Easy, baked Southwest Stuffed Poblano Peppers with ground beef and rice are packed with bold, savory flavors and topped with cheese to make the BEST healthy stuffed peppers recipe you’ll ever taste!
If you’re crazy about these poblano peppers, you need to try my Easy Stuffed Bell Peppers, Stuffed Pepper Skillet, and Southwest Corn Chowder.
Are you back? Good. So, about these delicious Southwestern Stuffed Poblano Peppers. The inspiration for these hit me recently when I was checking out my friend’s garden and noticed she had a bunch of the poblano peppers hanging like big, green cowbells from no less than four different plants. When I asked her what she was growing those for, she had no idea. She just thought they’d be fun to grow as an experiment.
Well, I can’t just let good poblano peppers go to waste, can I? I vowed right then and there to find a use for those peppers, and the idea of stuffing them was the first thing I thought of. You only need a few peppers to make enough servings for a group and they pair wonderfully with ground beef and other Southwestern-inspired ingredients like black beans, corn, diced tomatoes, green chilis and, of course, cheese.
Are Poblano Peppers Good for You?
Well, to begin with, poblanos are a vegetable and I tend to think all vegetables are good for you. Sure, some more than others, but overall, veggie = good in my book. But, as for the nitty-gritty of why poblanos are good for you, check this out: One cooked poblano has only 13 calories and almost zero fat. They also have a little bit of protein and carbs, and a decent amount of fiber, iron, and vitamin A.
How Hot are Poblano Peppers?
I chose to use poblanos in this dish because they have a milder taste and heat than other, hotter pepper options. While you have probably had poblanos in salsas and sauces, in savory muffins (like in Cilantro Lime Grilled Shrimp + Roasted Poblano Sauce, or Breakfast Muffins) in chile rellenos, or even in chili chowders, you may not have thought to stuff them. Good thing you’ve got me, that’s all I’m saying.
On the Scoville heat unit scale, poblanos score 1,000-1,500 units, which is fairly mild. To put that into perspective, jalapenos score at 2,500-8,000 units. So that makes them two to eight times milder. That’s a pretty big difference, I suppose, especially if you don’t like spicy foods. But it’s really hard to tell with jalapenos, as some will be mild and some will set your entire mouth on fire for what seems like forever.
On the flip side, bell peppers have a heat score of exactly 0, while one of the the hottest peppers (the Carolina reaper) has a score of 1,400,000-2,200,000 units. All that being said, I picked the poblano in this recipe because it’s not super bland but its tiny kick of heat sets it apart from other peppers you could use, like bell peppers or hatch chilis. Remember, too that the peppers have to be big enough to stuff, so that eliminates A LOT of pepper varieties.
One more note on heat: Choose green and not red poblanos, as red ones will be a lot hotter.
How do you Soften Poblano Peppers?
For this recipe I softened the poblanos ahead of time in the oven. Otherwise, if you went ahead and stuffed them and cooked them all together and didn’t pre-cook them, they would be too hard to eat in my opinion. You could also boil them for a couple minutes before slicing in half, stuffing, and baking.
If you don’t like the poblano skin, another option is to roast them before stuffing and baking. To do this, roast the poblanos either in the oven (at 450 degrees) or on the grill until the skin starts to darken and blister. Take them off the heat and cover them to let them steam up a bit. (You can put them in a plastic bag or overturn a bowl or towel onto the peppers to help trap the steam.) When they are cool enough, you can peel off the skin, then prepare according to recipe directions.
Happy eating!
More Southwest Recipes
Did you try this Southwest Stuffed Poblano Peppers recipe? YAY! Please rate the recipe below!
Southwest Stuffed Poblano Peppers
Ingredients
- 4 poblano peppers - halved and seeds/membranes removed
- 1 pound lean ground beef - OR chorizo, see note 2
- 1 teaspoon each ground cumin, chili powder, garlic powder
- 1 cup cooked long grain white rice - see note 1
- ½ cup canned black beans - drained
- ½ cup frozen or canned corn - drained
- 1 15-ounce can fire roasted diced tomatoes - drained
- 1 4-ounce can diced green chiles
- ½-1 cup grated mozzarella OR Mexican-blend cheese
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees and lightly grease a large baking sheet. Arrange halved poblano peppers in a single layer on the baking sheet so that they aren't overlapping. Bake for 10-15 minutes while you move on to the next step.
- Add ground beef (or preferred meat choice, see Note 2) and rice to a large skillet, and season with the cumin, chili powder, and garlic powder. Saute over medium heat for 5-8 minutes until meat is browned and cooked through.
- Stir in the black beans, corn, diced tomatoes, and green chiles. Cook another 1-2 minutes. Spoon mixture into the peppers, sprinkle with cheese, and return to oven for another 10 minutes or so until peppers are tender and cheese is melted. Allow to cool slightly before serving.
Notes
- Ready rice works great!
- Ground beef, chorizo, ground chicken, ground turkey, or ground spicy Italian sausage all work well in this recipe! My personal favorite is the spicy Italian sausage or chorizo.
- Substitutions for the poblano peppers: bell peppers, hatch chiles.
Use half the beef or double the peppers, I have a ton of filling left over after stuffing the peppers
Is the calorie count per pepper?
Per half pepper, as the peppers are cut in half.
Could I omit the meat? Or do you have a good substitute? I don’t eat mushrooms either
Ground beef, chorizo, ground chicken, ground turkey, or ground spicy Italian sausage all work well in this recipe! My personal favorite is the spicy Italian sausage or chorizo. Or you can omit it completely if you prefer. As for mushrooms, they aren’t called for in this recipe so you have nothing to worry about there 🙂
So yummy! I used pablano and red bell peppers. My husband loved it all.
Does this freeze ok? Looking for recipes that I can freeze my abundant harvest of peppers.
I think they can be frozen. If it were me, I would probably assemble and then freeze. Bake before serving!
This was very delicious and also simple to prepare. It made a lot more filling than i could stuff into my peppers. So, we now have something to put on a salad or to put in a wrap for leftovers! (I did add some jalapeños and some red onion in with my sausage).
The recipe was easy to follow. We used chorizo. Easy to put together. We will have this again, soon.
Tasty! Sometimes you must use what is on hand, so my changes were that I used fresh tomatoes (split lengthwise and roast for 10 minutes at 400 degrees, let cool slightly then the skins can be easily plucked off and discarded, then dice the flesh retaining all the juices. I used fresh corn kernels, cut from the cob. For meat I used 50/50 ground beef and Mexican chorizo. I left the chili powder out because the chorizo is highly seasoned. I stirred half the cheese into the meat/rice/corn/bean stuffing mix after allowing it to cool a bit, then used the remaining cheese to top the stuffed peppers.
It was great I used goat cheeses, and roasted peppers in house.
Not much flavor and took long to make.
I made these exactly as the recipe called for with hot Italian sausage, baked a few minutes longer. Amazing!
Yummy
Delishiosness!!!!! Made with chorizo and premade lime cilantro rice that was in the pantry!! Yummy!
Used this for meatless Monday, and substituted jackfruit for the meat. Used Rotel instead of fire roasted tomatoes and chilis. Made a side dish of Arroz Rojas. Excellent!
Love these! I make these according to the recipe using beef or pork chorizo(get the good stuff not the dirt cheap stuff) and I probably add extra cheese just because. I make these for company all the time and serve them with salsa, sour cream, avocado and a side of tortilla chips. Perfect and easy to assemble ahead of time. Thanks for the recipe!