Ingredients
Combine the tomatoes, onion, peppers, cilantro, and garlic in a medium bowl. Stir in oil, chili powder, and cayenne to taste. Yields 2 1/2 to 3 cups.
i say chi-chi's mild salsa or if you are the person who likes spicey put hot salsa
Well according to my 7th grade experiment salsa dose increase your body temperature. However mild salsa will raise it more than hot salsa will!
The different types of salsas available at Chipotle are mild tomato salsa, medium tomatillo-green chili salsa, and hot tomatillo-red chili salsa.
Ketchup that uses the flavor of mild salsa in it, and it is usually smooth and rich, instead of chunky. Popular in south America. Especially in Pollo Campero, a Guatemalan chicken restaurant
laid-back or easy going
Mild polite carefree easy going people
No, the word hot is an adjective, a word that describes a noun or a noun. Examples: Adjective: The hot weather has been great swimming weather. Noun: The salsa that I like is the mild, not the hot.
Here's one Homemade Sala. Its called Homemade Hot Salsa. The sauce contains two tablespoons mild jalapeno green salsa, a tablespoon of garlic salt, a cup of stewed tomatoes, an onion, a celery stalk, a cup of whole tomatoes and two green peppers. Chop the onion, green peppers and celery stalk. Get a pan and pour 1/2 teaspoon and sauce the green peppers, elery stalk and onion. If you have a blender, transfer the mixture into it. Add the green salsa, garlic salt, stewed tomatoes and whole tomatoes. Mix all the ingredients together. Finally refrigerate it and when its ready, serve.
Gates are made from mild steel, because mild steel is relatively easy to change shape of, is rather cheap and quite strong.
Reasonably priced, readily available, easy to work with.
Picante is salsa. Picante is to salsa as grape is to jelly or Taurus is to Ford. It's just a variety of salsa. "Picante" means "spicy," so salsa picante is "spicy sauce." There are also sweet salsas and sour salsas.To add to the correction, "salsa" simply means "sauce." So Picante is just a description of the sauce, or salsa, and it indeed means "spicy," or, perhaps, "sharp." In Spanish, it would be "Salsa Picante," but companies like Pace call it Picante Sauce.^ Picante is a Spanish adjective that derives from picar, or "to sting," it refers to the feeling caused by the salsa on a persons tongue.And to correct the original answer, pico de gallo in much of Northern Mexico is a non-saucy mix of chopped tomatoes, onions, chiles, and so on. Farther south, it is made with jicama and orange, and is another thing entirely.Now it's my turn. To the second editor: if picante sauce supposedly "is a type of salsa," as you say, then how could there the same brand of both products sitting side-by-side on a shelf, as if they were different things--as if picante sauce was a completely separate thing from salsa?Also, how could there be a "spicy salsa" and a "non-spicy salsa" (non-picante) if both types have their medium and *hot* versions along with the mild version (which means that they *both* can be spicy)?I can see this is not a good place for getting answers, despite the website's name.
gentle, easy, pleasing, smooth, soft, mild, peaceful