As the taxi sped through laneways so empty and inconsequential they suggested an imminent kidnapping, I tried with hopelessly inadequate Spanish to conduct my routine interview with our driver. This was three years ago, my first trip to Mexico, and the dialogue was–to my understanding–as follows (note: this translation only partly captures my linguistic ineptitude).
Australian:"Excuse me sir, what good eat here?"
Driver:"Say again?"
A:"Umm, to eat? What good eat? In Puebla."
D:"Hmmm, well. Mole poblano, tacos al pastor...have you tried a stuffed chile?"
A:"Yes. Oh, Yes."(standard confused answer, waiting for a word I might recognise)
D:"You've tried it?"
A:"What?"(now very confused, since the only words I know being used in reference to ones I don't)
D:"Stuffed chile. Do you like it?"
A:"What this is?"
D:"A chile pepper. Stuffed with meat and spices. You've tried it?"
A:"Ah yes." Long pause. "Who is..?"
And on it went like a high schooler's version of a Monty Python sketch, until I found out what I was to try, or gave up and looked in the guide book for bad advice.
So years and miles away from that dire moment in Puebla, I'm in a position to save you the effort, confusion and air miles. This is a great recipe, a composite of three that I have collected from Chiapas, Oaxaca and Puebla. In fact, it is the very chile relleno that we teach at our cooking school, which I am shamelessly plugging here.
All of the ingredients are very common, outside of the chile Poblano itself which can happily be substituted for a green capsicum (pepper), or better yet a banana chile. The Poblano has a lightly acidic, almost piney taste without any heat, which roasts to a slightly sweet clean taste. The Banana chile would just add a little kick, which would work well since the stuffing employs only sweet and aromatic spice.
Sometimes my recipes come with a few tips. All tips pertaining to this recipe have already gone to my taxi driver. Him know what good eat here.
Chile Relleno | serves 4
The Chile
4 chile Poblano
300g ground pork
1 inch cinnamon quill
3 whole allspice
1 clove garlic
2 bay leaves
1/2 onion, finely diced
Water to cover
1 level teaspoon of salt
1 tomato, diced
1/4 cup chopped almonds
1/4 cup chopped raisins
1/4 cup chopped parsley
The Sauce
2 tomatos
1/2 a small white onion
1/2 clove garlic
1 cup chicken stock
Pinch of thyme
3 black peppercorns
The Batter
3 eggs, seperated
Salt
Flour for dusting
- To prepare the chile for peeling and stuffing, place directly over a flame and quickly char the skin. Place in a bowl, cover, then place in the fridge.
- Place the pork mince, spices, onion and salt then cover with water. Heat gently and then simmer for 40 minutes, topping up the water if need be. Remove and strain, keeping the stock.
- Remove the cinnamon, bay and allspice, then return the pork to the pan with the chopped almonds and fry on a high heat for five minutes until the pork starts to colour. Add the tomato, raisins and stock and continue to cook until the stock has reduced to only just enough to keep the mix moist. Add parsley and remove from the heat.
- In a blender, puré all the ingredients from the sauce component of the recipe. Strain into a saucepan, bring to the boil and simmer for five minutes.
- Take the chiles from the fridge, remove the burnt skin and rinse to remove any flecks then dry with paper towelling. Remove the stem from the chile and clean out the seeds and membrane. Gently fill them with the pork mixture, forcing the mix down to expel any air.
- To Prepare the batter, whip the egg whites to a medium peak, add salt then 1 yolk at a time whisking all the while.
- To ensure the egg batter sticks, lightly flour the chiles then gently dip them into the egg mixture, then on into a frypan with small amount of oil. Seal both sides of the chile (they are much easier to turn if you keep the chiles quite flat when stuffing them) then pour the sauce over them and keep them on a gentle heat for half an hour.
- Serve with a little chopped coriander, salsa of your choice and crumbled fresh cheese. We had queso fresco available, but in a pinch feta is a fair substitute.
I don't quite understand the use of batter, when you spak the chile in sauce straight away. Or did I miss something?
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I'm already drooling...
You missed nothing my friend, the chile is indeed battered and then immediately placed in the sauce.
ReplyDeleteWhereas most fried batters provide a crispy exterior, this pure egg mix only binds the chile, ensuring it doesn't open up. Additionally, because the egg it whipped it makes the batter absorb the sauce as it sits, enhancing the dish further.
It did strike me as a bit weird when I first saw the process, but if you try it you'll see, as I did, just how much sense it makes.
Website truly interesting. Congratulations!
ReplyDelete