Ok, you you go then.
Here was the finished product:
Ok, let's see what I can do. I don't have an actual recipe, because I made it up as I went along, but I remember it pretty well. Measurements of stuff not in clear units (1 can, 1/2 onion) are all "-ish"
Chile Verde:
1 pound of meat (I used pork chops) cut into cubes/chunks ~1"
1 can of diced green chiles (7oz)
1 can of green enchilada sauce (14oz, or half a 24-oz) I used Old El Paso
salt to taste
1/2 large onion, cut in long pieces (I cut radially into 6-8 portions then separate the layers)
- simmer everything but the onions gently over low heat for 5+ hours.
- an hour before finishing, add the onions
- at the end, raise to boil to thicken the sauce. Add a corn starch slurry if necessary for desired thickness.
Prepare black beans - 1 can - before using in the other dishes by boiling a can with salt, cumin and powdered green chile.
Egg rolls:
black beans (half of the above)
canned green chiles, drained (about 4 oz)
sun dried tomatoes, chopped (dunno, a couple tablespoons?)
chopped onion - about 1/4 onion, more or less to taste (use the rest below)
1 finely chopped serrano (more or less to taste)
egg roll wrappers
- mix all filling ingredients in a bowl, add a little salt for flavor
- spoon into wrappers and wrap
- deep fry
Fried rice:
Prepared rice
- 1 Cup long grain rice (VERY important to use long grain)
- powdered green chile* (maybe 2 Tbs?)
- cumin (about 1-2 tsp)
- 2 cup chicken stock (unsalted)
- salt
The rest
- diced green chiles drained (about 4oz)
- 1 can RoTel, drained
- beans (the other half)
- 1 green bell pepper, chopped
- 1/4 onion chopped (or more)
- if you want a little more heat, add some chopped fresh green chile peppers
- prepare the rice an hour in advance by cooking normally with the chicken stock, chile, cumin, and salt
- spread the cooked rice on parchment paper on a sheet pan
- freeze for an hour
- just before starting the rest, take the rice out of the freezer and break it up. It will be kinda like peanut brittle. Break it up as much as possible but doesn't have to be completely broken.
- saute the onion and bell pepper for ~ 5 minutes (whatever fat you want, I like to use lard for Mexican)
- Add the rice and continue cooking. Keep stirring to break up the rice as much as possible
- When the rice is fully broken up and mixed, add the RoTel and canned chiles. Cook another couple minutes
- Add the beans, mix well, cook until everything is hot.
The noodle-like strips on top are deep-fried flour tortillas cut into strips. They're great for dipping in the sauce too.
Habanero sweet and sour:
1/4 cup honey. I used a hatch red chile honey*.
1-2 Tbs sugar
1/4-1/3 cup white vinegar
touch of salt
1/8 tsp powdered habanero**
1 Tbs corn starch
1/4 Cup water
- Mix the honey, sugar, vinegar, salt, and habanero together and simmer
- before thickening, adjust taste to suit
- corn starch slurry: mix corn starch with cold water
- bring to a boil then add slurry to thicken. Do more slurry if you want it thicker
* I grew up on New Mexico chile, so I get a lot of my chile at a place called The Chile Shop in Santa Fe. These are powdered chiles, not chile powder - difference being it's JUST the chile, no other spices.
** Not sure where you can get powdered habanero. I make my own. Dried a BUNCH of them from my garden then used a spice grinder to make a powder. Should have worn a gas mask... You could probably chop a couple and simmer that, then strain before thickening.
As mentioned, measurements are very approximate. Taste everything as you go so it suits!