Showing posts with label Chicken Enchiladas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicken Enchiladas. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 June 2016

Abundant Early-Summer Rains & Snails...and the comfort of warm food & feline company

Gardeners are known to complain about both the abundance and lack of rain in a manner matching the staccato rhythm of a cloudburst richochetting off a tin roof. We spade-wielders come from a long tradition of supplication including dancing wildly about in the hope of divine intervention. And when we do get a stormy series of deluges, we suddenly realise how profoundly wet, rain is. If there's a Drizzle Demiurge, I will gladly offer a percentage of my harvest to itperhaps some huge gooseberries not only so engorged with water that they are double their usual size but also are fungus-free for the first time in the six and half years we have been chez nous.

Copious watering paradoxically prevents fungal development on gooseberries

Gooseberry roots may delight in drenched soil, but said soil does not delight in being spaded as such action compacts particles into a oxygen-deprived environment for seeds and transplants. Inclement weather is forecast all the way up to Sunday which delays the planting of the last few veggie beds. So whenever the rain lets up, whether several minutes or longer . . .


. . . I am out doing what I can do like weeding, deadheading, and trimming. The patches of ivy we inherited with this place languished as the weather at first was fairly dry for many months. Then they flourished as precipitation increased the last couple of years. So much so, that a rusty fence and a pergola with peeling paint are on their way of being cloaked with luxuriant foliage.

Ivy needs two haircuts yearly (spring & fall) to look thick and healthy

A neighbour hunted for snails in our garden one dusky evening following some rainfall. She found over a hundred! They are destined for the cook pot. Moi? I'll remain content at present with just photographing snogging snails. Having eaten some (not the snogging variety!) at a restaurant, I agree with my sister's description of their taste and texture resembling that of chicken hearts. Buying already cooked snails and clean shells makes preparation fairly easy, but doing it from scratch involves a lot of work.* However, escargot is a fabulously delicious and thrifty component of French culinary tradition. Plus when they are eaten, they can't eat leafy greens in the veggie patch!


Windy, wet weather calls for comforting food. We have recently switched to buying free-range chickens which are sold in France in regular supermarkets under the Label Rouge (red label). Their depth of flavour and dense, but tender, flesh makes us accept that we previously were eating a pale imitation. And what stock it makes! A Haitian friend said decades ago regarding her eating experience after first moving to New York City: Nothing tastes good here. Tomatoes don't taste like tomatoes. Chicken doesn't taste like chicken. I doubt she would say that about this chicken and pasta soup with an Asian flair: Put some homemade chicken broth (recipe here, though photos are corrupted in this old post, text is correct!) into a pot, add minced garlic, ginger, and red pepper flakes. Stir in a fistful or two of broken tagliatelle. While pasta is cooking, crack an egg into a small cup and carefully slide its contents into simmering water in a shallow pan. After a minute or two, turn off the heat and let sit until the soup is ready which will give the yolk a jellied consistency. Trim any raggedly edges right in the pan. Salt the soup to taste, pour into a bowl, and place egg on top.


Spicy beef and chicken enchiladas (recipe here) are wonderful any day but especially when it's gloomy and cool. We made some changes/improvements which include increasing the amount from eight to sixteen and only baking the ones destined for immediate consumption. The others are frozen (without the cheese topping) in their rolled-up, sauced, but unbaked state. When those are ready for the oven (partially thawed is best), cheese is then sprinkled. Dousing with less sauce and not crowding them when being baked results in a firmer enchilada with some crisp edges, but still a tender one. Our favourite toppings are mashed avocados and crème fraîche. Since we have enjoyed a Cahors wine with enchiladas in the past, I wanted to try another red from our cellier, a Côtes du Rhône. But, I forgot to take the bottle out in time to bring it to room temperature! Happily, there are plenty in the freezer with which to do this pairing fairly soon.

Looks like a vanilla/pistachio ice cream banana split with raspberry sauce!

The saucers under potted plants can get completely filled with rainwater causing some roots to become waterlogged, so I tip them over, causing a flow which captivates Dirac the Cat.


When the most beautiful cat in the world (OK, OK, there may be a few just as beautiful) decides that the tide is coming in too fast, he jumps up on the potting room's windowsill to keep his paws dry.

Can this pillow be upgraded to a softer one?

When rested, he enters the room . . .


. . . for a play session.


À la prochaine!

*Much interesting information at this link for snail preparation such as:  DO NOT cook a dead snail. And never give a snail the benefit of the doubt. If you think a snail might be dead, poke it with a sharp object and if it does not react, do not cook it and Wash the unshelled snails at least 3 times in vinegar and water (one cup of vinegar to two gallons of water) to eliminate remaining mucus.

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

A Perfect Time for Chicken Enchiladas

Latin cuisine has always delighted me, starting in my childhood when my mother made chile con carne.  As a member of my High School Spanish club, I joined in cooking arroz con pollo.  Yellow rice was a revelation!  The lady-in-charge took us to Joe Baum's original La Fonda del Sol, a pan-Latin restaurant in New York City where I had fantastic tamales wrapped in corn husks. Then I moved to the upper West Side of Manhattan and was regaled with Chinese Cuban cuisine. I especially loved the ropa vieja--slow-cooked, shredded beef smothered in a spicy tomato sauce. There were fried plantains cooked to perfection by friends of Puerto Rican ancestry and sizzling fajitas when we lived in California and Oregon.

Long, skinny, mild, green chili peppers: piments doux des Landes

Sadly a dearth of that kind of delicious food became a reality for many a year after moving to UK and then France. So when The Calm One wistfully brought home a packet of flour tortillas, I immediately thought of the pile of mild, green chili peppers Madame M recently gave us, cooked chicken and stock in the freezer, crème fraîche in the fridge, tomato paste and chili powder in the cupboard, and tomatoes, garlic, onions, scallions & flat-leaf parsley from the potager. Ah, it's time to make chicken enchiladas!


First the enchilada sauce is made.  You will need 3 T of olive oil, 1 T of flour, 4 T of chili powder (sauce is mild, add more if you want more heat), 16 fluid ounces of chicken stock, 8 dry ounces of tomato paste, and salt if needed.

In a saucepan, heat the oil over medium low heat for about thirty seconds and stir in the flour till smooth which should not take more than a minute. Add the chili powder and cook for one minute, continuing stirring.

My brand has bell pepper, onion & tomato flakes in addition to spices--it's really good!

Slowly pour in the chicken stock while stirring.  If not smooth, then give it a good whisk. Add the tomato paste and mix well. Simmer over low heat for about fifteen minutes until nicely thick, stirring occasionally. Salt to taste and reserve.


Ingredients
(makes five large enchiladas)

  • Enchilada sauce, 16 fluid ounces (see above for recipe)
  • Tortillas, about 10 inches in diameter, corn or flour, 5
  • Chicken, cooked and shredded, 16 fluid ounces (I used simmered chicken but broiled, sauteed, roasted, grilled could be substituted, just remove all bones and skin)
  • Chile peppers, mild, green, fresh, 5
  • Tomatoes, chopped, fresh (canned can be substituted but drain them well), 16 fluid ounces
  • Onion, medium, 1
  • Garlic, 2-3 fat cloves, peeled and minced
  • Cheese, grated (I used Edam, but Cheddar and Monterry Jack would be good or a mix of mild, firm cheeses), six fluid ounces
  • Flour, a tablespoon or two
  • Chopped scallions, tomatoes, crème fraîche/sour cream  & flat leaf parsley for garnishing

Preheat the oven to 350 F degrees. To make the filling, peel the tomatoes (if using fresh) by dunking them in boiling water for a minute or so and then placing them in cold water.  The skins will easily come off with a help of a sharp knife.


Chop them coarsely. Wash and carefully seed, de-membrane, and slice the peppers. Mince the garlic and thinly slice the onion.


Pull the chicken apart with your fingers and dust the shreds with a bit of the chili powder.


Grate the cheese.


Put a tablespoon of olive oil (or drippings if you broiled, grilled, roasted or sauteed the chicken) in a skillet and heat over medium flame briefly. Add the garlic and onions and saute for a minute or two. Toss in the peppers and cook for a minute or so.


Add the tomatoes and cook for about five minutes.


Stir in the chicken and the flour. Salt to taste. 


Pour the sauce in a shallow dish. Put a tortilla (if not pliable, briefly warm in a lightly oiled skillet) in the sauce and quickly flip it over. Don't soak or it will disintegrate. Place one fifth of the filling close to one edge of the tortilla and then roll up neatly. Spread a couple of tablespoons of sauce in a baking dish and place the enchilada seam down.


Repeat with the remaining four tortillas. Cover with the rest of the sauce and top with the grated cheese.


Bake for about 15 minutes or until cheese is well browned and sauce is bubbling. Serve with the scallions, tomatoes, flat-leaf parsley, and  crème fraîche on the side.


Since we were hankering for spicy Latin food for a while, these plump, moist, and yummy chicken enchiladas were happy food indeed.  They freeze well and taste even better when thawed and re-heated.


In the potager, the plentiful figs are maturing nicely.


In the flower garden, the pinks I sowed in the spring are now robust plants.


And the David Austin Falstaff super-fragrant climbing rose is still going strong.


Monsieur and Madame M gifted us with a regional sweet to thank us for watering their garden while they were on a short trip to Pays Basque.

The lovely tin will be a pleasure to re-use again and again.

I am having one of these buttery gâteau a la myrtille (blueberry) daily--OK, a couple of them, hmmm, several to be honest--with coffee, and they are GOOD!

This little 'cake' is like a Linzer cookie on steroids

À la prochaine! 

RELATED POSTS
How to skin tomatoes
How to make Piperade (a Basque dish with peppers & tomatoes)

RELATED LINKS
Dorie Greenspan's recipe for Basque Cake
Basque Cuisine