Charred Shishito Peppers with Sweet Togarashi Spice - Diversivore.com

Charred Shishito Peppers with Sweet Togarashi Spice

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Charred shishito peppers with a sweet and spicy shichimi togarashi glaze on a white plate
Charred shishito peppers with a sweet and spicy shichimi togarashi glaze on a white plate

Charred Shishito Peppers

With Sweet Togarashi Spice

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Ah, trendy food. I both love and hate when something gets 'discovered' by the food community, and I'm sure I'm not alone. I love it because, as you probably know if you've been following the site for a while, I'm endlessly fascinated by the diversity of food, and I'm ecstatic to see interesting produce and pantry staples become easier to find. But as with all trends, food goes through cycles, and all of the sudden people aren't eating it (or selling it). It's frustrating - just because it's not the trend du jour doesn't mean I'm done with it. I mean, sun dried tomatoes haven't been trendy since 1985 (if you're around my age, there's a good chance you're picturing Monica from Friends making fun of them right now), but that doesn't mean that I'm done eating them. And sure, the disappearing sense of novelty is partly to blame, but some trendy foods are also driven from the collective consciousness by over-saturation. Once something becomes popular, people start playing and experimenting, and amazing recipes start to show up.  That's wonderful, but things go a little too far at times, and popular ingredients start getting shoe-horned into rather questionable and over-wrought recipes. Take bacon. As much as I like bacon, I think we can safely say that we went through a period of bacon over-saturation (Bacon candy! Bacon pie! Bacon-scented stationery! Bacon-wrapped bacon! Bacon-wrapped fish quenelles, made from fish fed an all-bacon diet, cooked in a bacon-scented-broth and topped with crumbled bacon salt, served on a plate made from bacon!). Enough is enough. Let's just settle down and say "Hey, this is awesome, let's eat this and not drive each other crazy with it."

That last paragraph serves both as an introduction to this recipe, and as a bit of preemptive defense on my part: I'm cookin' trendy, but I promise I'm not getting crazy.  No scented stationery involved.

Let's talk about the shishito peppers. There's a pretty solid chance that there's a trendy little restaurant near you, replete with Edison bulbs and exposed brick, more than ready to sell you a frighteningly expensive platter of charred shishitos to go along with your pint of session ale. But hey, who can blame them? They're delicious, they're great to work with, they're healthy, and it's just fun to say 'shishito.' (For the record, it's pronounced shee-SHEE-toh, and not... well, you get it.) These tasty, thin-skinned little peppers are amazing when charred and served with a bit of oil and salt (a preparation also used for the similar padron pepper).  It's an awesome way to eat them, but I had to tinker. I can't help it. I'm a tinkerer. But I'm not trying to completely reinvent the wheel here; I wanted to marry my little Japanese peppers to some sweet, spicy, salty Japanese ingredients.

The basics of this recipe are pretty simple: char and blister the peppers in a very hot pan or on a grill, then add sake, evaporate most of the liquid, and toss with a mixture of sugar and shichimi togarashi. The end product is lightly sweet, a little citrusy (especially if you can get a good sake with a nice floral/citrus kick), salty, spicy, and incredibly tasty. These little guys just disappear when you put them in front of four or five other people. Or two. Or just me. They're amazing as part of a Japanese izakaya-style meal, ideally alongside grilled goodies (like my bacon-wrapped shimeji mushroom kushiyaki, or my chicken tsukune).  When you're eating the peppers, simply grab a stem and bite off everything below it, seeds and all.

Charred shishito peppers with a sweet and spicy shichimi togarashi glaze on a white plate

A Pepper By Any Other Name

Warning: substantial linguistic diversion ahead.

I love linguistics, and I love food history and culture, so I get pretty psyched when the two intersect in an interesting way. If that's not your cup of tea (a word and a drink, incidentally, borrowed from Chinese), feel free to jump past the next picture and on to the recipe notes.

The name 'shishito pepper' is a great example of how funny words can become when we borrow and modify them from other languages. It's also a continuing example of just how confusing the word 'pepper' really is.  In Japanese, they're called shishi tōgarashi which means 'lion-dog hot pepper.' The 'lion-dog' (shishi, also known by a load of other names) is a common feature in Chinese, Japanese and Korean art, and they're frequently portrayed with one paw on a ball or a small cub, steadfastly guarding a gate or temple. Apparently somebody decided that the end of these peppers look like their curled-up, snarling faces. Alright. Tōgarashi means hot/chili-pepper, but when the phrase made its way into English, we took the 'Tō' off of the front and tossed the rest, which is a little nonsensical. Imagine the reverse situation: it's sort of like taking 'bell pepper' and turning into 'beru-pe togarashi' where the 'pe' part is left behind from the word pepper. For the record, Japan didn't do that - bell peppers are called pīman in Japanese, from the Spanish word pimiento (more on that word in a moment).  What I'm saying is it would have made a lot more sense if we called them shishi peppers.  In fact, I haven't yet figured out who started calling them shishitos in the first place. To be fair though, Japan has done the same thing to plenty of English words; the Japanese word pasokon is simply "personal computer" with the ends lopped, and pokemon is just 'pocket monster' with a Japanese pronunciation and truncation. Language is fun.

But there's more to this than just a cross-cultural game of broken telephone.  These words tell you something about the development of Japanese and Asian food in general.  Japan hasn't embraced the hot chili with the same fervor seen in China, India, and Southeast Asia, but it's safe to say that the ingredient has made its mark on the cuisine of the entire continent.  This is despite the fact that chili peppers were not found in Asian cuisine until the 16th century when they were imported from South/Central America by the Portuguese.  That in and of itself is amazing - I mean, picture Asian cuisine without chilies.  They're iconic, and yet they're a relatively young ingredient in the region. And as luck would have it, the globe-trotting pepper has dragged linguistic confusion with it everywhere it has traveled.

Charred shishito peppers with a sweet and spicy shichimi togarashi glaze on a white plate

Apparently when Columbus set down in the New World, he quickly encountered chili peppers, which had long been cultivated in the region and were already wildly popular.  Presumably without pausing to consider the linguistic insanity he was about to unleash, he decided to call them pimiento, in honour of (or confusion with) the ultra-valuable peppercorn plant (called pimienta) which was one of the key economic factors driving his attempts to find a new route to Asia.  Apparently the word 'pepper' (which is Sanskrit in origin) ended up being used in English by the 16th century simply because of the equivocation between the two pepper-words in Spanish.  If you're wondering why on Earth you'd call two wildly different looking foods by the same name, we need to look at their usage, and at a type of peppercorn that has largely fallen out of favour.  As for usage, black pepper and chili peppers are both popular for their ability to add zest, spice, and intensity of flavour to food.  This similarity is why chilies absolutely took off when introduced to India; they were easily substituted for black pepper, and cooks took to them immediately.  But a peppercorn looks nothing like a chili pepper right?  Well, as it turns out, before the ubiquitous black peppercorn swept the world, much of the spice trade actually centered around its very close relative the long pepper.  Thankfully, this name actually makes sense - long peppers are indeed long.  They still don't look exactly like chilies, but they look a heck of a lot closer.

The Portuguese and their incredibly extensive trade routes rapidly spread the ingredient throughout the world, where all sorts of names got slapped on it, which brings us back to Japan. The  portion of tōgarashi literally translates to Tang (like the dynasty) and is a reference to China, where the peppers enjoyed widespread acceptance. This means that shishito effectively breaks down to "lion-dog Chinese." The karashi part (which becomes garashi when a vowel prefaces it) also refers to spicy mustard, which was a prominent source of heat in Chinese and Japanese cooking at the time.  From what I can tell, the word was also adopted in deference to the fact that the chilies were ground into a spicy powder, which allowed them to be used in very much the same manner that mustard was.

I'm not sure if the "Chinese mustard" name is a reference to the chili pepper's popularity in China, or a mistaken belief that it originated there (if you know, tell me).  The Portuguese actually spread the chili pepper so rapidly around Asia and it caught on so quickly that many believed for a time that the peppers actually originated in Asia.  In fact, the wildly hot pepper Capsicum chinense (lit. Chinese pepper) is native to South/Central America (as are all peppers).  However, it had become so popular and widespread in Asia that when Dutch biologist Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin encountered and named the species in 1776, he believed that it was native to China. Interestingly (and rather uniquely), the black peppercorn has never been very popular in Japan, but that doesn't mean that the linguistic conflation between chilies and peppercorns didn't happen there too.  Chili peppers were originally called nanban kosho in Japan.  Nanban means 'Southern barbarians,' a term that referred to the Portuguese, who enjoyed lucrative trade in the region before Japan decided to effectively shut its doors on the world in 1633.  As for kosho, it means - you guessed it - pepper.

Charred shishito peppers with a sweet and spicy shichimi togarashi glaze on a white plate
Charred shishito peppers with a sweet and spicy shichimi togarashi glaze on a white plate

Recipe Notes

Phew, still with me? Alright. This is pretty easy to make, and a few little tips turn it into a breeze.

Shishito Peppers

Shishitos are thin-skinned and relatively mild peppers. The fact that they're fairly thin is what makes them work well in this recipe - a thicker pepper might char well, but it the thicker flesh will steam and become soft as it cooks, giving you an altogether different texture. If you can't find shishito peppers, padrón peppers make an excellent choice.

Shishito peppers, like most peppers, are green when immature and red when mature. You'll mostly find green ones for sale, but red peppers (or half-red ones) are perfectly good to use too, as the pictures can attest.

I've seen multiple references to the unpredictable heat of shishitos, though I'm not sure how accurate this is. They're generally mild, but you'll see many claims that 1 in 10 (or 12) will be very spicy. Certainly this is something that happens commonly with all sorts of normally mild peppers, but given that the degree of spiciness varies based on several growing conditions (and can vary even on the same plant), the percentage-based odds don't make much sense. I didn't have a single overly hot pepper in this entire batch. Nonetheless, do keep in mind that you may occasionally encounter a very hot pepper.

Oil

I used avocado oil for this recipe because a) it's got a REALLY high smoke point, and b) I had some. You can use any number of high-smoke-point oils, but don't use something like extra virgin olive oil, as it will burn too easily. You'll also notice that I didn't use much oil. The idea here is to sear the peppers without frying them in oil, and in order to do that it helps if you have a very well seasoned wok or frying pan. If you struggle with getting the right char (and/or with smoke issues) you can either add a little more oil, or you can use the grilling method I've detailed in the recipe below.

Charred shishito peppers with a sweet and spicy shichimi togarashi glaze on a white plate with chopsticks, tea cups, and small side plates

Nutritional info is given for a single serving (1/6 total recipe, or about 5-6 peppers). They're wildly healthy though so feel free to eat it all.

Nutrition Facts
Charred Shishito Peppers with Sweet Togarashi Spice
Amount Per Serving
Calories 28 Calories from Fat 9
% Daily Value*
Fat 1g2%
Saturated Fat 0.1g1%
Polyunsaturated Fat 0.1g
Monounsaturated Fat 1g
Sodium 99mg4%
Potassium 3mg0%
Carbohydrates 3g1%
Fiber 2g8%
Sugar 2g2%
Protein 1g2%
Vitamin A 350IU7%
Vitamin C 23.9mg29%
Iron 0.4mg2%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Nutritional Summary

GOOD NEWS:
If you're a chronic snacker (hello friend), these are the way to go. The nutritional information is for a snack-sized 1/6th portion, but you could eat the entire serving without worrying. It's also very high in vitamin C, and moderately high in dietary fiber and vitamin A.

BAD NEWS:
Nothing. Eat all you want.

Ingredient Pages

No ingredient pages have been written yet for any of the ingredients in this recipe.  Like to see one?  Let me know in the comments below or by email.

Pantry Pages

  • Vegan
  • Gluten free
  • 15-minutes
Charred Shishito Peppers with Sweet Togarashi Spice - Diversivore.com
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5 from 4 votes

Charred Shishito Peppers with Sweet Togarashi Spice

Shishito peppers are wildly popular, linguistically confusing, and easy to cook. Here we examine all three of those things in one lovely sweet-and-spicy recipe.
Prep Time2 minutes
Cook Time6 minutes
Total Time8 minutes
Course: Appetizer, Side Dish
Cuisine: Asian, Japanese
Keyword: shichimi togarashi, snack, summer, vegan
Servings: 6 people
Calories: 28kcal

Ingredients

  • 225 g shishito peppers (about 35-40 peppers)
  • 1/2 tsp shichimi togarashi (plus more to serve)
  • 1/2 tsp sugar
  • 2 tbsp sake
  • 1 tsp avocado oil or other neutral, high smoke-point oil
  • salt to taste

Instructions

Prep

  • Rinse and VERY thoroughly dry your peppers (I like to use a salad spinner to help me get any excess water off).
  • Use a small knife or needle to poke a small hole in each pepper. This will prevent them from puffing up with steam and bursting as they cook.
  • Mix the shichimi togarashi and the sugar together and set aside.

Wok/Pan Searing Variation

  • Heat a well-seasoned wok or large cast-iron pan over very high heat. Add the oil and swirl the wok/pan to cover the bottom portion evenly. Note that the oil should not pool anywhere in the pan - you just want it to cover the pan in a thin film.
  • When the oil is just beginning to give off a tiny bit of smoke, add the peppers in an even layer. Sear until well charred, turning frequently to ensure even coverage; about 6-8 minutes total. Remove from heat.
  • Add the sake to the wok/pan and toss the peppers to ensure that they're covered evenly. Cook liquid has almost entirely evaporated.
  • Add the sugar/togarashi blend and toss the peppers to cover them evenly. Remove from heat, season with salt, and serve as soon as the peppers are cool enough to touch, ideally with extra shichimi togarashi on the side.

Grilling Variation

  • Preheat an outdoor grill until it reaches a searing range (around 450 F). Brush the grill or a grilling tray with a little oil (you'll need more than the tsp necessary for the pan-searing version). Spread the peppers out over a high, direct heat. Grill until well charred, turning frequently to ensure even coverage; about 5-7 minutes.
  • Heat an small pan or wok over high heat (indoors, or on your grill). Once the pan is very hot, add the peppers and the sake, stirring to coat the cooked peppers. Once the liquid has evaporated completely, add the sugar/togarashi blend and toss the peppers to cover them evenly. Remove from heat, season with salt, and serve as soon as the peppers are cool enough to touch, ideally with extra shichimi togarashi on the side.

Notes

Shishito peppers have gotten trendy, which makes them easier and easier to find. If you can't find them, you could very easily substitute padrón peppers (another trendy and delicious little green pepper). You could experiment with other small peppers, but fleshier peppers (e.g. jalapenos) have too much moisture and will not yield a similar end product.

Nutrition

Calories: 28kcal | Carbohydrates: 3g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 0.1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 99mg | Potassium: 3mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 350IU | Vitamin C: 23.9mg | Iron: 0.4mg

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Comments

  1. Looks delicious, Sean. I had these, done on a grill at a friends house earlier this year and made up my mind to grow them next year. Great post and photos.

    1. Author

      Thanks Colleen! They’re pretty delightfully addictive little things. I think growing them sounds like an amazing idea, especially given that they tend to be a little pricy. Let me know how that goes!

  2. What an incredibly educational ride I just went on!! I loved the in-depth information and background on the pepper itself, reminded me so much of my hubby (who is FULL of this kind of knowledge) as I read along!! He would LOVE your blog BTW, I sense a new follower 🙂 You had me at “Monica” just so we are clear (ha!). This dish will be made in our home in the near future, I just know my hubs will go nuts when he sees what you created and beg to make them (even though I am not a huge pepper fan, although that may change with this dish). Thanks so much for the info and recipe!

    1. Author

      Thanks Melissa, I’m glad you enjoyed the piece and the recipe! Truth be told, I could talk about this kind of stuff all day – so I’m sure your husband and I would get along swimmingly. 🙂

  3. Well, I consider myself informed! As a self-declared pepper lover, I surely don’t know as much as I could. And I especially could not pronounce shishito…

    I love the idea of taking something so simple (and yummy as is) and transforming it into a pure yet very different dish. I feel like we (as food bloggers) tend to like to complicate things. And sometimes, it’s a crying shame to not celebrate the normal flavours of great produce!

    1. Author

      I’m glad you enjoyed the post Amanda! I think peppers in general have a lot of potential when it comes to simple, ingredient-centered dishes. I mean, they’ve got tons of flavour and character on their own, and you really don’t want to bury that!

  4. Another fascinating post, Sean! I love the knowledge you drop on us, combined with simple (but delicious looking) recipes — it makes it much less intimidating to cook with these out-of-the-box ingredients. I would happily munch away on a plate of these Charred Shishito Peppers this afternoon! 🙂

    1. Author

      Thanks Justine! I’m really glad you enjoy my approach. I know that a lot of folks want to jump right to a recipe (and hey, that’s what the button’s there for), but for unfamiliar foods it’s really great spending some time getting to know your ingredients and learning how to get the most out of them. It’s how I like to learn, and it’s how I like to teach.

  5. First of all, “I used avocado oil for this recipe because a) it’s got a REALLY high smoke point, and b) I had some.” LOL @ *B*. Secondly, send me some of these right now.

    This post was great. #TodayILearned. I love learning about why things are named the way they are. I really do wonder how certain parts of a name get discarded while others don’t, like you’d mentioned with shishito peppers being better off as shishi peppers. It IS nonsensical, and I’m sure white people did it. Because that’s how so many of them (us?) do (except not us).

    1. Author

      Yeah, sometimes I just want to be honest about that stuff. I mean, I like avocado oil, but yeah… I have a nice big bottle. Gotta use that bad boy.

      I’m glad you enjoyed my linguistic diversions. And as funny as I think it all is, I just shrug and laugh. If there’s one thing weirder than food itself, it’s language. Gotta role with the punches.

    1. Author

      Thanks Amanda! And this is precisely the kind of thing to have around if you’re a chronic snacker – tasty, satisfying, and no empty calories!

    1. Author

      Thank you Shareba! They’re really lovely little peppers, and I do hope you’ll try them out. I’ve seen them at Whole Foods now (pricey of course), and they’re showing up with regularity at many farmer’s markets. Cheers!

  6. These are fantastic pictures..they can’t help but make your mouth water! I can’t wait to try these as my brother in law is a huge fan of anything to do with peppers( he collects hot sauce aswell). I’ll be serving these up the next time he’s over to visit!

    1. Author

      Thank you Markus! If I’m being honest (and tooting my own horn a little) I was really happy with how these shots turned out. I have no doubt that a pepper lover like your brother would be very excited by these! I personally love how they feature the pepper flavour so prominently while bringing in some sweetness and the distinctive citrus/chili heat of shichimi togarashi. It’s unexpected, and really tasty!

  7. I love this Sean. The use of avocado oil brilliant and as far as using too much of it I agree. These peppers look so packed with flavor. I could see myself passing by a few times to snack on them only to discover they are all gone. They are so easy to handle and pop in your mouth that there would be no complaints about complexity to eating them. The colors also take you in and I bet the aroma is intoxicating for us pepper lovers.
    Well done once again Sean, Well done!
    Loreto

    1. Author

      Thanks Loreto! Avocado oil is a great ingredient to be sure, and one that deserves more recognition. As for the peppers, they’re undeniably snack-worthy… fortunately they’re also pretty guilt free! Thanks for the kind words, and for taking the time to comment. Cheers!

  8. I’m obsessed with shishito peppers, and while I usually go the simple route with sprinkling of big crunchy salt flakes, I can just imagine how wonderful they’d taste with a sweet-and-spicy garnish. What a brilliant idea to combine shichimi togarashi and sugar together.
    I never realised that the English-speaking world had so badly mangled the original Japanese name for these tasty little peppers… language is kind of a funny thing, huh?

    1. Author

      The simple route is so good with shishitos and I certainly don’t blame you. But I was excited to come up with something new and different for those times when you want to switch things up! And I’m glad you like the sugar/shichimi togarashi combo. I was a little surprised that it wasn’t a more common idea to be honest. It’s reminiscent of other common sweet chili flavours, but quite unique thanks to the citrus, sesame, and sansho.

  9. Oh I love these so much, unfortunately Dave has issues with peppers so I never have them unless I’m out with friends – fortunately they seem to be the hot vegetable on everey menu right now.

    1. Author

      Thanks Ayngelina (and sorry for the suuuuuuper late response). Also, pun intended on ‘hot vegetable’? 😀

    1. Author

      Thanks Dawn! It’s a fun recipe – and I was really happy with the shots on this one. Cheers!

    1. Author

      I hope not… but I did find bacon-wrapped pork belly, and apparently it’s popular. Since bacon is just made from pork belly, I guess that’s pretty close. Lol.

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