Why It Works
- Making the ají amarillo paste from frozen whole peppers unleashes more of the pepper's natural floral and fruity flavors. (But jarred works in a pinch if that's all you've got.)
- A blender makes quick work of the sauce, resulting in an easy à la minute appetizer.
One of the many joys ofPeruvian cuisineis the beautiful way in which it has melded with the foods of immigrants.Nikkeicooking, for example, is Japanese-Peruvian food, the result of a 19th century influx of Japanese migrants to Peru. Peruvian food has influenced the way Japanese food is cooked there, and Japanese food has changed how Peruvians cook. The results are damn delicious.
A Japanese-Peruvian Marriage
One fun example istiradito, which combines elements of ceviche and sashimi in a single dish. Ceviche typically involves "cooking" raw fish in an acidic marinade. One doesn't make ceviche and serve it right away; it's better to waitabout 15 minutesuntil the fish has turned more opaque, and the exterior of each small piece has taken on a partially cooked consistency.
Compare that to Japanese sashimi. While some species like mackerel are cured or seared, many are served completely raw—no heat, no acid, no lengthy salt-curing process. And unlike ceviche's smaller chunks of fish, sashimi is often cut into larger rectangular slices. When served, it's adorned minimally, with soy sauce, wasabi, and pickled ginger on the side.
Tiradito marries the two traditions. Like sashimi, the fish is cut into large slices and spends no time curing before being served. But like ceviche, it's served with a tart, spicy citrus-chile marinade known asleche de tigre(tiger's milk . . . you know, because it's got enough attitude to make you goRAWR).
Making the Leche de Tigre
Some tiradito recipes call for infusing the leche de tigre with pieces of fish and then straining them out and discarding them. This brings it closer to the sauce that comes with a ceviche, in which fish juices have mingled with the marinade. I did not do this for my tiradito recipe, though, since it requires sacrificing some of your (likely pricey) fish to the marinade for what amounts to a nice, but nonessential, step. If you want to do this, though, you can; just soak some fish pieces in the lime juice for 15 or 20 minutes before straining them out and continuing with the recipe (you can, of course, eat those fish pieces in the kitchen, so that they're not totally wasted). If you're working with a whole fish and filleting it yourself, this infusion step becomes much easier since you'll definitely have scraps.
Tiradito sauces come in many flavors, but the most classic features lime juice and a purée made from Peruvianají amarillo peppers, which have an incredible floral aroma and a decently spicy kick. It varies from pepper to pepper, but it tends to be hotter than your average jalapeño but not nearly as hot as a habanero.
There are a couple of ways to get ají amarillo paste in locales where the fresh peppers aren't available. Easiest is to buy a jar of the purée at a market that sells Peruvian ingredients. Better is to make it yourself from frozen whole ají amarillo peppers. The from-frozen stuff has a more complex flavor that captures more of the pepper's natural floral and fruity notes; the jarred option is good, but some of ají amarillo's charms are snuffed out in the canning process. Making your own with frozen peppers is as easy as boiling the peppers for 10 minutes,removing their stems and seeds(and, if you want to be more finicky about it, their skins, too), and then liquifying the flesh in a blender with just enough water to get it moving.
Beyond that, the leche de tigre for tiradito goes like this: Blend fresh lime juice with garlic and some fresh ginger, mix in enough of the ají amarillo paste to give the sauce a punch of chile heat and enough viscosity that it doesn't just flow like water on the plate. Some freshly minced cilantro can go in at the end.
In Peru, the fish is typically white-fleshed, something along the lines of corvina or fluke. Pictured here, though, are salmon and yellowtail (hamachiin Japanese), which are common substitutes, at least here in North America. The important thing is toget fish that you can serve as sashimi; your selection will depend heavily on where you live.
On the side, you might add somechoclo(a type of large, white Peruvian corn) or some thick rounds of cooked sweet potato, both of which are traditional tiradito accompaniments. Neither is necessary, though: Tiradito is, at its heart, a dish open to interpretation. It was born of cultures colliding and being flexible enough to embrace each other. Setting its presentation in stone cuts against that spirit.
March 2019
Recipe Details
Peruvian Tiradito With Aji Amarillo and Lime Recipe
Prep10 mins
Cook20 mins
Active20 mins
Total30 mins
Serves4 servings
Ingredients
8 ounces (225g) frozen ají amarillo peppers (about 6 peppers) or 1/2 cup (120ml) ají amarillo paste (see note)
6 ounces (170g) sashimi-grade fish, such as salmon, yellowtail (hamachi), fluke, or corvina
3/4 cup (180ml) fresh lime juice from about 10 limes
2 medium cloves garlic
One 1-inch knob peeled fresh ginger (about 1/3 ounce; 10g)
Kosher salt
1 teaspoon minced fresh cilantro leaves and tender stems
Choclo and/or cooked and peeled sweet potato rounds, for garnish (optional; see note)
Directions
If using frozen ajíamarillo chiles: In a medium pot, cover chiles with water (they will float) and bring to a boil. Boil for 10 minutes, stirring pot from time to time to rotate peppers. Remove from heat and drain. Allow to cool.
Meanwhile, using a sharp slicing knife, slice fish into thin slabs. Arrange slices on plates and transfer to refrigerator.
In a blender, combine lime juice with garlic and ginger and blend on high speed until garlic and ginger are fully processed. Transfer to a medium mixing bowl. Rinse blender jar.
Remove and discard seeds and stems from chile peppers. Strip off as much of the chile skin as you can and discard it. Transfer chile flesh to blender jar and blend at high speed, adding only enough water to get things moving, until a smooth purée forms.
Stir 1/2 cup (120ml) ajíamarillo paste into the lime juice until thoroughly combined. (You can add less or more chile paste to your taste, but keep in mind that in addition to heat and flavor, it also gives the sauce viscosity. If you add too little, the sauce will be very thin.) Season with salt. Reserve remaining ajíamarillo paste for another use.
Stir in cilantro. Remove plates from refrigerator and spoon sauce on top of fish, lightly coating it (reserve any remaining sauce for another use). If desired, garnish plates with choclo and/or sweet potato. Serve right away.
Special Equipment
Blender, sharp slicing knife
Notes
You can find frozen ajíamarillo peppers in the freezer section of a well-stocked Latin grocer; a jar of ajíamarillo paste is also found at Latin grocers and online as well. Making the paste from frozen peppers yields a more flavorful result, highlighting more of ajíamarillo's floral and fruity notes.
Choclo is a variety of Peruvian corn with large, white kernels; you can find it in the freezer section of grocers that sell Peruvian ingredients; boil it for several minutes to tenderize the kernels before serving.
Make-Ahead and Storage
The ajíamarillo paste can be made up to three days in advance and kept refrigerated in an airtight container.
Read More
- What Is "Sushi-Grade," Anyway? A Guide to Eating Raw Fish at Home
- Classic Peruvian-Style Fish Ceviche Recipe
- Jalea (Peruvian Fried Seafood Platter with Salad)