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Edited on Thu Jun-24-10 03:26 PM by mike_c
I love eggs, tortillas, and salsa in any form, but this is one of my favorites. I make the red chili with a blend of New Mexico red chili, pasilla chili, ancho chili, and chipotle chili, all bought as pure, ground chili powders on my last pass through New Mexico. It only takes a little chipotle powder to crank up the spice and add a wonderful smokey flavor.
Santa Fe Style Huevos Rancheros
For each plate:
3 strips bacon + extra lard if necessary 3 corn tortillas + extra for serving 3 eggs 1/2 - 3/4 cup Red Chili Sauce (recipe below) 2-3 Tbsp crumpled queso fresca
Fry the bacon slowly in a heavy pan to render as much fat as possible. There should be enough to fry three tortillas and the eggs-- if there isn't, add a little lard as needed. Drain the bacon. Fry the tortillas, one at a time, in the bacon fat for just a minute or so, until they begin to puff and become fragrant. Don't crisp them. Remove the tortillas to drain on paper towels, then spread them on a plate.
Fry the three eggs sunny side up. Yolks should be runny to slightly runny, but not cooked solid unless you just can't eat eggs otherwise. Lay the eggs on top of the tortillas, pour Red Chili Sauce over the egg whites, leaving the yolks uncovered. Crumble some queso fresca over the top. Serve with fresh hot tortillas on the side.
Red Chili Sauce
4 Tbsp lard 4 Tbsp flour 1 onion 2 cloves garlic 1 Tbsp salt 1 Tbsp dried Mexican oregano 1 1/2 cups dried red chili powder (NOT the stuff sold as chili powder at most supermarkets outside New Mexico) 4 cups chicken stock + a little water if necessary
Cut onion in half and roast over a flame or in a very hot pan with the garlic until both have significant char, pulling the onion apart while it roasts to achieve more charred surface. Don't blacken the whole thing, just spread some char around. Put the charred onion, charred and peeled garlic, salt, chicken stock, and oregano into a blender and blend until smooth. It will thicken.
Melt the lard in a sauce pan and stir in the flour. Fry over high heat, stirring constantly, for a couple of minutes until the flour starts to darken and smells toasty. Slowly pour in the blended chili/onion mixture, stirring. The oil will splash, so be careful. Cook the mixture over med/low heat for 20-30 minutes, stirring often. Add water if necessary to thin the consistency. Don't let it scorch.
The sauce freezes well.
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