Recipe

Mexican Cooking Tips (6 Of 6) Recipe


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Ingredients
  • 1 x
  • 1 x Dictionary of MEXICAN Cookin

Directions
  • Step #1 PHEASANT: This game bird fares equally well when cooked with a bravely Spice uped sauce or a mild creamy one.
  • Step #2 Serve it with a grain side dish; see Game.
  • Step #3 PILONCILLO: This unrefined sugar is purchased in hard cones.
  • Step #4 Like other "raw" sugars, piloncillo is beige to brown; the deeper the color, the more pronozd the molasses flavor.
  • Step #5 PINE NUTS (PINIONS, PIGNOLIS): Pine nuts are the seeds of the Pinion pine.
  • Step #6 They are delicious raw or toasted.
  • Step #7 Store them tightly covered & either put in the fridged or frozen, depending on how quickly they are to be used.
  • Step #8 See NUTS for toasting & grinding.
  • Step #9 PLANTAIN: This relative of the banana boasts a thick skin & large size.
  • Step #10 The fruit itself tends to be a deeper yellow than that of the banana.
  • Step #11 Cooked unripe plantain is eaten as one would a potato.
  • Step #12 Plantains are sweetest when ripe, which isn't until their skins are an alarming through black.
  • Step #13 Like bananas, plantains will ripen after they have been harvested.
  • Step #14 POSOLE: Sometimes hominy is called "posole," but the word authentically refers to a dish made with hominy as an ingredient.
  • Step #15 See Hominy PRICKLY PEAR: This is the diminutive (egg size) fruit of the cactus of the same name.
  • Step #16 It is nearly impossible to avoid the prickles when peeling to reveal the garnet-colored flesh.
  • Step #17 Prickly pears are sometimes sold with the prickles removed.
  • Step #18 PUMPKIN SEED: With the shells or husks removed, pumpkin seeds are known as PEPITAS.
  • Step #19 Store them in a cool, dry place.
  • Step #20 To toast pumpkin seeds, spread them in a single layer in an ungreased pan.
  • Step #21 bake this at 350 degrees F.
  • Step #22 for 13 to 15 mins, stirring & checking for doneness frequently.
  • Step #23 QUAIL: These little birds weigh in at about 1/4 lb.
  • Step #24 They have richly flavored meat, what there is of it.
  • Step #25 Quail are most commonly available frozen.
  • Step #26 See GAME.
  • Step #27 QUESO: Spanish for "cheese.
  • Step #28 " QUESO ANEJO: The name means "aged cheese" in Spanish.
  • Step #29 See CHEESE.
  • Step #30 QUESO FRESCO: The name means "fresh cheese" in Spanish.
  • Step #31 See CHEESE.
  • Step #32 RABBIT: Rabbits are raised commercially.
  • Step #33 As with many uncommon meats, it is said of rabbit, that it "tastes like chicken.
  • Step #34 " It doesn't; it tastes like rabbit.
  • Step #35 Large rabbits aren't as tender as the little ones; it is well to marinate or stew older ones, or make rabbit sausage.
  • Step #36 See GAME.
  • Step #37 RED PEPPER: See Ground Red Pepper.
  • Step #38 RED PEPPER SAUCE: This commercially bottled condiment is made from vinegar, spices & hot chilies.
  • Step #39 It adds heat but little in the way of flavor.
  • Step #40 RICE: Mexican cooking calls for long grain or medium-grain white rice.
  • Step #41 The occasional southwestern dish uses wild rice, which really isn't rice.
  • Step #42 It is the fruit of an aquatic grass once harvested only by Native Americans who lived by the Great Lakes.
  • Step #43 SQUASH BLOSSOMS: Contrary to poplar belief, the blossoms used in southwest cooking are those of winter squashes such as pumpkin, not zucchini.
  • Step #44 They are a perishable item & are best used the day they are bought.
  • Step #45 TAMARIND: This is an intensely pungent, tart pod about four inches long.
  • Step #46 Tamarind is usually bought packaged in a tightly compressed, sticky plastic-wrapped lump.
  • Step #47 The flesh is riddled with fibers and seeds--not what you want in your food--and must be soaked before using.
  • Step #48 Separate the tamarind pods, pulling away & discarding as much of the pod as you reasonably can.
  • Step #49 Cover with water & let the pulp soak for at least an hr (overnight, if time permits).
  • Step #50 Then squeeze the pulp well to extract the juice or rub as much pulp as you can through a fine mesh sieve.
  • Step #51 TEQUILA: A pale, which thrives in an arid, sharp-tasting liquor distilled from the agave plant, hot climate.
  • Step #52 The stem of the agave, known also as the "century plant," is used in making both PULQUE and tequila.
  • Step #53 --.
  • Enjoy the MEXICAN COOKING TIPS (6 OF 6) recipe

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