Pickled Chilies

4.59 from 29 votes
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Pickled Chilies - Popular condiment that accompanies many Southeast Asian street food and Asian noodle dishes.

Pickled green chili is a popular condiment that accompanies many Southeast Asian street food and Asian noodle dishes. Have these for your guest for your Chinese New Years feast. | rasamalaysia.com
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This is the first time I made pickled green chilies at home and was pleasantly surprised that it took only a jiffy and the chilies were ready practically overnight.

Pickled green chili is a popular condiment that accompanies many Southeast Asian street food and Asian noodle dishes.

The tartness from the rice vinegar and the pickled green chilies are best served with char hor fun, rad na, fried vermicelli, dry wonton noodles, etc.

In many Cantonese noodle joints and Thai restaurants here in the US, you will always find a small container of picked green chilies on the table, together with other sauces such as soy sauce, chili sauce, and pepper…

While you can buy pickled green chilies from Asian stores (there is a close cousin which is Made in Mexico), home-made pickled chilies just taste so much better and “fresher” knowing that they are not packaged months ago and have been sitting on the shelves forever!

Here is my simple pickled green chilies recipe. It’s really painless to make and they keep for a while in the refrigerator.


Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories per serving?

This recipe is 84 calories per cup.

Pickled green chili is a popular condiment that accompanies many Southeast Asian street food and Asian noodle dishes. Have these for your guest for your Chinese New Years feast. | rasamalaysia.com

What To Serve With Pickled Chilies

For a wholesome meal and easy weeknight dinner, I recommend the following recipes.

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4.59 from 29 votes

Pickled Chilies

Pickled green chili is a popular condiment that accompanies many Southeast Asian street food and Asian noodle dishes. Have these for your guest for your Chinese New Years feast.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 10 minutes
Servings: 1 cup
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Ingredients  

  • 4 oz (125g) green chilies, discard the seeds and sliced into pieces
  • 1 cup Chinese rice vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 cup water, boiled

Instructions 

  • Prepare the green chilies and transfer into a small bowl. Bring the water to boil and transfer it to the small bowl. Let the chilies sit in the boiled water for about 10 seconds. Drain and discard the hot water.
  • In the same bowl, add in the rice vinegar, salt and sugar. Stir to blend well. Transfer everything into a small glass container or canister jar and leave it overnight in the fridge. The pickled green chilies will be ready overnight.

Notes

Any green chilies (except bird eye’s chilies) can be used. If you are in the US, you can use green serrano pepper or jalapeno.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cup, Calories: 84kcal, Carbohydrates: 10g, Fat: 0.01g, Sodium: 2720mg, Potassium: 6mg, Fiber: 4g, Sugar: 6g, Vitamin C: 14mg, Calcium: 24mg, Iron: 0.1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Please rate and comment below!

About Bee Yinn Low

Bee is a recipe developer and best-selling cookbook author, sharing easy, quick, and delicious Asian and American recipes since 2006. With a strong following of almost 2 million fans online, her expertise has been featured in major publications, TV and radio programs, and live cooking demos throughout the United States and Asia.

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32 Comments

  1. George says:

    Great! Thanks! But second time I don’t seeded the chilies, more heat, more joy for me :)

  2. Jim says:

    I wish I knew what chillies to use here in the US. JALAPEÑO is just not the same as what I had at the food stalls back in KL 40 years ago!

    1. Bee Yinn Low says:

      Jim – if you can get Malaysian type of red chilies then please use it but you can’t find those in the USA. So you have to improvise and use what you have! I used jalapeno.

  3. Al says:

    Hi Bee, keen to try this recipe. Can I please check why you don’t recommend using bird’s eye chilli?

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      They are too spicy!

    2. sumi says:

      hi… was wondering why brids eye chillies r not recommended

  4. Kwok says:

    hi bee
    recipe worked well as u said, even with apple cider vinegar, forgot I had rice vinegar in the cupboard.
    I couldn’t find the right type of chili as in Malaysia where I’m from, living in Switzerland so did the next best thing, bought from a turkish store. Wasn’t sure if it would work, overnite when I first tasted it, it was a bit hot/spicy but after a few more days, it became just right, yippy.
    Think you forgot to mention that we should use gloves to handle the chilis, burning hands the first time I did it, the next time I used gloves but much harder to remove the seeds when you got gloves on, anyone else had the same problem?
    How long do these chilis last once made?

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Hi Kwok, it lasts for a while once pickled, just keep in the fridge. :)

    2. Micheline says:

      Mine are at 2 months in the fridge, just a few left, but still crunchy and delicious.

  5. Micheline says:

    I made this! Oh, I love it. Had it with Cantonese noodles. Delicious. Thank you!

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Awesome!

  6. Tex Hooper says:

    I like what you said about putting in stirring in vinegar and salt into your peppers. I need to get green chiles for my salsa. I’ll have to consider getting a new recipe for our party.

    1. Admin says:

      Thanks.

  7. Don says:

    This was so easy to make. I grew up in Thailand so I was exposed to this condiment at a very young age. I looked at a lot of recipes out there but this one is the most like what I had when I lived in Thailand. I made over a pound of them because I know they won’t last long otherwise. I’ll eat these things on so many foods!! Thank you!

    1. Admin says:

      Thanks!