Chile Ristras, Wreaths & Crosses

Hand-tied in Hatch, New Mexico from chile our family grows. Four styles (Sandia and pequin ristras, wreaths, and crosses) from 3 inches to 3 feet, shipped untreated and edible by default, year-round, to all 50 states. Read the full ristra guide ↓

Rated 4.8 out of 5 from 291 reviews
🌶️ 4 styles: Sandia, Pequin, Wreath, Cross📏 Sizes 3" to 3′🍴 Edible, untreated chile🪢 Hand-tied in Hatch, NM📦 Ships nationwide, year-round
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Quick answer: A chile ristra is a string of red chile peppers tied together and hung to dry, the classic symbol of New Mexico. Every ristra, wreath, and cross we sell is hand-tied in Hatch, New Mexico from chile our family grows, shipped untreated and edible by default, in four styles and sizes from 3 inches to 3 feet.

Which Hatch Chile Ristra Is Right for You?

Four styles, all hand-tied in Hatch. Here is the quick way to choose.

Still deciding? Compare Sandia vs. pequin side by side → · Hand-tied to order and shipped Tuesday–Friday to all 50 states, year-round (freshest in September).

Why 500,000+ Customers Keep Coming Back

These ristras are well made and beautiful. We enjoy them hanging in our kitchen window. The ristras were packed well and arrived in great condition.
Rebecca G · Verified
This new ristra replaced an old sad looking one. It's a beautiful addition outside my front door.
DAVID V · Verified
This is quite possibly the most beautiful ristra I have ever seen. Each pod, so red and vibrant, and the coating was masterfully done to preserve it for longer. It’s full, vibrant, and brings so much life into the room. Thank you.
Larae M · Verified
absolutely gorgeous in every way. i have ordered numerous ristras from this company and have never been disappointed. they arte fabulous.
Laura J · Verified
fabulous in every way. i love this company!!!
Laura J · Verified
they are fresh and just what i am used to. I spent 36 years in NM and i now live in Phoenix Az and no where here can you find the original NM chili. I clean and grind the pods myself and that way i can continue to make my carne con chili in the fashion I know and appreciate
Bruce m · Verified
It is beautiful It is a gift and I’m sure they will lovenit
Anita M · Verified
Was excited to get. Feel like I'm in New Mexico. Puts a smile on my face when I look at it. Only one pepper fell out.
Julie S · Verified
Sent to family in Seattle and haf them sign a waiver that im not responsible HAHA. THANK YOU Wonderful B-Day & XMAS GIFT
Macia C · Verified
The Ristra was perfect. We got the treated version for decor
Phillip H · Verified
they are beautiful. really love them.
Jennifer G · Verified
Arrived in tact. Beautiful
Allison D · Verified
A Christmas gift to friends and in Northern California. They loved it!
Tony C · Verified
It is fresh and beautiful and looks great hanging in our kitchen This shop is definitely the most reliable place in Santa Fe to purchase a ristra, especially if it has to be shipped.
Patricia O · Verified
I ordered the wreath and a ristra as gifts for family members who no longer live in the southwest. Both gifts arrived in beautiful shape, smelling delicious, and will be used in cooking. Thank you! You made the holidays brighter, and more flavorful!
Gary C · Verified
Very bright and beautiful!
shauna v · Verified
Very beautiful and festive! Arrived in great shape. Bought this as a gift, but now I want one for myself!
Christine B · Verified
Hatch green chili is awesome. All of their products are very good. I will continue to order from Hatch green chili.
LINDA M · Verified
Beautiful ristras and I was not only able to use the chiles but also have a beautiful, functional, and tasty piece of New Mexico in my home kitchen. Very pleased and have ordered since. One was a very well received gift.
Jody H · Verified
It's beautiful and arrived on time and perfectly packaged.
Kathleen S · Verified
Ssent as a gift to my sister in Philadelphia and she iis very pleased. I send one every year and Hatch has been great.
Martin T · Verified
Fresh and perfect non edible decoration to bring a little piece of New Mexico home!
Elia L · Verified
I have ordered from this company before and always receive a beautiful ristra. The one I received this year was the most beautiful one yet! I highly recommend this company.!
Judy R · Verified
The Ristra I received is beautiful!!! Its hanging in my kitchen, and the peppers are also delicious. I almost don't want to eat any of them and retain the beauty of the 1.5 foot long Ristra. Thank you!
John P · Verified
Beautiful, bright color and very shiney. Replaced rista I've had for over 10 years - couldn't believe how much difference the color is. Love my purchase although cost of shipping was a little over the top...but cheaper than driving to New Mexico!
Christine M · Verified
Beautiful! I sent as a gift and the recipient was overjoyed!
Susan G · Verified
Lovely wreath - abundant, beautifully dried chiles. I bought the untreated wreath, and the chiles are a vibrant color. It make quite the autumn show hanging from the front door here in Massachusetts.
Barbara M · Verified
This wreath is beautiful and tasty. I was worried about shipping it all the way to the east coast, but it cam through perfectly.
Alphonse L · Verified
Beautiful! Very well made
Cameron K · Verified
Love it! Even better than expected
Cameron K · Verified

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I actually cook with your Hatch Chile Ristras?
Yes. Our large Hatch Chile Ristras are made from Sandia variety dried red chile — genuine cooking chile. Pull a pod from the string, remove the stem and seeds, rehydrate in warm water for 20 to 30 minutes, and use it in red chile sauce, mole, or any application calling for dried red chile. The ristra continues to function as decoration as you work through it.
What's the difference between the Hatch Chile Ristras and the Chile Pequin items?
The Hatch Chile Ristras are large strings of dried Sandia chile — a full-size cooking pepper grown in the Hatch Valley. The Chile Pequin ristras, wreaths, and crosses are made from chile pequin, a very small ornamental pepper. The pequin items are primarily decorative; while pequin is edible and quite hot, the small pods on wreaths and crosses are not practical for cooking use the way Hatch ristras are.
How long will a ristra last?
Hung in a dry environment with good airflow, a traditional chile ristra can last one to three years as a decoration. In a humid climate or kitchen with heavy steam, the pods can mold — keep them away from steam sources. For maximum longevity, hang in a covered outdoor spot or inside near a window in a climate-controlled room.
Can I ship a ristra as a gift?
Yes — ristras ship well. They're dried, lightweight for their size, and packaged to protect the pods in transit. They make a meaningful gift for anyone connected to New Mexico or interested in the state's food culture. If you're ordering for a specific occasion, check lead times on the product page during harvest season.
What does a ristra symbolize in New Mexican culture?
Ristras originated as a preservation method but became a cultural emblem over generations. They're associated with home, harvest, and the New Mexican chile tradition — you'll see them hung on doorways, portal beams, and in kitchens throughout the state. The chile pequin cross specifically carries religious and cultural significance in the Southwest, often displayed as a blessing or housewarming gift. Both forms connect to a way of life built around the chile harvest.

The Complete Guide to Chile Ristras

What Is a Chile Ristra?

The word ristra (pronounced REE-strah) comes from the Spanish for "string" or "braid." In New Mexico, it almost always refers to a string of red chile peppers tied together and hung to dry. Ristras serve a dual purpose: they preserve the chile harvest for year-round cooking, and they make one of the most iconic decorations in the American Southwest.

Red chile is simply green chile that has been left on the plant an extra four to six weeks to ripen fully. That additional time on the vine concentrates sugars and develops the deep crimson color. Once harvested, the peppers are strung onto twine — traditionally three or four at a time — and hung in the dry New Mexico air, where they cure naturally over several weeks. As the pods dry, natural fermentation breaks down sugars into more complex flavor compounds, the same process that makes sun-dried tomatoes so much richer than fresh ones.

A well-made ristra is both functional food storage and folk art. The shape is instantly recognizable: a dense, tapered column of glossy red pods topped with shredded corn husks, finished with a twine loop for hanging. Ristras also come shaped into wreaths, crosses, hearts, and other forms, particularly when made from the smaller chile pequin (also known as chile de árbol).

History and Cultural Significance

The practice of drying foods by stringing them together predates Spanish colonization. Pueblo peoples along the Rio Grande sun-dried corn, berries, and meat on hanging racks as early as 1000 CE. When Spanish colonizers introduced chile peppers to New Mexico in the late 1500s — documented as early as Juan de Oñate's 1598 expedition — Pueblo farmers quickly adapted their indigenous drying techniques to the new crop. By the 1700s, the chile ristra as we know it had emerged: a practical hybrid of Pueblo food preservation and Spanish colonial agriculture.

The hanging method solved a critical problem. Chile drying on the ground attracted dirt, insects, and moisture. Birds posed an even bigger threat — they are immune to capsaicin and will devour chile seeds given the opportunity. Suspending the harvest on strings kept it clean, dry, and safe from wildlife, all while allowing air to circulate freely around every pod.

Over the centuries, ristras evolved from purely practical food storage into powerful cultural symbols. In New Mexican folklore, a ristra hung by the front door signals welcome, warmth, and hospitality. Many families believe ristras bring good health and good luck to the household — a tradition with roots in both Pueblo spiritual practices and Spanish colonial customs. Today you will find ristras hanging from portals, vigas, and entryways on adobe homes from Taos to Las Cruces, at restaurants advertising authentic New Mexican cuisine, and in shops and galleries throughout Santa Fe's historic districts.

The ristra is so woven into New Mexico's identity that it has become the single most recognizable symbol of the state after the Zia sun symbol. It appears on everything from tourism campaigns to official state publications, and every September the Hatch Chile Festival draws thousands of visitors who watch artisans tie fresh ristras in real time.

Our Chile Ristra Collection

We offer four product families, all hand-tied in Hatch from chile grown in the Valley. Every item ships with a corn-husk top and a hanging loop, ready to display the moment it arrives.

Traditional Hatch Chile Ristras (Sandia Variety)

Our flagship ristra uses Sandia red chile, the same hot variety that New Mexican cooks grind into red chile sauce. Sandia pods are large, meaty, and moderately hot — roughly 6,500 Scoville Heat Units — making them ideal for both cooking and display. These ristras come in six sizes from 6 inches to 3 feet, so you can find the right scale whether you want a kitchen accent or a full-size door hanger. Shop Hatch Chile Ristras →

Chile Pequin Ristras

For a more delicate look with serious heat, our chile pequin ristras (also called chile de árbol) use tiny, slender peppers that pack roughly 30,000 Scoville Heat Units — nearly five times hotter than Sandia. The small pods and strong stems make these ristras tighter and more compact. Available in five sizes from 3 inches to 2 feet, they are perfect for windowsills, mantels, and narrow spaces. Shop Chile Pequin Ristras →

Chile Pequin Wreaths

Our chile pepper wreaths are handcrafted rings of chile pequin, shaped and bound on a wire frame. A wreath uses significantly more chile than a straight ristra of comparable length, which gives it a full, lush appearance that looks stunning on a front door, above a mantel, or as a centerpiece for a Southwestern-themed wall. Particularly popular around Christmas and the fall holiday season, a chile wreath makes an unforgettable gift. Shop Chile Pequin Wreaths →

Chile Pequin Crosses

Our chile crosses combine Southwestern tradition with a faith-inspired shape. Each cross is formed from chile pequin on a wire frame, making it a meaningful decoration for a kitchen, dining room, or entryway. These are among our most-gifted items, especially for housewarmings, holidays, and religious celebrations. Shop Chile Pequin Crosses →

Sandia Chile vs. Chile Pequin: A Side-by-Side Comparison

Choosing between our two chile varieties comes down to what you want from your ristra — bold cooking versatility, or compact decoration with extreme heat. Here is how they compare:

Feature Sandia (Large Chile) Chile Pequin / de Árbol
Pod Size 5–8 inches long 1–3 inches long
Heat Level ~6,500 SHU (Hot) ~30,000 SHU (Very Hot)
Flavor Profile Earthy, complex, slightly sweet Sharp, bright, intensely peppery
Best For Cooking Red chile sauce, enchiladas, posole, carne adovada Crushed flakes, infused oils, Thai & Mexican dishes
Ristra Sizes Available 6 in · 1 ft · 1.5 ft · 2 ft · 2.5 ft · 3 ft 3 in · 6 in · 1 ft · 1.5 ft · 2 ft
Shapes Available Traditional straight ristra Straight ristra · Wreath · Cross
Appearance Bold, dramatic, large pods Delicate, dense, tightly packed
Common Use Door hangers, kitchen cooking supply Wreaths, crosses, smaller décor accents

Treated vs. Untreated Ristras: Which Should You Choose?

This is one of the most important decisions when buying a chile ristra, and one that many sellers gloss over. Here is what you need to know:

Untreated Ristras (Our Default)

Every ristra we ship leaves Hatch completely untreated unless you specifically request otherwise. That means the chile is 100% edible — you can pull pods off and cook with them anytime. Untreated ristras will naturally fade from bright red to a deeper, darker burgundy over several months, especially in direct sunlight. This is normal and does not affect flavor. An untreated ristra stored in good conditions will look great for one to two years and remain usable for cooking even longer.

Treated Ristras (+$5 at Checkout)

If your ristra is purely decorative and you want it to stay vibrant red for as long as possible, select our treatment option at checkout. We apply a clear protective coating that locks in color and adds resistance to moisture and dust. A treated ristra stored indoors and away from direct sunlight can look good for three to five years or longer. The tradeoff: treated ristras are not edible. The sealant makes the chile unsafe for consumption.

Our recommendation: If you plan to cook with your ristra at all — even occasionally pulling pods for a batch of red chile sauce — keep it untreated. If it will be a permanent wall fixture or outdoor decoration and you never intend to eat from it, the $5 treatment is worth it for dramatically extended color retention.

Cooking with Your Chile Ristra

A ristra is not just a beautiful accent — it is a pantry staple hanging on your wall. Dried red chile from a ristra produces some of the deepest, most complex flavors in New Mexican cuisine, thanks to the slow sun-drying process that concentrates and ferments the natural sugars.

How to Harvest Pods from a Ristra

Pull pods from the bottom of the ristra, then tuck the exposed string up into the remaining chile. This keeps the ristra looking full while you work your way through it over weeks or months. Start at the bottom because gravity keeps the upper pods compressed and shapely.

New Mexican Red Chile Sauce — The Mother Sauce of the Southwest

Red chile sauce is to New Mexican cooking what béchamel is to French cuisine — it is the foundation that everything else is built on. To make it from your ristra:

1. Prep the pods: Pull 8–12 dried pods from your ristra. Snap off the stems and shake out most of the seeds (leave a few in if you like extra heat).

2. Toast briefly: Press the pods flat in a dry skillet over medium heat for 15–20 seconds per side, just until fragrant. Do not burn them.

3. Rehydrate: Place the toasted pods in a bowl and cover with boiling water. Let them soak for 20–30 minutes until softened.

4. Blend: Transfer the rehydrated pods and about a cup of the soaking liquid to a blender. Add 2 cloves of garlic, ½ teaspoon cumin, ½ teaspoon oregano, and a pinch of salt. Blend until smooth.

5. Strain and simmer: Pour through a fine-mesh strainer to remove skins and seeds. Simmer the strained sauce in a saucepan for 15–20 minutes, adding chicken or vegetable broth to reach your preferred consistency.

This sauce freezes beautifully for up to a year and works as the base for enchiladas, carne adovada, posole, huevos rancheros, tamale sauce, smothered burritos, and dozens of other New Mexican staples. For more chile-inspired cooking ideas, visit our recipe collection.

Other Ways to Cook with Ristra Chile

Beyond sauce, dried ristra pods are incredibly versatile. Grind them in a spice grinder for homemade red chile powder — fresher and more flavorful than anything on a grocery shelf. Crumble dried pods directly into soups, stews, and braises for slow-building heat. Toast and grind them with cumin, garlic, and oregano for a custom New Mexican chile seasoning blend. Small chile pequin pods can be crushed into flakes for pizza, pasta, and stir-fry, or steeped whole in olive oil to create a chile-infused cooking oil that adds Southwestern heat to any dish.

Chile Ristras as Gifts

A chile ristra is one of the most distinctive gifts you can give — a piece of living Southwestern tradition that no one expects and everyone remembers. They are especially meaningful for people with ties to New Mexico, military families who were stationed at White Sands or Holloman, college friends who attended UNM or NMSU, and anyone who has fallen in love with Southwestern food and culture.

🎄 Christmas & Holidays Chile pequin wreaths and crosses are our top holiday sellers. The wreath replaces a standard greenery wreath with unmistakable Southwestern character. Crosses make meaningful faith-inspired gifts.
🏡 Housewarming A 2-foot Sandia ristra is the classic housewarming gift — it symbolizes welcome and good fortune in a new home. Choose untreated so they can cook with it too.
🎂 Birthdays & Thank-You A 1-foot pequin ristra or small wreath makes an unexpected, personal gift that breaks the cycle of generic presents.
🍽️ Food Lovers & Chefs Send an untreated Sandia ristra — it is a kitchen decoration AND a cooking supply. Pair it with our sauces and salsas for the ultimate gift box.

Every order can include a digital gift message — perfect if you are short on time or shipping directly to the recipient.

Where to Hang a Chile Ristra

Placement matters — both for aesthetics and longevity. Here is a quick guide to the best and worst spots for your ristra, wreath, or cross:

Location Rating Why
Covered porch / portal ⭐ Best Protected from rain and direct sun; good airflow; maximum visual impact
Kitchen wall or archway ⭐ Best Easy access for cooking; controlled climate; great conversation starter
Indoor entryway / foyer ⭐ Best Welcoming tradition; protected from elements; ideal for treated ristras
Front door (covered) ✅ Good Classic New Mexican look; works well for wreaths and crosses
Partial sun — patio, eave ✅ Good Some fading over time, but acceptable if covered from rain
Full sun — open yard ⚠️ Fair Faster fading; Sandia holds up better than pequin in sun exposure
Uncovered, windy area ❌ Avoid Wind batters dried pods against walls, causing breakage
Humid / rainy location ❌ Avoid Moisture causes mold that destroys the ristra from the inside
Pro tip: If you live somewhere humid (Southeast, Pacific Northwest, Gulf Coast), hang your ristra indoors or under deep cover. New Mexico's bone-dry climate is what makes outdoor ristras last so long here. Replicating that low-humidity environment indoors will give you the best results outside the Southwest.

How Long Do Chile Ristras Last?

Longevity depends on three factors: treatment, placement, and climate.

Untreated ristras stored indoors or under a covered porch in a dry climate will maintain good color for roughly 12 to 18 months and remain edible for two years or more. The chile flavor actually deepens with age, much like a dried spice. Eventually the pods become very brittle and the color shifts to a dark mahogany, but they are still perfectly safe to grind into powder or simmer into sauce.

Treated ristras kept indoors can look vibrant for three to five years, sometimes longer. The clear coating protects against dust, minor humidity, and UV fading. Outdoors under cover, expect two to three years of good color before gradual fading sets in.

The enemies of ristra longevity are moisture, wind, and direct sunlight. Moisture causes mold (the single fastest way to destroy a ristra), wind causes physical breakage of the brittle pods, and UV light bleaches color. Controlling these three factors will maximize the life of your ristra regardless of treatment status.

Seasonal Availability and Shipping

Unlike many competitors who only sell ristras during the September–October harvest window, we hand-tie and ship ristras year-round. Our artisans in Hatch work from a supply of sun-dried chile stored under controlled conditions, so you can order a ristra in January, April, or July and receive the same quality you would during peak season.

That said, the freshest ristras — made from just-harvested red chile — typically become available in early to mid-September, coinciding with Labor Day and the annual Hatch Chile Festival. If you want the brightest color and maximum freshness, September and October are the prime months. We will note on the product page whenever ristras are on pre-order versus ready-to-ship.

Shipping Details

Ristras, wreaths, and crosses ship Tuesday through Friday in protective packaging designed to cushion the pods during transit. We cannot ship to PO boxes — please use a physical street address. If you need your ristra held for a specific delivery date (for a holiday, event, or gift), email support@hatch-green-chile.com or call (575) 267-2067 to place a hold. All hold requests and changes (upgraded shipping, address corrections, substitutions) must be submitted by 4:00 PM MST on Monday before your scheduled ship date.

How to Make Your Own Chile Ristra

If you have access to fresh red chile — whether from our fresh red chile shipments or a local farm — making a ristra is a rewarding hands-on project. The two traditional methods are tying and sewing.

The Tying Method (More Durable)

Create a twine loop slightly shorter than your desired ristra length. Working from the bottom up, wrap individual chile stems with twine, then tie clusters of three to four pods together with a tight knot. Stack clusters, rotating them slightly to fill out the ristra's shape evenly. Leave roughly six inches of loop at the top for corn husks and hanging hardware. A two-foot ristra takes about 15–20 minutes once you find your rhythm.

The Sewing Method (Faster)

Thread a sturdy needle with fishing line or heavy thread and pierce through the center of each chile stem, stringing pods one after another. This method is faster but creates small holes in the stems that can make pods more fragile once fully dried. Use the smallest needle possible to minimize puncture damage.

Topping with Corn Husks

Soak dried corn husks for a few minutes to make them pliable. Shred them with a fork or a board with finishing nails (a common farm trick in the Hatch Valley). Gather the shredded husks around the top of the ristra's hanging loop and secure with a tight twine wrap. This creates the traditional crown that finishes the ristra and protects the top from unraveling.

Don't want the DIY route? Our ristras are hand-tied by artisans who have been doing this for decades. Browse our ready-to-hang collection and skip straight to enjoying yours.

Why Buy Ristras from the Hatch Chile Store?

There are dozens of places to buy a chile ristra online. Here is what sets ours apart:

We are the source. Our family has farmed the Hatch Valley for over a century, starting with Joseph Franzoy — the first farmer to grow chile commercially in Hatch. When you buy from us, there are no middlemen, no wholesalers, and no guesswork about where the chile came from. Every pod on your ristra grew in the same valley where our artisans tie it.

Hand-tied in Hatch, year-round. Many sellers outsource ristra production or only sell seasonally. Ours are made in Hatch by people who learned the craft from family, and we ship 12 months a year.

Edible by default. Some competitors treat their ristras with shellac or lacquer without clearly disclosing it, leaving customers to discover their "decoration" is inedible only after buying. We ship untreated unless you specifically request treatment — so you always know exactly what you are getting.

Direct from the farm. We control quality from seed to string. The same family that plants the chile, harvests it, dries it, and ties it is the one packing your box and answering the phone when you call (575) 267-2067.