Categories
Daily Dose Recipes

Chiles Rellenos: Burning Down the House

Jus the right amount of capsacein cheese, eh?
Just the right amount of capsaicin cheese, eh? [Credit]
Chile – you may know it as a country or the little devil peppers that intimidate tomatoes in a mean salsa.
Last week, the beau happened across a coworker eating Chiles Rellenos, stuffed peppers, and decided I must make them for him. Talk about hellacious!

I’d never made chiles rellenos, mostly because once you fry a pepper, the wonderful crunchiness gets blown away. The chewy, damn near rubberized mess, kind of grosses me out.
Should I keep down-selling peppers?

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The pruny-esque poblano can hold a wallop, especially if boiled and softened first. Don’t let their light weight deceive you!

I lurve the spicy, earthy flavor a pepper delivers, but I prefer them freshly diced and in some pico!

Despite all my raw emotions for this particular ingredient, I refused to go belly up on this one!
I busted out the KitchenAid stand mixer to whip the egg whites until a hard peak formed, but make sure you do this last. You don’t want the egg whites to sit too long and get goopy. [Tidbit to you – don’t forget to use the whisk. I used the paddle attachment for about two minutes, and then realized I’m a dummy.]

Next, I sliced open the poblanos.
NOTE: If you prefer the mushy goodness that most of the Latino/a population devour, then you’ll want to soften the skins by boiling them for about 2 minutes or grilling them on a hot skillet/griddle until the skin starts to blacken.
Don’t fret – you’re not going to eat the pepper covering in this scenario, so it can get charred. It’ll make the removal process easier. I highly recommend letting them cool for about 15 minutes (or until you can comfortably handle them without burning yourself) and use cool water to help you peel them.

Out came the ground beef,Sazón, salt, pepper, chicken stock, Worcestershire sauce and A1. Mix well and brown.
Toss in a can of  mixed vegetable and voila! Your stuffing is done!

It’s time to STUFF the peppers!

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Gently spoon a couple of pinches of Monterey Jack [or whatever cheesy deliciousness suits you] cheese into each pepper. [I hope I don’t have to tell you that these peppers, and any other fruits/veggies you prepare must be washed and, if you wish, dried before consumption.]
Be careful! You don’t want to rip open the pepper.

You need the pepper to close at the seam. Spoon the filling into each pepper.
Coat the engorged poblano into egg yolks.
Dredge the pepper in a thin coat of flour.
Dip the pepper into the egg whites.

Now you’re ready to FRY the pepper.
Hand to the scientific food genies, frying foods is not my forte.
I’m pretty terrible at it, so – for this part of the process – I grabbed the beau to play his part in my kitchen.

This is where my PSA comes in:

USE TONGS! We nearly set the kitchen on fire. We actually started a small grease fire when the poblano took his fate in its own hands and leapt into the vat of oil. The grease popped out, the flames went up, and the beau – never lost his cool. The flame went out quickly and the frying continued. He got better as we went, slowly lowering the peppers into the oil with the tongs – versus laying them down in the oil by the stem. The latter process is highly unreliable.
We fried the peppers for roughly 3 minutes and then pulled them out to cool on a paper towel covered dish.

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I forgot to put the pinto beans in the crock pot this morning, making this a one side-dish show.
Unfortunately, rice’s partner in crime did not make an appearance tonight.

Instead, I diced up a quick salsa with my Ninja chopper. Chips and salsa? Always a winner!

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These were just the right amount of veggie to beef, and with a wonderful crunch.
No wilted peppers here, ladies and gents.

Just delish! Try them for yourself.

Much love,
CerebellumChef

 

Note to my readers: I do no receive any form of payment for reviewing products. I have linked the kitchen gadgets and ingredients found here to give credit to those companies and so you may know what I use to make these dishes. If interested in having me review a product, please follow up here.

 

Categories
Recipes

Southwest Tacos & Salty Apologies

I know! I’ve been away for a few weeks. I’m so very sorry, my fellow foodies!
Life got super hectic! Finals for my students, weekend trips, planning for conferences, planning for graduate school, quality time with my broskis. No worries, though – I’m BACK!

I’ve got so much to fill you in on: New restaurants, new recipes, and an almost-bug-eyed worthy moment when I tell you about my first Vegan cooking experience. Yep, vegan! Nope, we are not going the full-Monty with being Vegan. We’re simply just not that disciplined, plus – we heart us some meat!

My friend Ashli introduced me to a great vegan bakery in Dallas, more on that little gem later.
I ordered the “Ate layer” burrito and have since (as in, for three solid weeks) been craving this decadent cacophony of flavors. What’s even better? You can choose to eat this vegan, or not. The beau wanted chicken, so we added some.

Here’s what you’ll need: 

olives
black beans (canned or fresh, it’s up to you – following the instructions on the bag if you decide to make them yourself)
quinoa (we used a red bulgur mix)
whole wheat wrap or tortilla, for taco versions
avocado
tomatoes
jalapeños
cheese (NOTE – most vegan cheeses are made with nuts, so be careful if you have allergies!)
mayonnaise
Siracha sauce
chicken tenders, if you want more protein (or can’t seem to go one meal without meat)
Seasoning for your chicken, we used Woody’s Cinnamon Chipotle Rub

 

 

Step 1: Slice & Dice
Dice your vegetables and spread them onto a cutting board. This makes building your tacos/wraps so much faster, getting the yumminess in your mouth tons faster!

One beefsteak tomato, one avocado and 3/4 of a jalapeno pepper.
One beefsteak tomato, one avocado, and 3/4 of a jalapeño pepper.

Step 2: MEAT, baby! [If you’re making these meatless, then skip this section]
Pour 3 tablespoons of the dry seasoning (of your choice) into a gallon-sized plastic bag
Add 1.5 pounds of chicken tenders and seal the bag. — We used tenders for portion control. 
Shake well to coat each tender thoroughly.
Spray a pan with non-stick cooking spray and place on a burner set to medium-high heat.
Place the strips in the pan and cook them for about 3 minutes on each side.
Once cooked through, remove the chicken tenders and place them on a cutting board.
Let them cool for a few minutes while you start putting those tacos together!
Slice them in half and place one half-strip into one taco.

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Step 3: The Sauce
In a small bowl, mix 2 tablespoons of Siracha with 3 tablespoons of Mayonnaise. This is a bit more on the spicy side, so if you want it creamier – add more mayo.

Step 4: Building Tasty!
Using wraps means you can either heat up the tortilla, or not. If you’re using tortillas from a pack, you definitely want to heat them up. They taste better!
We served two tacos per person. Heat up as many as you need, but let me say this – two is plenty!
Once you’ve got the taco on your plate, you can start building.

Add ingredients in any way you choose; a bit of everything. Don’t forget the sauce!
Your finished product should look something life this:

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Drooling? I certainly hope so! Go make some!

 

These tacos were super easy to make, and on the table in under 25 minutes!
Two of these southwestern delights come out to about 450 calories. No need to feel guilty about scarfing these down.
Feel like you need sides? Slice up a cup of watermelon or pineapple for a quick dessert.

Let me know what you think.
Again, you can easily make them vegan by simply removing the chicken tender strips from the equation.
Your tacos will still be equally scrumptious.

Much love,
CerebellumChef