wnissen wrote:Jenise wrote:Also yesterday, I roasted 25 lbs of green chiles.
Our biggest grocery has a road show, they roast and you peel and seed. Took me 2 hours yesterday but I have converted my box of the Hatch Valley's finest into 6 kg / 13 lb. of pure green gold (not that kind). They were already sold out of mild, unfortunately, but the hot ones aren't too hot. For the most part. I was smart enough to do almost all the work outside, then I brought in the cutting board to wash it off and de-seed a few that I had saved for making chile relleno. Big mistake. The spray of the water kicked up a cloud of capsaicin and my wife and I were both fit to cough up a lung. Turned on the fans, that helped enough that we could finish cleaning up. Still, that stuff is volatile! You could smell it down the driveway, even inside a plastic bag inside the box. And yes, I wore gloves and an apron.
Do you have a recipe for green chile stew, Jenise? This is my first time roasting a case, and even after I part some of it out to friends I'll still have a bunch.
I would have the local guys do the roasting for me IF they would have done it for the price of a case. But no, they have to be show-offs, and they will sell you the already-roasted chiles for $5/lb. They're $2/lb raw, or 10% off for a case. So I did my own on the hobs of my Viking range. Btw, I don't bother to peel them. I pull the stem and shake out the seeds, but otherwise they go in baggies (about three per baggie, about what we'd need for two hamburgers) peel and all. I love some charred bits in my green chile stew and I don't want them too 'clean'.
For which, to answer your question, I don't have a recipe. My first ever taste of a green chile stew was made by a project secretary way back when, and hers was better than any I've had in restaurants in New Mexico so what I make is an attempt to copy hers. Nothing written down, I "just do it". Which is: pork shoulder cut in strips, dredged in flour and browned lightly, then onions and beef broth are added along with oregano and cumin, which I simmer to desired tenderness, about an hour, in the middle of which I add lots of chopped chiles and charred bits, thicken if neccessary with a flour slurry, and add a few dollops of cream to enrich it. That I serve over rice cooked with kaffir lime leaf and garlic slivers. I usually also pickle thin slices of some of the chiles with oil, vinegar, garlic and oregano, and add those on top as a lively garnish.