Meet My Friend, the Poblano Pepper

I was hungry for real Mexican food last week, and so my wonderful husband took me to our local ethnic store (more Puerto Rican than anything), and I found some good poblanos for Chiles Rellenos and Rajas Con Crema.  The great thing about the poblano pepper is that it is not too hot, and by extracting the seeds and inner veins, you can make it hardly hot at all if you like, or you can leave all of that in, and it gives you a definite “bite”!  Two of my favorite Mexican dishes are made with the poblano pepper.

1. First we’ll take on Chiles Rellenos (i.e., Stuffed Chile Peppers)!

Roasted Poblanos

First, roast the peppers in the oven until the skin is blackened about as shown in the picture.  Be careful the stems do not touch the heating element, or you could start a fire! Then place all roasted peppers on a plate inside a plastic bag –or probably any sealable place –for a few seconds so the humidity can loosen all the skin.  This is magical, because if you omit this step, it will be a hot, hard, and tedious job trying to peel the skin off.  I have been there!  (Maybe that is why I haven’t made these in such a long time!)  After a short time of being closed up, open the plastic bag and the skin easily peels right off.  (The skin has a bitter taste, and so is better if removed.)  Then slice open the pepper and remove as much of the seeds and veins as you want.  Leaving them will probably make your chiles rellenos more picante.  Removing will likely yield a milder flavor.  But don’t blame me if they’re spicy…you never know from pepper to pepper how hot one will be!

Stuffing the peppers with cheese

I stuffed them with provolone, because that is what I had.  I think the best cheese to stuff them with is probably Queso Oaxaca, a Mexican cheese you might find in an ethnic store if you have one nearby.  Oaxaca cheese comes in a knot shape, and you can unravel it.  It is stringy like mozzarella.  You can probably use just about any cheese you like, though.

Stuffed and secured with toothpicks

Next, close the peppers with round toothpicks.  The toothpicks are easy to detect and remove when you begin to eat!  Try biting into a wooden toothpick!

Then, batter and fry the critters.  I followed a video tutorial and whipped egg white until very foamy, then stirred in the egg yolk.  After that I coated the pepper with flour then dipped it into the egg mixture.  Carefully drop it into a frying pan with plenty of hot oil and fry until golden brown (when egg batter is completely cooked).

Chiles Rellenos ready to eat with tomato salsa

These are usually eaten with a simple tomato salsa (not picante at all).  You can just puree a little tomato, garlic, and onion to make your own.  (You’ll probably want to salt everything before eating.)  I like to pour the tomato salsa all over the chiles until they are almost “swimming” in it!  Then add a little crema on top if you have it, –Que rico!

Closest immitation to Mexican “crema” I have found in the USA!

Crema is one of Mexico’s delicacies.  I developed a taste for it while living there.  It is not just watered down sour cream, but actual cream.  If you go to some villages and get the more natural, fresh stuff, it is actually almost as “set up” as butter.  Then you use it as a condiment on your dishes, and it melts into the hot food, cools the picante a little bit, and adds so much rich taste!  This table cream made by Nestle is a pretty good imitation to the real thing.  Of course it is no comparison to some crema found in Mexico, but it is the closest thing I have found in the U.S. that is not just water-y sour cream!  Hmmmm…

2. The next dish I made with poblanos is actually one I prefer above Chiles Rellenos.  This one is Rajas Con Crema.  Rajas are simply sliced strips of pepper.

These are made by roasting and peeling the poblanos in the same way as before, but then slicing them in long, narrow strips.  Next you sautee a few onion strips in butter, then add the rajas (strips of poblano).

Onion and poblano rajas sauteeing…with plenty of seeds for spice!

When well heated, add a little of the same tomato salsa mentioned above (a simple puree of tomato, onion, and garlic).  And at this point, you can add a bit of canned or fresh corn if desired.

Rajas, onion slices, and tomato puree

Lastly, remove the mixture from the pan, and add a good amount of crema (discussed above).   Serve with warm tortillas (I fill the tortilla with the rajas con crema, and eat it like a taco).  This is one of my most favorite Mexican dishes!

 

Why Do We Keep Eating Here?

Andrea and I are starting to become more set in our ways.  Seriously, we eat at Chipotle almost every Monday!  All I have to do, instead of giving excuses and explanations, is post a few pictures:

Burrito Bowl

Andrea’s Burrito Bowl is usually about the same: cilantro-lime rice, black beans, chicken, mild salsa (pico de gallo), medium salsa (salsa verde), corn salsa, cheese, crema, and every once and a while–their delicious guacamole.

Burrito

My burrito has not changed in a long while: cilantro-lime rice, a small amount of pinto beans, chicken, mild salsa, corn salsa, cheese, and lettuce.

Okay, that’s not enough explanation for some.  Here’s an excuse: the tastes are fresh and out-of-this-world good!  Now, neither of us are health food nuts or organic people; but Chipotle truly emphasizes their hormone free products, humanly treated animals, and responsible farming.  Do I care?  Not really.  Does it make the food taste better?  I think so.  Not only are their ingredients mostly “all-natural”, but they are fresh.  I think that people do notice that.  We do.  The food even tastes mildly healthy–yet another thing I usually could care less about–but hey, it makes you feel good!

And yes, we’ll probably still eat here almost weekly!

Please Give Your Opinion…

I had heard positive reviews of homemade laundry soap.  At first I was skeptical –has the coupon clipping and penny-pinching really come to this?  But then, they said it does a wonderful job of laundering clothes…that it cleans very well and yet is gentle on the material.  I thought maybe one day I would try it…as an adventure if for nothing else!  After all, I still have lots of laundry soap from “stocking up” before we were married!  (You can ask my Mom Murdock about that!!!)

Then Marcia, a good friend, who with her husband had just invested in a frontloader washer, mentioned something one day.  It was something to the fact of, “I just bought all the stuff to make homemade laundry soap, and now our washing machine requires only High Efficiency laundry soap.  I wanted to try it to save money, and now I cannot use it, and I wasted the money buying the supplies.”  I’LL BUY IT FROM YOU!”  I said.  Here was my chance to try out the endeavor, and I wouldn’t have to run around to stores looking for Borax and other supplies either!

So, for twelve dollars, I had probably enough to make eight or ten batches of the soap, and each batch makes enough for around forty loads.  If you cannot say anything else about homemade laundry soap, you can say, IT IS CHEAP.

Marcia and I got together and made it at my house.  It was a piece of cake to make…SO EASY!  So you can say that in its favor too.

As for how it washes, how will we know, except to test it out on a stain or use it and over time see how it seems to work?  Well, I decided to test it out on a stain as I had seen that someone else had done.  I squirted Mustard on two old socks and soaked one in homemade soap, and the other in Dynamo laundry soap.  Well, are you waiting for me to give you a rave review on the homemade stuff?  I can’t.  THe Dynamo did better.  It is true.  Maybe I should try a different way next time, or maybe it is because of our water here…it is very hard, I think.  But it wasn’t anything special.  I would be willing to try a different recipe later, and I will definitely use up what I have, but I cannot rave about it.  Have you had a different experience?  Can you tell me why mine didn’t do wonderfully as it seems to have done for others?  I would like your opinion, especially if you have made homemade laundry soap before yourself!

Ingredients
Grated bar soap dissolving in hot water
Adding all the ingredients into a five-gallon bucket

Bacon-Ranch Chicken

Well I got the idea from here…”Ranch Style Chicken”…sounds good, right?  And it probably is, but it really isn’t “Ranch”-y as in Ranch seasoning.  I think the name of the dish just kind of came from the fact that the author lives on a ranch.  This is fine, and I am sure her version is delicious.  However, I decided to make ours Bacon-Ranch Chicken as in Bacon, Ranch seasoning, and chicken!  Of course, I did not come up with the idea on my own either…but I googled “Ranch Chicken,” I believe it was, and this is what I found and came up with!

Cook some bacon.  Coat your chicken breasts with liquid Ranch salad dressing, then in dredge in bread crumbs.  Fry the coated chicken in the grease from the bacon (I know, I know…so unhealthy!)  Then, after a few minutes on both sides, when your chicken has some good color, place in an oven-safe dish and bake for about ten minutes or until cooked through.  Take out of the oven, place two slices of bacon on top of each chicken breast, and sprinkle cheddar cheese on top.  Place the pan back into the oven until the cheese is melted.  (You can turn on the broiler for a few seconds if necessary to melt the cheese more quickly…watch it, though!  It burns food real fast!)  Remove chicken from oven, call your husband, thank God for it, and devour!

If you want to be extra unhealthy, deep fry some thinly sliced onion for Onion Strings!