Mexican Mac & Cheese

I pulled some chorizo out of the freezer this morning with a vague idea of something spicy for dinner.  The only tangible was the sausage.  Everything else was open for inspiration.

Did I mention it's about a million degrees below zero?  Okay.  Not quite, but it was 12° when I left for work this morning.  It's the end of January and we've had it pretty easy thus far.  But I'm a west coast boy who will never - ever - get used to the cold.  I wanted something warm and soothing when I got home.  Macaroni and Cheese started calling my name early.  I thought I'd get a ham steak and do ham & mac & cheese with peas when the idea of a Mexican Mac & Cheese started formulating...

The more I thought of it, the more I wanted it.  Chorizo and tomatoes, jack and cheddar.

A recipe was born...

Mexican Mac & Cheese

  • 1/2 lb fresh chorizo
  • 1/2 cup onion, diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • dash cayenne
  • 1 can diced tomatoes, drained
  • 3 tbsp butter
  • 3 tbsp flour
  • 3 cups milk
  • 2 cups shredded cheeses (cheddar, jack, whatever...)
  • tabasco sauce
  • worcestershire sauce
  • salt and pepper, to taste
  • 1/2 pound macaroni

Remove chorizo from casing and brown with onion and garlic.  Add spices and cook until very fragrant.  Add tomatoes.  Heat and set aside.

Melt butter in saucepan.  Add flour and stir until smooth.  Cook about 3-4 minutes.  Add milk and cook until thickened.  Add cheese, and a few drops of tabasco and worcestershire sauces.  Add salt and pepper, to taste.

Meanwhile, cook macaroni.

When done, mix drained macaroni with chorizo and tomatoes.  Add cheese sauce and mix well.

Place all in buttered casserole and top with buttered bread crumbs.

Bake at 350° for about an hour.

It was all the right things... rich, creamy, slightly spicy, crunchy topping.  Perfect comfort food for a freezing day.

I can't wait for Spring...


Beard on Bread, Tim on Chili

 

By far, one of the best bread-baking books out there is Beard on Bread.

The beauty of anything written by James Beard is that he writes in a straight-forward way, gives common-sense instructions, and gives a list of variations.  His basic premise is "you can't screw it up."  I've been following that advice for years.

So after making a big pot of chili today, I thought making some bread bowls would be a fun way to serve them.  It's cold outside.  I can pretty much justify the calories.  Besides, fresh bread is one of life's great pleasures.

My 'go-to' recipe for a quick and easy bread is Beard's French-style (also called Cuban) Bread.  It's a one-rise and into a cold oven bread that has a great crust.  I thought it would be perfect for bread bowls.  They almost were.

I followed the directions and formed into balls instead of loaves and into the oven they went.  They actually rose up more than they rose out, so, while they could have worked, I decided to put the chili in bowls and serve the bread on the side.  It worked.

Here's the complete 2-page recipe and schpiel from his 1973 cook book.

French-Style Bread

French bread, as we all know, has been praised and prized above all other breads in the world for its distinctive crumb, crisp crust, and superb flavor. However, the carefully controlled preparation of it in commercial bakeries is difficult to duplicate in one’s own kitchen. If you are ready for the challenge, you should search out a recipe that is as complete as the one developed by Julia Child and Simone Beck for Volume 2 of Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Their method seems tremendously complex but it is great fun to follow through to the final goal (and once mastered, not difficult to do again); the loaves are startlingly good and genuinely French.

The bread I am giving here is not truly French, and for that reason it is called “French-style.” Actually it could be called “Continental,” because it is very much like the bread one finds in Italy, Spain, and Portugal. It has also been known for many years as "Cuban Bread." It is a casual, easy-to-make bread that can be played with in several ways. If made according to the basic recipe below it produces a good loaf ready for eating almost the minute it comes from the oven. It will not hold for more than half a day but, of course, can be frozen.

Yield: 2 long loaves

Ingredients

  • 1½ packages active dry yeast
  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
  • 2 cups warm water (l00° to 115°, approximately)
  • 1 tablespoon salt
  • 5 to 6 cups all-purpose or hard-wheat flour
  • 3 tablespoons yellow cornmeal
  • 1 tablespoon egg white, mixed with 1 tablespoon cold water

Directions

Combine the yeast with sugar and warm water in a large bowl and allow to proof. Mix the salt with the flour and add to the yeast mixture, a cup at a time, until you have a stiff dough. Remove to a lightly floured board and knead until no longer sticky, about 10 minutes, adding flour as necessary. Place in a buttered bowl and turn to coat the surface with butter. Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, 1½ to 2 hours.

Punch down the dough. Turn out on a floured board and shape into two long, French bread-style loaves. Place on a baking sheet that has been sprinkled with the cornmeal but not buttered. Slash the tops of the loaves diagonally in two or three places, and brush with the egg wash. Place in a cold oven, set the temperature at 400°, and bake 35 minutes, or until well browned and hollow sounding when the tops are rapped.

VARIATIONS

For a wheaten loaf, use half white flour and half whole-wheat flour.

Substitute equal parts of whole-wheat flour and cracked wheat for half of the white flour.

For a more involved, more tightly textured loaf: Use either the original recipe or the whole-wheat variation. After the first rising, remove from the bowl, punch down, and knead again for 5 to 10 minutes. Return to the buttered bowl for a second rising. When it has doubled in bulk, form into two loaves and place on a baking sheet sprinkled with cornmeal. Cover and let rise for 30 minutes. Slash with a sharp razor or knife, brush with slightly beaten egg white or water, and place in a cold oven set for 375° or 400°. Bake until nicely browned and hollow sounding when tapped with the knuckles.

Line the oven rack with tiles (see page 12), preheat the oven to 400°, and slide your bread loaves from the baking sheet directly onto the tiles, which have been sprinkled with cornmeal.

Add to the liquid in the first step 4 to 5 tablespoons olive oil and then proceed with either the original recipe or the whole-wheat variation. You may need to use a small additional amount of flour.

Use 1/3 white flour, 1/3 whole-wheat, and 1/3 cracked-wheat. This will give a very nice coarse, nutlike texture to the bread. With this mixture I would advise adding olive oil in the beginning to give tenderness.

© 1973 James A. Beard

Chili is one of those things I just kinda make.  I don't really have a favorite recipe and I more or less make it differently every time I do make it.  I make it with ground beef, cubed beef, stew beef, fresh beans, canned beans, dried beans, whole tomatoes, canned tomatoes, fresh chilis or dried or ground.

It's chili.  Ya can't really screw it up.

This chili was pretty much a canned affair.  Beans and tomatoes were canned and the beef broth came out of a carton.  The beef was real.

Canned beans are a great convenience and I always pick up a can or three when when they're on sale.   While I was actually planning to use dried beans, Victor gently reminded me last night that we had probably a dozen cans of various beans on the shelf taking up more room than a single bag of beans.  I just love a logical man!  Canned beans, it was!  I used Roman beans, cannellini, pintos, pink beans, and red beans.

5-Bean Chipotle Chili

  • 2 pounds beef, cubed
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1 28oz can crushed tomatoes
  • 1 14oz can diced tomatoes
  • 2 8oz cans tomato sauce
  • 1 qt beef broth
  • 6 cans assorted beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 tsp chipotle powder
  • 1 tbsp cumin
  • 1 tbsp chili powder
  • salt and pepper
  • cheese and sour cream for toppings

Brown beef (I browned it in bacon grease because I had some from breakfast).  Add onion and garlic and cook until onion is wilted.

Add spices and cook to rid them of their 'raw' taste.

Add tomatoes and then broth.  Bring to a boil and then simmer about an hour.

Add beans and simmer another hour or so.

Check for seasoning and serve with cheese and sour cream.

Bread was served on the side.  It was crusty, crunchy, and perfect for dipping and sopping.

And there are leftovers.

Yum.


Not Cookies For Dinner

12-13-chicken

Okay.  I've OD'd on cookies and candy - already!

Well... not really.  I do have a great capacity for homemade sweets.  But I did have to seriously slow down on my tasting.  There really is something about the cookies and candy this year - everything tastes extra-special good.  But man does not live by cookies and candy alone.  Real food has to enter into the equation now and again.

Dinner.

I wanted something quick and easy.  Time to clean out the refrigerator.

Chicken thighs, green mole sauce, canned beans, fondue, sour cream, and a really thick corn tortilla that I picked up at Assi. (They also have a bit of a Mexican section.)

12-13-chicken-2

It was one of those combinations that just worked.  And it wasn't sugar.


Chicken Mole Verde

12-3-mole-verde

This may be the least traditional mole ever created - but, dayum, it was good!

I started off with a jar of Doña Maria Mole Verde and a couple of chicken breasts.  I had first thought I would just make the sauce (add a quart of broth to the jar of sauce) and serve it over the chicken but then I thought I'd rather have it served over rice.

I diced and then sauteed the chicken, added the sauce, and then added some frozen corn.  And then some canned beans.  And half a bag of frozen spinach.  And a small can of sliced black olives.  And some leftover rice from the night before.

I couldn't help myself - it became a clean out the kitchen obsession!  What else could I put in this simmering pot?!?  I almost put in some cheese (I had both Spanish blue and Philly cream) but finally realized I had done enough for one pot.

What started out as a simple sauce over a chicken breast became a thick and hearty stew.  It was amazingly good!

It's one I won't be replicating any time soon, but it really does show the versatility of the Doña Maria sauces.  They're like $1.99 - I always have a couple in the cabinet for those lazy whatever nights.

Yum.


Stuffed Mexican Meatballs

Phoebe Wilson Dineen

  • 1 lb. lean ground beef
  • 1 C crushed corn chips
  • 2 tbsp chopped green chilies
  • 1 egg, slightly beaten
  • 3/4 tsp chili powder
  • 1-7 oz. jar pimento stuffed olives
  • 1 small jar taco sauce (to dip meat balls in, if desired)

Combine ground beef, chips, chilies, egg, and chili powder in large bowl. Mix as for a meat loaf. Take a small amount of mixture and shape it around an olive. Repeat until all the meat is used. Bake at 350 until meat is brown.


Microwave Cheese Enchiladas

Kate Kelly Hodsdon

  • 2-1/2 to 3 C cottage cheese
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 1 C chopped green onions
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 4 oz. Monterey jack cheese with jalapeno, shredded
  • 8 oz. Monterey jack cheese, shredded

Mix above ingredients. Wrap 12 corn tortillas in a napkin and warm on HI for 1 minute. Fill tortillas with cheese mixture and roll tightly. Place in glass dish, seam side down, Cover with enchilada sauce. Microwave on MEDIUM HI for 8-10 minutes, covered with plastic wrap. Sprinkle with 2 cups shredded cheddar, cover, and let stand 8-10 minutes. Top with sour cream and onions.

Enchilada Sauce:

  • 3-1/2 tbsp margarine
  • 3/4 tbsp chili powder
  • 4 tbsp flour
  • 3/4 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • Pinch of oregano

Melt margarine on HI for 30 seconds. Add remaining ingredients, stirring well, Gradually stir in 2 cups water. Cook on HI for 4 minutes or until thickened, stirring every 1-1/2 minutes.


Marcy's Burritos

Marcy Dineen Medeiros

SAUCE:

  • 2 tbsp cumin
  • 2 tbsp chili powder
  • 8 oz can tomato sauce
  • 1 tsp garlic, chopped
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp salsa (or more)
  • 1/2 chopped onion
  • 1/2 chopped tomato
  • 1/2 chopped bell pepper

And then:

  • 10 large flour tortillas
  • 1 lb hamburger meat
  • 1 16 oz can chili con carne
  • 1 lb cheddar cheese
  • 1 onion, chopped

Mix all ingredients together, add water as needed. Simmer until vegetables are cooked. Vary the strength of the cumin and chili powder according to taste.

Directions for Burrito: Cook ground beef. drain grease. Add cooked sauce and can of chili beans. Simmer for 5-10 minutes.

Take 5 tortillas and put between 2 very wet napkins in the microwave for one minute on high. This will soften up the tortillas. Do again for second set. Shred the cheddar cheese. (Large shredder).

Make the burrito:

Put a heaping spoon of the meat/bean/sauce mixture on flour tortilla. Add a handful of cheddar cheese and some onions and put on top. Roll up and put in glass pan. Leave enough cheese and onions to spread over top of burritos. If you heat in oven, heat at 375 degrees until hot, or put in microwave if in a hurry, which I always am, and heat on high for 5-10 minutes to melt cheese. Serve with salsa on the side, tortilla chips and/or guacamole.

This is a once-a-month must-serve dish. It makes 8-10 burritos and lasts for two nights. Yeah – one night without cooking!


White Bean Chili

Tim Dineen

This is a variation of a recipe I found in Bon Appetit quite a few years ago. I entered in in a Chili Cook-off one year when I worked at UCSF, and won the People’s Choice Award! A variation of this became a staple in the Moffitt Cafe in the Medical Center!

  • 1# Great Northern White Beans
  • 2# Boneless Chicken Breast
  • 1Tbsp Olive Oil
  • 2 medium onions, chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 4oz cans chopped mild green chilies
  • 2 tsp ground cumin
  • 1 tsp oregano
  • 1/2 tsp ground cloves
  • 2/3 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 6 cups chicken stock
  • 1 cup Monterey jack cheese, shredded

Soak beans overnight. Put chicken breasts in cold water and simmer 15 minutes. Cool and cut into cubes.

Drain beans. Saute onion in olive oil until translucent – about 10 minutes. Stir in garlic, and spices. Saute about 2 minutes. Add stock and beans and bring to boil. Simmer 2 hours or until beans are tender. Add chicken and cheese, stirring until cheese melts.

Serve with additional cheese, sour cream, etc…


Sopitos

10-18-sopitos

I recently heard of a store in Norristown called Plymouth Produce.  It's all of about 8 miles from us in a pretty empty shopping center.  (Parts of Norristown are pretty blighted...)  While I wasn't in the market for another produce store, the intriguing part of what I had heard was that they had 2 long aisles devoted to Mexican and Italian products - things one doesn't usually find at the local grocery store Mexican or Italian Food Aisles.

I decided to give it a shot.

The store itself was exactly what I expected to find in a rundown, empty shopping mall - it was a bit rundown.  But the stuff IN the store wasn't.  Produce looked fresh, cans weren't dirty, dusty, or rusty.  It appeared that, at minimum, they had a good turnover of product - and fairly reasonable prices.

The downside to the produce was it was all prebagged and priced.  With only two of us, I don't need 8 zucchini, even if the price is only $2.50.  Or 8 bell peppers, 6 ears of corn...  I'm just not going to use it.  But I did pick up a bag of tomatillos.  I don't see them often at the local grocery, and a bag of about a dozen tomatillos of various sizes was only $2.50.

It was fun walking up and down the aisles - I found some fun products like strawberry balsamic vinegar for a mere $2.99.  Okay, I'm not expecting "Aceto Balsamico Tradizionale di Modena" for $2.99, but it looked as if it would be something fun.  They also had lemon and orange.  I figured if nothing else, they'd make a good reduction. I bought all three.  It won't go to waste.  A bit of papardelle pasta, Cento cherry pepper shooters, canellini beans, tuna in olive oil... time to head over to  Mexico.

I was surprised at how many of the Mexican products I already had.  I still have lots of chipotles in adobo, sofrito, recaito, red and green moles...  I passed on a lot of things I can pick up closer to home, but I did get some piloncillo!  It's unrefined sugar in a cone shape.  I have NO idea what I'm going to use it for, but I had to have some!  It was too good (and cheap!) to pass up.

In the front of the store is a deli counter as well as a display unit that had fresh Mexican chorizo with jalapenos, several types of queso fresco, and something I hadn't seen in years  (and never pre-made!) - Sopes!

Sopes are thick corn tortillas with a rim, for lack of a better description.  Little flat-bottom bowls.  Perfect for filling with shredded pork and beans and cheese and the like.  When fried, they're crispy on the outside and soft and chewy on the inside.   I bought a pack.  And some chorizo, and two types of queso fresco.

Dinner was starting to come together!

I thought a layered approach was the way to go and started with the tomatillos.  This is a bit of a spin on a Rick Bayless recipe...

Tomatillo Sauce

  • 10-12 tomatillos
  • 3 tbsp salsa ranchera
  • 1 tsp cayenne pepper sauce
  • 1 medium onion, diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • juice of one lime
  • 2 cups broth (I used beef, tonight)
  • cilantro, to taste
  • salt and pepper, to taste

Remove the husk from the tomatillos and rinse them to remove the sticky residue. Place the tomatillos on a baking sheet and broil until they are slighly blackened.

Place the tomatillos and the chiles in a food processor and pulse until they are broken up, but not pureed.

Cook the onion and garlic in a small amount of oil until soft.

Add to the food processor. Pulse until everything is almost smooth.

Fry the puree over medium heat until it starts to thicken, darken, and smell very fragrant.

Slowly add the broth, stirring occasionally, and cook sauce until it thickens.

Add the chopped cilantro and stir well.

Chorizo

  • 4 links fresh chorizo
  • 1/2 small onion, diced
  • 1 8 oz can tomato sauce
  • 1 tsp cayenne pepper sauce
  • salt and pepper, to taste

Begin browning diced onion in a bit of olive oil.  Remove chorizo from casing and add to pan.  Cook through.

Add tomato sauce and simmeruntil nice and thick.

Check for seasonings and add salt, pepper, and additional hot sauce, if desired.

The beans were unadulterated canned black beans, and the rice was white rice cooked in broth with a cup of frozen corn.

To assemble:

Fry the sopes according to package instructions.

Fill with a spoonful of chorizo filling,.

Top with a spoonful of black beans.

Top that with tomatillo sauce.

Sprinkle queso fresco on top and serve rice on the side.

Enjoy!

These really were awesome!    All through the meal we were both saying "Gee, these are good" and "Wow, I really like these".

I dirtied four pots, but it was worth it!

Tomorrow morning, I'm heading up to the new Wegmans in Collegeville.  I already have my shoppers card, my list, my coupon book, and my card for a free reusable shopping bag (I only have about 15 of them right now... why not get a few more, eh?!?)  I'm hoping that a Monday morning trip will get me in and out within a reasonable amount of time.  But it's a brand-new store, only open a week.

We shall see...


Cup Tamales

Back when I was a kid growing up in San Francisco, there was a great place named Johnson's Tamale Grotto where we would get "cup" tamales.  Cup tamales were made in - you guessed it - coffee cups.  They spread the filling into greased coffee cups, added the filling - the turkey cup tamale was the most popular - and then added more filling to the top.  They were then steamed until done and served with a brown sauce that went on everything.

San Francisco had scores of "Tamale Parlors" and "Tamale Grotto's" once upon a time - most coming into being during the 1920's.  We practically lived at The Hot House at Playland, and Johnson's was a short bike ride when we were catching crawdads at Pine Lake.  (Yeah - we city kids had our pockets of country right in our own backyards - and the Pacific Ocean was 2 blocks away!)  Roosevelt's is still in full swing - albeit a new remodel and menu has changed the place dramatically (and their website is still a mess...)  But I digress...

I bought a bag of masa a few weeks back thinking that I might just make some tamales, again... I actually used to make them all the time - they're pretty easy to do - and even kept corn husks on hand.  I think my most memorable tamale party was my brother-in-law's birthday maybe 25 years ago.  He's a 4th of July baby and we had a huge party.  I made hundreds of tamales and consumed hundreds of  margaritas.  I think we had a great time.

Fast-forward to 2009...

I wanted tamales, didn't have corn husks.  I remembered those wonderful Johnson's Tamales (damn, I wish I had their tamale sauce recipe!)  and decided to go for it.

Tamale Dough

  • 3 cups Masa Harina
  • 3 cups lukewarm broth or water (I used homemade beef broth - I was roasting beef bones...)
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 cup lard

Whip lard in mixer until light.  Mix dry ingredients in a bowl and then add lukewarm broth a nd mix with fingers to form a slightly moist dough.  Add to lard and mix well.

Filling

I had a couple of chip steaks that I simmered in the aforementioned beef broth.  I chopped them and then - in a skillet - mixed them with:

  • 1 diced onion
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • 1 tsp pasilla pepper
  • 1 tsp ancho chile powder
  • 1 can diced green chilis
  • 1/2 cup chipotle sauce
  • salt and pepper, to taste

Saute chopped beef with the onions and garlic.  Add green chilis and spices.  Add chipotle sauce and simmer.

Assembly

I used 10 oz souffle cups.

Grease containers well.  Place about 2 tbsp dough in bottom of cup and press down.  With a small spatula or knife, spread dough around the inside of the cup to the rim, leaving a well for the filling.

Place a couple of tablespoons of filling in each cup, pressing down.  Add a bit more dough to top to cover and smooth.

Cover with foil and place in deep pan.  Add boiling water halfway up cups and bake at 350° for 1 hour.

Tamale Sauce

I'll never be able to replicate this one...

  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 28 oz can crushed tomatoes
  • 2 tomatoes, chopped
  • 1/2 jar mole paste
  • 1 tbsp assorted chili powders (I have several.  I just added some of all of them...)
  • 2 cups aforementioned beef broth
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp Mexican oregano
  • salt and pepper

I sauteed the onion and garlic, added the fresh tomatoes, then the canned.  I added the rest of the ingredients and then hit it with an immersion blender.  I then strained it and put it back into the pot to simmer.

I made the (brown) rice with bottled enchilada sauce thinned with yet more of that beef broth.

The beans were canned pintos to which I added jalapenos and sofrito sauce.

Dinner was really, really good.

This one took some time, because I really did do it all from scratch.  I think if I could find a good all-purpose Mexican Red Sauce (maybe I'll take a run out to Wegman's one of these days) it would save a lot of time.  Plus, I hadn't done these in a really long time, so I took my time putting them all together.

Tomorrow is Chinese New Year - the year of the Ox.  I can guarantee no Oxtail Soup.


Empanadas especial

 

Empanada basically means "to wrap in bread" and that's pretty much what I did tonight.  A simple dough, a simple filling, simply fried.  A simple dinner, indeed! There are as many "traditional" fillings as there are countries where empanadas can be found, so that pretty much left me free to create my own.  I had leftover turkey in the 'fridge, so it was pretty automatic that turkey was going to be a main ingredient! I found the dough recipe online...

Empanada Dough

* 3 cups flour (plus a little more for kneading)
* 1 teaspoon salt
* 1/2 cup cold water
* 1 egg
* 1 egg white
* 1 teaspoon vinegar
* 3 tablespoons shortening (I use lard)

Preparation:
1. In a bowl, beat the water, egg, egg white and vinegar together. Set aside.
2. In a separate bowl, mix together the 3 cups of flour and salt.
3. Cut the shortening into the flour mix with a pastry blender or two butter knives. Make a well in the center of the flour mix and pour the liquid ingredients from the first bowl into the center.
4. Mix the wet and dry ingredients with a fork until it becomes stiff.
5. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Knead it just until all the flour is incorporated and the dough is smooth.
6. Wrap the dough in plastic and refrigerate for at least 1 hour, but never more than 24 hours.

The Filling

  • 1 cup diced cooked turkey
  • 1/2 jar Happy Hal's Black Bean Bruschetta
  • 1/4 cup chipotle sauce
  • 1/2 cup diced roasted red pepper
  • Salt and Pepper to taste

Mix.  That's it.  Really. To make empanadas, take dough and divide into 10 pieces.  Roll into balls and then roll out to about 6" circles.  Fill with a couple of tablespoons of filling.  Fold over and crimp edges with a fork to seal. Fry in a bit of hot oil until browned.

These were really a lot of fun - and the filling was about as non-traditional as you can get.  It's okay, though, because eating is supposed to be about fun and flavors, not rigid rules.  Granted, if I were making these for someone from a country where they are native, I would probably be a bit more exacting, but this is me, Victor, and the stuff already in the house.  The food police are not coming over, tonight. I can tell that I'm getting older...  Once upon a time, I would have insisted that everything be exact, that ingredients all be authentic.  I would have driven myself (and everyone around me) crazy. Not any more.  Food Fun.  Fun Food.

The rice was brown jasmine rice that I added a couple of tablespoons of sofrito sauce to the cooking water.  Not exactly traditional, either, but dayum, it was good! A smiling stomach and leftovers for lunches. Life is good!


Excellent Enchiladas

We've been cooking up a storm at work, recreating all of the recipes submitted for the recipe contest.  It has not been an easy task.  We actually received too many good recipes!  (okay - so everyone should have such a problem!)

And the tastes linger well after leaving work and coming home...

One recipe today did just that.  It's a Chicken and Blue Cheese Dip.   The flavors mixed well and the tasting panel really thought it would make a great filling for something like crepes, or even whole wheat tortillas (besides its original intent as a dip!)  In our personal cooking, we don't limit ourselves to a few ingredients, and the ideas were flying - crisp steamed vegetables folded in and rolled into a crepe was one of my favorites. I think it's a sign we're all pretty serious foodies (or totally nuts - you be the judge!) when the first thing out of our mouths is what else we could do with something...

So I got home tonight and started thinking about dinner, and thought that a chicken and blue cheese enchilada would be the ticket!

The only actual ingredient I had at home from the original recipe was the chicken breasts.  But did that stop me?!?  Of course not!

I poached the chicken breasts in water.  I added garlic powder, turmeric, cumin, and chipotle powder and let the chicken stew.

Into a bowl I crumbled a bit of roquefort cheese and sour cream.  I added a bit of cheddar for body and balance.  I have some Calypso Hot Sauce (really, really hot!) and added a few drops for heat.

I made an enchilada sauce from a half-jar of Salsa Autentica, a can of tomato sauce, and a bit of the simmering chicken water.

I rolled the filling in corn tortillas, topped with sauce, and baked at 350° for about 20 minutes.  I also made rice and served it all with sour cream and a quickly-prepared uacamole.

Dinner start-to-finish was about 45 minutes.

And I am pleasantly stuffed.