hatch green chile stuffed peppers ahead of time?
Yes. Assemble the stuffed peppers, cover, and refrigerate up to a day ahead, then bake when ready. They also freeze well unbaked — freeze on a tray, transfer to a bag, and bake from frozen with a few extra minutes. Cooked leftovers keep three days in the fridge.
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