- 3pounds (18 to 24 medium)tomatillos, husked and rinsed
- 1largefresh poblano chile
- 1 1/2tablespoons vegetable oil or rich-tasting pork lard, plus a little oil for spraying the tortillas
- 1medium white onion, chopped
- 2cups chicken broth, plus a little extra if needed
- Salt
- 1/2cupMexican crema , crème fraiche or heavy (whipping) cream
- About 2cups coarsely shredded cooked chicken, preferably grilled, roasted or rotisserie chicken
- 2/3cup shredded Jack cheese or Chihuahua cheese
- 12 corn tortillas
- A few sliced rounds of white onion, separated into rings, for garnish
- Fresh cilantro sprigs for garnish
- 1/4cupfreshly grated Mexican queso añejo for garnish
Instructions
The sauce. Roast the tomatillos and chile
on a baking sheet 4 inches below a very hot broiler, until they’re
darkly roasted (they’ll be blackened in spots), about 6 minutes. Flip
everything over and roast the other side—5 or 6 minutes more will give
you splotchy-black and blistered tomatillos and poblanos that are cooked
through. Cool. When the chile is cool enough to handle, rub off the
blackened skin of the chile, then pull out the stems and seed pod. Tear
the chile open and rinse briefly to remove any stray seeds and bits of
skin, then rougly chop. Transfer the chiles and tomatillos with their
juice to a blender or food processor and blend to a smooth puree.
In a medium-size (4- or 5-quart) pot (preferably a Dutch oven or Mexican
cazuela),
heat the oil or lard over medium heat. Add the onion and cook,
stirring regularly, until golden, about 7 minutes. Raise the heat to
medium-high, and, when the pot is noticeably hotter, stir in the
tomatillo puree. Cook, stirring, until darker in color and gets
thickened to the consistency of tomato paste, 10 to 15 minutes. Stir in
the broth, partially cover and simmer 15 minutes. Taste and season with
salt, usually about ½ teaspoon. The sauce should be a slightly soupy
consistency—not as thick as spaghetti sauce. If it is too thick, stir
in a little additional broth. Keep warm over low heat.
Other preliminaries. Stir the
crema (or one of its
stand-ins) into the sauce. Put the chicken in a bowl and stir ½ cup of
the hot sauce mixture into it. Taste and season with additional salt if
you think it needs it. Have the cheese at the ready.
Finishing the enchiladas. Heat the tortillas by spraying
with the oil, then sliding them into a microwaveable plastic bag. Fold
the top over but don't seal it. Microwave on high for 1 minute to
create a steamy environment around the tortillas and then let them stand
2 to 3 minutes before using. Smear about ¼ cup of the warm sauce over
the bottom of 4 to 6 nine-inch individual ovenproof baking/serving
dishes or smear about 1 cup of the sauce over the bottom of a 13x9-inch
baking dish.
Working quickly so the tortillas stay hot and
pliable, roll a portion of the chicken into each tortilla, douse evenly
with the remaining sauce, then sprinkle on the shredded melting
cheese and bake at 400 degrees until the enchiladas are hot through (the
cheese will have begun to brown), about 15 minutes.
Garnish with añejo cheese, onion rings and cilantro sprigs and serve immediately.
Recipe and picture from Rick Bayless