Showing posts with label salsa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salsa. Show all posts

Friday, October 30, 2015

Santa Fe Style Stacked Enchiladas Verdes ~ Vegetarian




Let me just tell you how serious I am about Mexican food, I don't mess around. I won't eat it at most restaurants and I live in the southwest where Mexican food is abundant. Unfortunately, I've been spoiled. I've eaten Mexican food cooked by people who know what they're doing and now I can't go back to the imposter's at most chain restaurants. Good Mexican food consists of just 2 or 3 important factors in my opinion.

  1. The sauce. Canned stuff is out of the question and it's NOT hard to make your own.
  2. The tortillas. I implore you to stop buying the thin, cardboard tasting stuff from the store. Again, seriously easy to make your own in just minutes.  Masa. Water. Boom, corn tortillas!
  3. Good Cheese. Nuff said.
I made these vegetarian and they were filling and delicious. Why, because of for-said reasons. Also, I made these in my pressure cooker for fast, flavorful, and even cooking. Feel free to use a casserole dish if you don't own a pressure cooker. Layer the same, cook in a 400F pre-heated oven for about 40 minutes. ( I cooked mine in 8 minutes)

So here you go, my simple enchiladas verdes recipe. Oh, the Santa Fe style comes in because of the thicker, moist corn tortillas which are stacked and also the smoked Poblano peppers.  Enjoy.


You will need:

3 Poblano Peppers
10 Tomatillo's
1/4 cup white onion, finely minced
1/4 cup cilantro, plus more for garnish
1 tsp salt
2 zucchini, thinly sliced
handful of mushrooms, thinly sliced
1 cup Jack Cheese, shredded
1 cup corn kernels

'Easy Home Made Corn Tortillas' ~  recipe here















Putting it all together:

Place Poblano peppers on a broiler sheet and put in oven, 3 inches from top broiler. Cook for 10-12 minutes, turn with tongs, cook another 8-10 minutes till very charred. Remove from oven, put in a paper or plastic bag, roll closed and let skins steam off, at least10 minutes. Remove from bag, set aside until cool enough to handle. Pinch off stems, smush out seeds, peel off skins {they will peel off very easily!}. Don't worry about getting every last bit.


Husk and wash tomatillos under warm water to remove natural sticky film. Pat dry and place on broiler pan. Preheat broiler and put tomatillos on the middle rack. Cook for 10-12 minutes till browned. Remove, set aside in a bowl. Some recipes I've seen say to remove peels. I seriously don't see how that's possible,  I don't bother. Throw tomatillos, 1 cup roasted poblano, cilantro and salt in a food processor or blender and pulse till smooth. Save the rest of the poblano's for layering into enchiladas.



In the bottom of a glass dish meant for pressure cookers (or casserole dish if baking) Spread a bit of Salsa Verde (tomatillo mixture). Layer tortillas, then zucchini, mushrooms, onion, corn and chopped poblanos. I usually throw all of these veggies into a bowl together, toss then just add by handfuls to the enchiladas to make things easier.  Sprinkle with cheese, drizzle more salsa verde. Again, tortillas, veggies, cheese, salsa. Top with tortillas, salsa and then more cheese.




 Place trivet in bottom of pressure cooker if using, and add 1 cup water.


 Fold a piece of foil long enough to use as a handle to help remove casserole dish when done.

 Cover casserole dish with foil, fold foil handle over top. Lock lid onto pressure cooker. Over high heat bring pressure to 2nd red ring. Lower heat, stabilize at 2nd red ring. Cook 8 minutes.
*If baking, bake at 400F for 40-45 minutes.




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Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Simple Corn Cakes with Zucchini-Tomato Salsa



























This is one favorite summer recipes. It's quick, easy and very versatile. It's a twist on pancakes and can easily be made into a complete meal by adding salmon or crab meat into the batter. For a more indulgent cake you can simply add shredded cheese. You can add peppers, onions and cilantro to turn them into Mexican corn cakes and serve with black beans or as I do during the summer months, top them with a simple zucchini-tomato and black eyed pea salsa.











You Will Need:

2-4 Tbsp vegetable or grape seed oil {can substitute w real butter}
corn cut off of 3 ears or 2 cups frozen corn
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 c corn meal
5 Tbsp milk
2 Tbsp honey

salt and pepper to taste




Make the batter by whisking together eggs, corn meal, milk, corn kernels, sugar and a dash of salt & pepper. Add oil the bottom of the hot pan. Fry cakes in batches as you would pancakes, about 2 minutes on each side.  Set aside.



For the Salsa:

4-5 Roma tomatoes
2 zucchini
1 can of black eyed peas, drained and rinsed
1/4 cup red onion finely diced
2 tablespoons fresh Basil
1-2 tablespoons lime juice
1/2 tablespoon EVOO
salt and pepper to taste

Optional:
Jalapeno pepper, minced



Toss all ingredients in a bowl to combine. Serve on top of Corn Cakes.




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Saturday, June 13, 2015

Almond and Roasted Red Pepper Tapenade and The World's Best Ever Steak Marinade



This weekend as you well know is Father's Day weekend. Instead of hanging out around the house and  grilling some steaks and swimming in the pool we decided it would be a good idea to take all of the kids and meet the fam up at Big Lake for some camping chaos fun. If you didn't read my post from last year you may not fully appreciate how difficult interesting it can be when camping with 3 young children and a cranky teenager. If your up for a good laugh read about our adventure here.  I remain very optimistic that things will go much better this year.......



























For one thing, I'm going to make things a LOT easier on myself and stick with the basics. Simple, yet good food and packing just what's necessary instead of trying to plan for every inconceivable disaster. Quite frankly I'm just too pooped to plan.


Last weekend we grilled up some steaks which turned out to be hands down best ever and all around awesome. I'm not a huge red meat so when I'm craving a nice steak or burger It better be good. I like my meat very tender and super flavorful. These steaks were both and the tangy, sweet flavor can be attributed to this marinade which worked wonders on the meat. Man, it was so good!










I also attempted to make a red pepper, cilantro pesto from Dara at Cookin' Canuck  but ended up tweaking the ingredients and process a bit to end up with more of a tapenade. I love tapenades in every variety, they are so versatile and satisfying in a grown up sort of way. They can be paired with steak, on top of smoked or grilled fish (my favorite) or as a stand alone hor d'oeuvres with crackers, a baguette and of course a good aperitif.






Basically, for this to be a tapenade instead of a pesto, you need to use a bit more almonds and less red pepper. Preferably use a small hand food processor or pulse just a few times in your regular one. I love my little manual one for chopping garlic, finely mincing onion, herbs and making salsa and guacamole. It's just a tiny little thing and so easy to clean. I use it daily.





Almond and Roasted Red Pepper Tapenade

1 small red bell pepper, roasted
3 cloves garlic
1 cup blanched almonds (2 handfuls)
small handful cilantro
squeeze lime juice
2-3 tablespoons good quality extra virgin olive oil

Pulse all ingredients except lime juice and oil in a food processor until coarsely chopped.
Drizzle in oil and lime juice. Pulse until desired consistency.








Happy Father's Day to my dad who is the coolest and most gerous guy I know and to my sweet and as perfect as they get husband who keeps me grounded, happy and calm. 

and to all you other dad's, I hope you have a wonderful day!
(camping or not)




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Sunday, May 3, 2015

The Best Grilled Fish Tacos on Home Made Blue Corn Tortillas with Mango Salsa, Cumin & Garlic Black Beans and a Healthy and Simple Cinco de Mayo Roundup.




I've lived in the Southwest most of my 30 errrr  something years. Mexico has a big influence here in the Valley of the Sun. Mexican food, style, culture and architecture are all prevalent here in the Phoenix area.


One thing I've never really understood is where the celebration of Cinco de Mayo comes from and why we celebrate it here in the States. I have many friends from Mexico or with strong Mexican roots and not a one of them have ever celebrated Cinco de Mayo. "Sure" they say, "We will hang out and have a cervesa but it's not a holiday in our book."  Part of this was said in Spanish so I'm guessing that's what they said. 












Nevertheless, it is a very good excuse to make some really good food (my favorite cuisine!) and sit out on the patio with an ice cold beverage with friends and family. 



Tonight I'm making grilled fish tacos with fresh mango-jalapeno salsa on top of home made sweet blue corn tortillas and a side of cumin and garlic black beans (not from a can) tonight for dinner. Well, my husband is doing the grilling because I've been officially banned from with in 10 feet of the ol' BBQ since the unfortunate fire the other day. See the end result on Instagram if you're there. It's not pretty.


Fine by me. It's in the triple digits out there!




Fish:

2-3 pieces fresh Tilapia fillets 

2 juicy limes

1 teaspoon olive oil

1 teaspoon cumin (eye it)

1 teaspoon chili powder (eye it)

1 teaspoon garlic powder (eye it)  


Heat your outdoor grill on medium-high. 

In a large zip lock bag place fish and all ingredients. Zip bag closed, toss to coat fish. Let sit on counter for 15 minutes.  

Place fish in a fish grill basket, discard remaining juice and bag. Grill on medium-high heat for 7-8 minutes. Flip the basket over or, using tongs, flip fish. Cook an additional 5-6 minutes until fish flakes easily with a fork.

Remove from heat.











Blue Corn Tortillas:

1 1/2 cups blue corn flour

1 cup spelt flour (can sub w regular, unbleached flour)

1 cup hot water

1 tablespoon coconut oil

1 teaspoon salt


Mix flours and salt. Add water and oil, stir to combine. Let sit aside for 20 minutes to let the ingredients incorporate. Then you will be able to tell if it need more flour or water, a tablespoon at a time. The dough should be thick and not too sticky.  

On a lightly floured surface, take small hand fulls of dough and make into a ball. Using a tortilla press, place a small square of parchment paper on the bottom side and ball of dough on top of paper. Place another small square of parchment paper on top of dough. Press firmly down on tortilla press.  I like to roll out my tortillas even thinner with a rolling pin. The tortilla press helps ensure even, uncracked tortillas.



Place tortillas one at a time onto pre-heated cast iron skillet over medium-high heat. NO OIL! 

Cook for 1 minute on first side and 30-60 seconds on other side. If your tortillas are thick you may need to cook a bit longer. 

Remove from heat and place on a towel covered plate. Place tortillas in a tortilla keeper or keep them covered with another towel until ready to eat. 





Blue cornmeal has 20% more protein and a lower glycemic index than regular cornmeal.






Spelt Flour
Spelt (Triticum Aestivum Spelt) is a shiny, dark rice shaped grain related to wheat. Spelt flour contains less gluten than normal wheat flour but it is not gluten-free. 
Substituting Spelt Flour for All-purpose Flour:Many recipes will tolerate a cup for cup substitute. As with most substitutes the end result will not be the same and you may need to experiment with quantities to get a product you are happy with.



Spelt has a nice flavor, rather sweet, and is worth trying. I've only ever tried whole grain spelt. It is less springy than wheat (less strong gluten). In a yeasted bread, spelt uses less water than wheat,
















Mango Salsa


This salsa is a huge favorite of ours. It is best when made the day before and chilled overnight 
or at least 6 hours.


4 ripe mango's
1 large jalapeƱo
4 small sweet peppers
1/2 red onion, minced
small handful cilantro, chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cumin
1 teaspoon chili powder
1 tablespoon white wine vinegar

Peel mango's and cut flesh away from pit. Dice into small cubes. Place in large bowl.
Carefully cut jalapeƱo down center and using a knife cut out seeds and white veins taking care not to touch them.
Turn jalapeƱo over cut side down and mince into small pieces. Throw into bowl with mango.
Add minced onion, cilantro, salt, vinegar and spices. Toss to combine.

Cover with plastic wrap and chill at least 2 hours or overnight.









2 cups dry black beans

3-5 cups water depending on your cooking method

1 yellow onion, diced

1 tablespoon cumin

1 tablespoon chili powder

1 tablespoon garlic powder

2 teaspoons salt

Soak beans overnight.

I typically use my Kuhn Rikon pressure cooker to cook all of my beans, it's my favorite kitchen toy!  I brown my onion over medium-high heat, add soaked and drained beans and 3 cups water. Turn the heat up to high and bring pressure to second ring. Lower heat to low. Cook for 12 minutes (YUP THAT'S it!) and remove from heat letting pressure drop naturally. 

Slow cooker method: Brown onions in pan add beans, 5 cups water and remaining ingredients. Cook on lowest setting for 8 hours.







Mexican Food Roundup
all from Simply Healthy Family




Typically, tamales, tostadas, tacos, nachos and enchiladas all smothered with cheeses and sour cream are served up the Mexican-American way. It's how we ruin a good thing. It kills me a little each time I see canned cheese served in a Mexican/American restaurant.  Gag!  


For a lighter and more authentic Cinco Celebration try one or all
 {lot's and lot's of good, home made food is how it's done in the Latin tradition}
of these simple recipes instead of the usual carb and cheese laden ones. 














Last but not least, and I hate to pick favorites {unless you ask my teenager} is...............



Puerto Penasco Ceviche



Puerto Penasco Ceviche







Do you celebrate Cinco de Mayo???

If so I'd love to know how or what your traditions are!










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Monday, March 16, 2015

South Western Soft Tacos with Roasted Butternut Squash {12 Weeks of Winter Squash}








These vegetarian soft tacos are stuffed with the flavors of the South West and are just the thing to warm up your tummies on cold winter nights. They are full of good for you veggies and beans to get you back on track after all of the Holiday feasts and treats.











Winding down from all of the Christmas craziness festivities and celebrations means that me and my honey get to chill in the evenings for a few days and enjoy watching the kids play with their gifts. Relaxing for me means simple dinners that will warm and comfort us through the Winter Break so we can and hang out afterwards and play with our new games and snuggle up to watch our new movies.






 I'm a little glad that Christmas is over so we can just relax and spend time together for a couple of weeks before we get on with our normal routines. Don't get me wrong, I love Christmas but all of the running around and the sweets overload had to stop! Everyone was strung out on chocolate and candy canes and hopped up on egg nog for a solid month it seemed. With 4 kids there was a party every single day for a week and a half and family parties and get togethers every night.

Blessed. We are truly blessed. That's truly how I feel…… when I wasn't not exhausted from running from school to school with specified goodies, from store to store with requested side dishes to share and from city to city for gathering after gathering of our ginormous extended family.

Blessed.




Boring tacos just won't do during the winter Holiday season. Winter squash is in abundance after all and I fully intend on getting the most out of it until mid February when we are all sick of it and looking forward to the early spring harvest here in the Sonoran desert.





Of all the winter squashes out there, butternut squash is probably my fav. It's the most creamy, sweet and flavorful of the squashes IMHO and requires little to no added ingredients to be just perfect. Simple, natural, delicious. It's name says it all, butternut. That's pretty much what it tastes like a la mode, buttery and nutty. It is also very versatile. Roast it with some apple cider and cinnamon and you have a sweet side dish to your pork. Add chili powder, paprika and caramelized onions and you have a spicy side for your roast chicken. Blend it up with a bit of cream, spices and garlic, BAM my favorite hot and creamy comfort soup.





Last but not least, it makes a perfect vegetarian 'filler' for burritos or tacos. I'm not a big meat eater at all and much prefer hearty, healthy veggies instead.  Not only is it healthier and cheaper to sub veggies for meat as much as possible but very convenient. I pick up a few squash, sweet potatoes and sturdy greens at the store and when I'm looking for a last minute weeknight dinner I go to my  pantry and grab a squash, some beans, an onion and have a casserole, burritos or these tacos on the table in no time.





SERVES     6          TIME    30 MINUTES
Ingredients 
6-8 whole grain soft taco size tortillas 
1 cup (or 1 can) black beans, rinsed and cooked 
1 teaspoon cumin 
1 teaspoon chili powder 
1 teaspoon smoked paprika 
1 teaspoon salt, divided

1 teaspoon olive oil 
1 small butternut squash 
1 small red bell pepper, seeded and sliced into thin strips 
1 cup grated pepper jack cheese 
Arugula (or baby spinach) 
Avocado, sliced 
Roasted or Chipotle Salsa (my fav's, use your fav)
1 small handful cilantro, chopped



Preheat oven to 400F 

Peel and cube the squash, lightly toss with oil, sprinkle with salt, paprika and chili powder and roast at 400F on a stone baking sheet for 20 minutes till done but firm.  Read my post with step by step photos and tips for cutting and preparing squash here.
In a small sauce pot over medium-low heat cook beans with cumin and salt for 15-20 minutes till warmed through. 
Place tortilla on plate, layer with cheese, squash, beans, arugula, cilantro and avocado. Spoon on roasted salsa.




This is my post for week numero 9 of #12 Weeks of Winter Squash hosted by my peeps Heather and Joanna. Got some yummy winter squash recipes to share? It's not too late to join!










HAPPY HAPPY HOLIDAYS! I HOPE YOU AND YOUR FAMILY ARE TOGETHER AND YOUR LIFE IS FILLED WITH BLESSINGS!






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