Chile Colorado With Pork And Nopales Recipes

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CHILE VERDE WITH PORK AND NOPALES RECIPE



Chile verde with pork and nopales Recipe image

Prickly desert cactus sounds like the last thing you'd want to eat. But -- surprise! -- once the spines are off, cactus is juicy and tender, great in anything from salads and soups to main courses and even desserts.The variety we're talking about is Mexico's nopal cactus -- prickly pear. You may have seen it right here in town, growing wild or in someone's backyard, a sprawling plant composed of oval "paddles."These are what you eat. They're best when young, about the size of a hand or a little larger. Cut into strips and cooked, they look a bit like green beans. The flavor is delicate, not what you'd expect from a cantankerous-looking desert dweller.For centuries, Mexicans have eaten nopales in everything from stews to salads and omelets. So embedded is the nopal cactus in Mexican culture that it appears on the flag and on coins. A cactus plant supporting an eagle holding a snake was, according to legend, the sign that led the Aztecs to found their capital, Tenochtitlan, on the site that is now Mexico City.Mexican cooks love to get creative with nopales. On a recent visit to the little town of Santa Rosa near Guanajuato, I came across a nopal liqueur, made by a women's co-op that has a shop on the main street. The women also make a sweet, firm paste, called ate, from cactus. It's cut into chunks, to eat like candy. In a health food store I spotted nopal cookies, and in Mexican pharmacies I've seen nopal shampoo.But that's not all this plant can do. Beside the paddle, the nopal cactus produces a fruit that is small and seedy, but sweet and delicious. In Spanish it's known as tuna, which naturally causes endless confusion among non-Spanish-speakers accustomed to tuna casseroles and tuna sandwiches. Imagine their shock at coming across an agua fresca (a sweet drink) or a paleta (a popsicle) -- made with tuna.Here, nopales are in every Latino market, and sometimes they show up at farmers markets and well-stocked grocery stores. The paddles are sold whole, or you can find them cleaned of their spines, cut up and packaged.When shopping, look for nopales that are small, tender and bright green rather than large, thick and faded. Avoid any that are flabby and soft. Some markets provide tongs for picking up paddles that still have their spines. But don't worry if your market is tongless -- grab a plastic produce bag or two, and use them to shield your fingers.Removing the spines is not difficult -- it just takes a sharp knife. Hold the paddle on a slant and slice downward, starting from the base, not the rounded top. Trim off the edge of each paddle, and discard the thick base. You can also try a sharp vegetable peeler, but you may have to go back with a paring knife to cut out some stubborn spines. As you work, grip the cactus with a potholder, dishcloth or thick glove.Once you've mastered this procedure, you're ready to experiment, or copy the way local Mexican restaurants treat nopales. Cooked nopales remain slightly firm and resilient, unlike vegetables that soften when boiled too long. They keep well if cooked in advance, which is handy if you want to scramble eggs with nopales for breakfast.Tacos Clarita on East 4th Street in Los Angeles serves nopalitos asados (grilled nopales), topped with grilled onions and jalapeno strips. Guelaguetza in Koreatown ladles Oaxacan-style fajitas -- thin-cut salted beef known as tasajo, cooked with tomato, onion, bell pepper and Oaxacan string cheese -- over nopales. Teresitas in East Los Angeles simmers espinazo (pork spine) with cactus.The nopal champion, though, is Mary Carmen Salas of La Parrilla restaurant in Boyle Heights. Salas has written a flier for customers that explains what nopales are and where they grow. And she uses the fresh cactus in a lot of dishes. "It's healthy food," she says in the flier.The most unusual is huarachito Tizoc, a nopal sandwich filled with shrimp and covered with tomatillo salsa and cheese. The long oval nopal paddle resembles the sole of a huarache sandal, she says, explaining the name. Huarachitos also come filled with beef or chicken.La Parrilla's big meat and seafood combinations, called molcajetes, include nopales too. They're named for the stone mortars in which they are served. Nopalitos, says Salas, is the proper word for cactus that is cut up and ready to eat. Her nopalitos a la Mexicana is cactus cooked with tomato, chile and onion.The most popular cactus dish, found in markets all over Mexico, is cactus salad. A simple chopped mixture of nopales, tomato, onion and chile, it's sometimes tossed with crumbled Mexican cheese and flavored with cilantro or oregano. It's common in restaurants here too. Senor Fred in Sherman Oaks puts cactus salad on the plate with carne asada, but the most interesting cactus dish at that restaurant is chile verde, a pork stew with nopales. Chef Juan Carlos Leon simmers the nopales in water before combining them with the other stew ingredients.Leon insists on fresh cactus. "The flavor [of the canned] would ruin the flavor of my food," he says.When fresh ones are so easy to find, why use anything but? And don't let the spines scare you. Remember, you're the one with the knife.

Provided by Barbara Hansen

Categories     MAINS

Time 2h

Yield Serves 4

Number Of Ingredients 17

2 tablespoons olive oil
1 medium onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 pound tomatillos, husks removed, rinsed
2 poblano chiles, roasted, peeled, seeded and torn into large strips
1 jalapeno, stem removed
3 bunches cilantro, chopped
3 sprigs epazote, tough stems removed
1 teaspoon dried Mexican oregano
1 1/4 cups chicken stock
1 tablespoon oil
1 pound trimmed pork shoulder, cut into 1-inch cubes
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 pound nopales (cactus paddles), trimmed, peeled and cut into 1- by one-half-inch pieces
4 poblano chiles, roasted, peeled, seeded and cut into 1- by one-half-inch pieces
Tomatillo sauce
Salt, pepper

Steps:

  • Heat the olive oil in a skillet. Add the onion and garlic and cook just until the onion is translucent.
  • Add the tomatillos, poblanos, jalapeno, cilantro, epazote leaves, oregano and chicken stock and simmer for 20 minutes.
  • Remove the sauce from the heat. Cool it slightly, then puree it in a blender.
  • Heat the oil in a large skillet. Add the pork and sear until lightly browned. Add 2 cups water and the salt and simmer until the pork is tender, about 30 minutes. The liquid will reduce to a few tablespoons. Remove from heat and set aside.
  • In a separate saucepan, bring 1 quart of water to a boil. Add the nopales and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove the nopales from the heat, drain and rinse with cold water. Combine the nopales and the poblano pieces and set aside.
  • Add the tomatillo sauce and the nopales mixture to the pan with the seared pork. Simmer for 10 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.

CHILE COLORADO WITH PORK AND NOPALES



Chile Colorado with Pork and Nopales image

Chile Colorado recipe with tender pork pieces is an authentic northern Mexico dish. Colorado is a pepper that is very popular in the gastronomies of the northern states of Mexico. It is also known as Chile de la Tierra, Chile Seco del Norte, Chile de Sarta, and many other names that vary by region in that part of the country.

Provided by Mely Martínez

Categories     Main Course

Time 45m

Number Of Ingredients 11

2 lbs. of pork shoulder (with some fat, cut into 1-inch cubes)
4 small garlic cloves
2 bay leaves
½ of a large white onion
1½ cups of water
3 cups of fresh Nopales (cleaned & cut into small strips (about 12 oz.))
6 - 8 Guajillo Peppers*
2 tablespoons of flour
1¼ teaspoons of cumin seeds or 1½ teaspoons of ground cumin
1½ teaspoons of Mexican oregano
Salt and pepper to taste

Steps:

  • Place the meat in a large heavy pot. Add ¼ of the white onion, 2 bay leaves, and 2 of the garlic cloves. Cover with 1½ cups of water and turn the heat to high. Once it starts boiling, reduces the heat to low and gently simmers. Cooking the meat will take about 20-30 minutes, this will give you plenty of time to prepare the sauce and to precook the nopales.
  • While the meat is cooking, clean the peppers by removing the seeds and veins. Place them in a saucepan, cover with water, and turn the heat to medium-high. Once the water starts boiling, turn off the heat, cover the saucepan, and set aside for 20 minutes or until the peppers are soft.
  • Precooking the nopales: Place the chopped nopales in a saucepan, cover with 4 cups of water, and cook over a medium heat. As soon as the water starts boiling, reduce the heat and cook for 5 minutes. After this, remove the nopales from the heat, strain, and set aside.
  • By this time, the water in the pot where you're cooking the meat should have been reduced, and the meat will start to brown in its own fat. Remove the garlic and onion. If the meat is too lean and doesn't render any fat, add 2 tablespoons of lard or vegetable oil. Sprinkle with the 2 tablespoons of flour and stir well, browning the pieces of meat.
  • Drain the peppers from their soaking water. In a blender, place the peppers, ¼ of the white onion (chopped), 2 garlic cloves, cumin, and oregano, along with 1-1/2 cup of water. Blend on high until you have a very fine puree.
  • Pour the sauce over the cooking meat using a strainer (stir and add more water, if needed, to create a smooth sauce). Season the sauce with salt and pepper, and simmer for 15 more minutes until the meat is really tender and the sauce has thickened a little.
  • Stir in the cooked and drained nopales, and keep cooking for 5 more minutes. Taste to see if it needs some adjustment with the seasoning, I know some of you would like to add more cumin and oregano. Serve with rice, beans, and a stack of warm flour tortillas.

Nutrition Facts : ServingSize 6 oz, Calories 435 kcal, Carbohydrate 6 g, Protein 36 g, Fat 28 g, SaturatedFat 10 g, Cholesterol 130 mg, Sodium 116 mg, Fiber 2 g, Sugar 1 g

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