My buddy Glen and his wife, Christa have a crazy packed tiny garden. He brought me some of their peppers and tomatoes the other day. This recipe is your standard roasted salsa number... nothing going on special here, but as I made it, I was struck by how damn easy and forgiving it is. This time of year, when fresh tomatoes are everywhere, it's easy to make great food for every meal.
For example, dig this roasted tomato pasta sauce that I *thought* I invented until I saw a similar method in some magazine a year or so ago.
Anyway...
Start by charring your peppers. This silly grill grate thing is excellent on the gas stove top for peppers. Once charred, put them in bowl and cover them with plastic to sweat.
Then broil your tomatoes, garlic, and a couple onions.
Meanwhile, pull the stems (but not the seeds) off the peppers and scrape/pick/peel off the charred bits that come off easily. Toss them all in the food processor.
Char/blacken the tomatoes, onions, garlic a bit.
I press out the liquid from the tomatoes. Otherwise, you end up with a very soupy salsa. If I ruled, I'd save that charred tomato liquid for some brilliant thing.
Toss it all in the food processor. You gotta have cilantro. I happened to have a 1/2 a lime to juice and some chopped red onions too -- so that went in too.
Process it until it's done. Salt and pepper and you're good to go. If I did it again, I'd add some fresh jalapeno and/or habanero for that distinctly fresh pepper heat.
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
John's post-ride breakfast huevos frijoles
Hit it! |
We often have pinto beans going in the crockpot. We're big fans of pinto beans. We also love black beans, which also work for this breakfast, but pintos are better.
This is a super simple breakfast that I make all the time. The recipe I outline here is sort of the baseline. A guy could add all sorts of stuff to make it their own.
You can use canned beans to make this super easy and simple, but making pintos in the crockpot is so easy and cheap and yummy that it's hard to dump beans out of a can.
For the beans: We take 2 or 3 cups of beans and cover them with water by an inch or so and let it soak overnight. I usually throw a couple dried peppers in there too.
The key to great beans is not to dump out that soaking water. Seriously. Don't do it. You may need to add a bit of water, but don't dump any out. Cook on High for a couple hours, then turn it to Low until they are tender.
Be sure to season/salt after they cook. Not before. We like this "Extra Fancy" seasoning stuff. It's cheap and it's in the Mexican section and there's no MSG. What's not to love?
Add about 1/2 to 3/4 cups beans and some salsa. The taquero-style sauces are my favorite for this dish. You want lots of liquid going since you'll be sort of boiling/poaching the eggs.
Here's Joe pondering my current favorite salsa. I friggin' love this stuff. But looking at the Herdez site, now I want to find the Arbol sauce. Damn, I bet that's good too.
Plop the eggs on there and cover to poach/steam/boil.
I use a cast iron pan to cover the eggs. This works as a tortilla warmer too. Genius, right?
You can put some cheese on there for melting.
Cook until the egg jiggles, or not, to your liking. Cover with gobs of Valentina sauce and sop it all up with the tortilla: Grub, with a capital G.
You can put some cheese on there for melting.
Cook until the egg jiggles, or not, to your liking. Cover with gobs of Valentina sauce and sop it all up with the tortilla: Grub, with a capital G.
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Fried eggs are good. Fried eggs with jalapeno are gooder.
I want to think that I invented this. Of course it's been done. How could it not have been done before?
This is a fine, fine meal. For breakfast or perhaps very late night.
Saute some fresh, sliced jalapenos in a bit of olive oil for a minute or so. Then crack the eggs on top of them. Flip 'em for o'er easy or what moves you.
Fried eggs with a dang quesadilla and avocado. Salsa is new-to-me super-rad high-value Herdez "Taquera" salsa.
That's good living.
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Small and stiff spatula wins the coveted Tool of 2012 Award !
We interrupt the normal nothingness here to bring you exciting news!
Behold!
My favorite new tool of 2012!
Man I love this spat. I use every single day.
It's especially useful when coupled with a cast iron pan.
Armed as such I am invincible!
As for cast iron pans: I found a stack of these rusted suckers in a junk pile at the river. I'm methodically reviving each one... This is Number 2. Number three is in the dirt of our side yard, awaiting its Phoenix-like transformation.
Until 2013!
Behold!
My favorite new tool of 2012!
Man I love this spat. I use every single day.
It's especially useful when coupled with a cast iron pan.
Armed as such I am invincible!
As for cast iron pans: I found a stack of these rusted suckers in a junk pile at the river. I'm methodically reviving each one... This is Number 2. Number three is in the dirt of our side yard, awaiting its Phoenix-like transformation.
Until 2013!
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