I really miss Mexican food here. Unfortunately, because my wife is from Minnesota, she regards Mexican cuisine warily, if at all. I can forgive this, because of course this is a segment of America that, among other forms of individual and collective lunacy, stubbornly clings to "duck, duck, gray duck" (ha ha!) and fries anything that it can catch and impale on a stick at its reprehensible state fair. Though I love her still, her pepper phobia really limits the frequency with which I can crack into the vast hoard of Mexican spices that I smuggle back here each summer.
Now that the family is safely in Arizona, (a glorious land with Mexican restaurants on almost every corner and streets paved with masa), I can actually begin using this stuff. Since I'm cooking for myself, and thereby feeling lazy, I'll just make chorizo.
This is really, really easy and can be tweaked however you like. If you have adobo from chipotles, you should definitely add it.
The Chorizo itself
1 pound ground beef or pork or whatever (not people, you monster!)
1 tbsp paprika
1 tbsp chili powder
1/2 tsp cumin
1 tsp Mexican oregano (grind or crumble it up)
1 tsp garlic powder
2 cloves fresh garlic
1/2 tsp cinnamon
salt, lots of salt
1 1/2 to 2 tbsp (or to taste) apple cider vinegar
1 1/2 tbsp chopped cilantro
pepper
Preparation
1/4 cup minced onion
1/4 cup red bell pepper/jalapeno/whatever (again, not people, you monster!)
oil
4 eggs
dash of milk
paprika
salt
pepper
Step 1: Prepping the Sausage (yes, chorizo is sausage)
Flatten out the meat in a non-reactive bowl (that's glass or plastic, the vinegar is an acid and will leetch out metal) and sprinkle the dry spices, salt, herbs, cilantro and garlic, mix together, then add the vinegar and mix again. Let sit for about 15 minutes to an hour or so. You can add too little vinegar and salt here, so you will have to guesstimate. If necessary, you can taste the meat after it's cooked a bit and add some more later.
Step 2: The Veggies
Mince up the onion and pepper and set aside. Easy, right? Think again! No, actually it's pretty easy.
Step 3: Eggs
Crack the eggs and add them to a bowl, then add the milk, spices, salt and pepper and beat them all together. Bonus points for not getting shell in the mix. Extra bonus points if you can crack the eggs with one hand!
Step 4: Cooking
Add oil and then sweat the onions and peppers in large pan until soft, then turn up the heat to medium high, heat a bit, then add the meat. LET IT BE. If you move it around, it'll break up into the little mouse turds that you see at Taco Bell, and I assume that you'd not want that if you're bothering to read a blog about cooking. Allow it to brown and form the meat into larger clumps. After 5 minutes, flip the meat. The moisture will run out and boil away - let it. You can taste some of the meat at this stage to confirm salt content. Add more salt or spices as needed (probably paprika and chili powder)
Step 5: Eggs
When the pan is pretty dry, add the egg mix to the pan. Let it cook for 30 seconds, then flip. them over to ensure the eggs are done on both sides. Turn off the heat and cover the pan for a few minutes. You can add cheese here if that's your thing.
Serving:
I like to add a bit of labneh on the side of this, but Mexican crema or sour cream works too. Eat with tortillas or in a burrito, garnishing as you please.
Now that the family is safely in Arizona, (a glorious land with Mexican restaurants on almost every corner and streets paved with masa), I can actually begin using this stuff. Since I'm cooking for myself, and thereby feeling lazy, I'll just make chorizo.
This is really, really easy and can be tweaked however you like. If you have adobo from chipotles, you should definitely add it.
The Chorizo itself
1 pound ground beef or pork or whatever (not people, you monster!)
1 tbsp paprika
1 tbsp chili powder
1/2 tsp cumin
1 tsp Mexican oregano (grind or crumble it up)
1 tsp garlic powder
2 cloves fresh garlic
1/2 tsp cinnamon
salt, lots of salt
1 1/2 to 2 tbsp (or to taste) apple cider vinegar
1 1/2 tbsp chopped cilantro
pepper
Preparation
1/4 cup minced onion
1/4 cup red bell pepper/jalapeno/whatever (again, not people, you monster!)
oil
4 eggs
dash of milk
paprika
salt
pepper
Step 1: Prepping the Sausage (yes, chorizo is sausage)
Flatten out the meat in a non-reactive bowl (that's glass or plastic, the vinegar is an acid and will leetch out metal) and sprinkle the dry spices, salt, herbs, cilantro and garlic, mix together, then add the vinegar and mix again. Let sit for about 15 minutes to an hour or so. You can add too little vinegar and salt here, so you will have to guesstimate. If necessary, you can taste the meat after it's cooked a bit and add some more later.
Step 2: The Veggies
Mince up the onion and pepper and set aside. Easy, right? Think again! No, actually it's pretty easy.
Step 3: Eggs
Crack the eggs and add them to a bowl, then add the milk, spices, salt and pepper and beat them all together. Bonus points for not getting shell in the mix. Extra bonus points if you can crack the eggs with one hand!
Step 4: Cooking
Add oil and then sweat the onions and peppers in large pan until soft, then turn up the heat to medium high, heat a bit, then add the meat. LET IT BE. If you move it around, it'll break up into the little mouse turds that you see at Taco Bell, and I assume that you'd not want that if you're bothering to read a blog about cooking. Allow it to brown and form the meat into larger clumps. After 5 minutes, flip the meat. The moisture will run out and boil away - let it. You can taste some of the meat at this stage to confirm salt content. Add more salt or spices as needed (probably paprika and chili powder)
Step 5: Eggs
When the pan is pretty dry, add the egg mix to the pan. Let it cook for 30 seconds, then flip. them over to ensure the eggs are done on both sides. Turn off the heat and cover the pan for a few minutes. You can add cheese here if that's your thing.
Serving:
I like to add a bit of labneh on the side of this, but Mexican crema or sour cream works too. Eat with tortillas or in a burrito, garnishing as you please.