The honor of first favorite goes to Frijoles Charros and eggs, which I'll save for another post. This is a close #2: Huevos Rancheros. If you're a regular reader, my Mexican food fetish is probably known to you by now. If not... now you know. I could start every morning with eggs, beans and salsa and probably never grow tired of it. I don't think. Anyway, I was captivated by a version I found at Smitten Kitchen, but the task of flipping a tortilla with a raw egg sitting on top of it without making a bloody mess proved to be elusive. So, I made the salsa cruda as instructed on SK- which is devastatingly simple and delicious, just diced fresh tomato, onion (I used a sweet yellow, which I like best for salsa) and raw jalapeno; dismembered several stalks of cilantro; heated up the tortillas in a hot oiled skillet, melted cheese on each; and fried eggs in a separate pan, with the yolks still runny, naturally.SK's devilishly clever take was to use, as a delicious shortcut, Goya Black Bean soup for the bean side dish; I simulated this by spicing the beans with garlic, cumin and chili powder and copious amounts of black pepper, then letting a cup and a half of chicken broth reduce in the pan until the beans were sauced with the reduction. It felt strange trying to recreating canned soup manually, but the results were fantastic, I daresay better in the end for having been made from scratch. I doubt if I'll ever master that egg and tortilla over easy method, but this was mightlily satisfying, regardless.Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Mike's Second Favorite Breakfast
The honor of first favorite goes to Frijoles Charros and eggs, which I'll save for another post. This is a close #2: Huevos Rancheros. If you're a regular reader, my Mexican food fetish is probably known to you by now. If not... now you know. I could start every morning with eggs, beans and salsa and probably never grow tired of it. I don't think. Anyway, I was captivated by a version I found at Smitten Kitchen, but the task of flipping a tortilla with a raw egg sitting on top of it without making a bloody mess proved to be elusive. So, I made the salsa cruda as instructed on SK- which is devastatingly simple and delicious, just diced fresh tomato, onion (I used a sweet yellow, which I like best for salsa) and raw jalapeno; dismembered several stalks of cilantro; heated up the tortillas in a hot oiled skillet, melted cheese on each; and fried eggs in a separate pan, with the yolks still runny, naturally.SK's devilishly clever take was to use, as a delicious shortcut, Goya Black Bean soup for the bean side dish; I simulated this by spicing the beans with garlic, cumin and chili powder and copious amounts of black pepper, then letting a cup and a half of chicken broth reduce in the pan until the beans were sauced with the reduction. It felt strange trying to recreating canned soup manually, but the results were fantastic, I daresay better in the end for having been made from scratch. I doubt if I'll ever master that egg and tortilla over easy method, but this was mightlily satisfying, regardless.
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