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KATY
JUNE-FRIESEN |
New Mexico's cult of the chile
A hot icon is found on every porch and in every meal.
By Katy June-Friesen | Contributor to The Christian Science
Monitor
HATCH, N.M.
Sheathed in green satin and confidence, Green Chile Queen
Alexandria Berridge claims her title - coveted by every teenage
girl in this village - is about more than beauty.
"I actually know what I'm talking about," she says of her
chile credentials.
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QUEENS WHERE CHILE IS KING:
Green Chile Queen
Alexandria Berridge (left) and Red Chile
Queen Cynthia Rodriguez reign in Hatch,
N.M., the self-proclaimed chile capital of
the world.
KATY JUNE-FRIESEN
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This is no small claim in New Mexico, where the cult of the
chile - the state's official fruit (yes, fruit) - verges on the
religious. The fruit's likeness is a sort of state Virgin de
Guadalupe - ristras, hanging strings of chile pods, bless
front porches everywhere.
Chile sauce is slathered on every
native food for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Thousands make a
pilgrimage to the annual September harvest festival in this
town, the self-proclaimed chile capital of the world, to buy
their yearly stock. And it would seem that the trade in chile
tchotchkes and T-shirts is a bigger state export than the chiles
themselves.
Queen Alexandria says her knowledge - a speech about
"authentic Hatch chile" - secured the crown. Key in that speech
was the story of a chile farmer's wife who had to hitch a ride
with neighbors to the hospital when she went into labor because
her husband didn't want to be pulled away from his harvest.
But Alexandria - whose well-worn cowboy boots peak from
beneath her gown - also has some of her own first-hand chile
lore: she's witnessed the plowed earth of her family farm erupt
in green every season of her 17 years; she's brushed through the
rows of plants in the back-breaking labor of picking chile pods;
and she walks her talk by participating in the festival's
chile-eating contest.
But Alexandria was crowned this month in a particularly dicey
harvest season - the crop emerged in August to weeks of rain.
Alexandria watched her dad get three tractors stuck in the
saturated fields of the Hatch Valley.
A wet chile is not a happy chile. There's a reason chiles
thrive in the baking sun of the southern New Mexico desert. Wet
chile plants ripen too fast, and pods maturing at lower
temperatures can have less bite. Muddy fields make for difficult
harvesting, and some of the green and most of the red chiles
(which ripen later) hadn't been picked in time for the Labor Day
festival.
Chile peppers aren't simply an overplayed Southwestern icon
(which, at its worst, has a face and legs, and dances). New
Mexico is the nation's biggest chile producer, and chile
products contribute $200 million to the state's economy. There's
even a chile think tank - the Chile Pepper Institute at New
Mexico State University - devoted to breeding, researching, and
the high task of "educating the world about chiles." And, in
that category of educating the world, the Hatch Chile Festival
website points out that New Mexico spells it "chile," not
"chili," the way its hot pepper rival, Texas, (and the 48 other
states) spell it.
So when the town of Hatch swam in four feet of water last
month, many New Mexicans had nightmares about chile dearth.
But at the festival earlier this month, there were plenty of
prized Big Jims (medium heat), Sandia (hot), and New Mexico No.
6 (milder) pods slung in big burlap bags over buyers' backs.
Though rain limited the crowds this year to under 10,000 (the
usual is 20,000) it was still the most action Hatch (pop. 1,600)
sees all year.
Rain or not, peppers pack enough political punch here that
Gov. Bill Richardson found time - amid a diplomatic effort to
free a New Mexican journalist being held by Sudan authorities -
to open the Hatch chile festival as grand marshal of the Labor
Day weekend parade. It took all of 20 minutes - and banter
between parade and curb made it clear that everyone knows
everyone.
Mayor Judd Nordyke suggested that there were more chile
stands at the festival this year because rain damage to crops
and homes have made locals more strapped for cash. The irony, he
noted, is that he recalls people at prayer meetings earlier in
the summer asking for rain. "It just didn't need to come all at
once," he added.
***
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CHILE-LINK FENCE:
Ristras - bunches
of pods - are a New Mexican icon found
hanging on front porches across the state.
KATY JUNE-FRIESEN
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At the festival, chiles are literally in the air - the smell
of fresh roasting peppers spins out of hand-turned gas roasters.
Every few feet is a stand festooned with bright chains of red
and green ristras. Tourists are like hummingbirds -
stopping to buzz around the iconic bunches and buy packaged
chile staples such as chile powder, salsa, chile jellies, chile
oils, and even chile peanut brittle. And where chile can be
eaten in the form of chile-on-a-stick (a pod stuffed with
cheese, then deep-fried) and chile chips (deep-fried chile
pieces) the lineup of the hungry is anxious and impenetrable
enough to be more like a New York queue than a laid-back
Southwestern one.
Amid the pungent array, it's not hard to separate locals from
the tourists. Locals are more casually dressed, and many tote
around another regional figure - the Chihuahua, which is clearly
the leading canine here. One woman is pushing hers around in a
cart with the sign "Cujo."
At June Rutherford's booth, customers are teeming. Ground to
powder and packaged in 1 pound to 2 pound Ziploc bags, "June's
Special Hot Red Chile" sells well, as does her chile knowledge.
She's been at this game most of her 82 years - as she puts it,
"My folks was chile farmers." Her father, Joseph Franzoy, was
the first chile farmer in Hatch Valley in 1915. The Big Jim
green chile, which June helped develop, is named after her late
husband.
Mrs. Rutherford and three of her brothers still farm here -
and, yes, she still gets out in the fields. The most momentous
chile development she recalls was when the North American Free
Trade Agreement took effect in 1994. The industry has never been
the same. She says she used to export large amounts of chiles to
California. After NAFTA she sells none there.
Most pods are still harvested by hand, so cheaper labor in
other countries is threatening the Chile Capital of the World.
Since NAFTA, the US has imported increasing amounts of cheaper
foreign chiles, particularly from Mexico. The folks at New
Mexico State University have tried to perfect a chile-picking
machine, but so far it's not efficient enough to make a
difference, and growers are still trying to figure out how to
compete.
***
Queen Alexandria, still in boots and gown, is lugging a jug
of milk toward the long folding table under the festival's
airport hanger. She's preparing for the under-18 chile-eating
contest, and milk is the best bet for cutting chile heat. Four
contestants face the seated audience and hunker down over paper
plates that hold five roasted hot chiles. The announcer yells
"go!" and seeds and juice fly as Alexandria tries to stuff down
the familiar fruit. But she's not fast enough to beat the only
boy at the table, an athletic high schooler who raises his fists
in the air to audience cheers.
Alexandria smiles and takes a big swig of milk. She doesn't
consider herself a loser. To be queen where chile is king, she
says, is something "no Berridge has ever done.... It's a huge,
huge thing - such an honor."
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