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---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.02
 
      Title: CHILE RELLENOS (STUFFED CHILES)
 Categories: Meats, Mexican
      Yield: 6 servings
 
           ___picadillo___
      3 lb Boneless pork
    1/2    Onion; sliced
      2    Cl Garlic; peeled
      1 tb Salt
      6 tb Lard or the fat from the bro
    1/2 md Onion; finely chopped
      3    Cl Garlic; peeled and choppe
      8    Peppercorns
      5    Cloves
    1/2    Stick cinnamon
      3 tb Raisins
      2 tb Almonds; blanched & slivered
      2 tb Acitron or candied fruit; ch
      2 ts Salt
  1 1/4 lb Tomatoes; peeled and seeded
           ___tomato broth___
  1 1/4 lb Tomatoes; peeled and seeded
    1/4 md Onion; roughly chopped
      2    Cl Garlic; peeled and choppe
    1/4 c  Lard or reserved fat from th
      4    Cloves
      6    Peppercorns
      2 sm Bay leaves
  2 1/2    Cinnamon
    1/4 ts Dried thyme
      3 c  Reserved pork broth
           Salt; to taste
           ___the chiles___
      6    Chiles poblanos; or bell pep
           ___the batter___
           Peanut oil - at least 3/4" d
      4    Eggs; separated
    1/4 ts Salt
           Flour
 
  Recipe by: The Cuisines of Mexico by Diana Kennedy ISBN 0-06-012344-3
  This dish consists of large chiles or bell peppers stuffed with meat or
  cheese, coated with a light batter, and fried. They are served in a light
  tomato broth.
  
  There is alays an exclamation of pleasure and surprise when a cazuela of
  golden, puffy chiles rellenos sitting in their tomato broth is presented
  at the table. If you have eaten those sad, flabby little things that
  usually turn up in so-called Mexican restaurants in the United States as
  authentic chiles rellenos, you have a great surprise in store. Here is yet
  another prime example of the fine feeling the Mexicans have for texture in
  their food: you bite through the slightly crisp, rich chile poblano to
  experience the crunch of the almonds and little bits of crystallized
  fruits in the pork filling. Then there is the savory broth to cut the
  richness of the batter.
  
  Chiles poblanos are imported in great quantities to large centers of
  Mexican population here in the States but very few find their way to the
  East. (Maybe this was true in 1972 when this book was published, but these
  days they are readily available here in Cambridge. To me, bell peppers are
  no substitute.) I am afraid the bell pepper is about the only suitable
  substitute for appearance and size--you can always spike them with a
  little chile serrano.
  
  Assembling the chiles may seem like a long laborious task, but it is no
  more complicated and time consuming than most worthwhile dishes, and this
  dish is certainly worthwhile.
  
  Prepare the picadillo:
  
  Cut the meat into large cubes. Put them into the pan with the onion,
  garlic, and salt and cover with cold water. Bring the meat to a boil,
  lower the flame and let it simmer until just tender--about 40 to 45
  minutes. Do not overcook. Leave the meat to cool off in the broth.
  
  Strain the meat, reserving the broth, then shred or chop it finely and set
  it aside. Let the broth get completely cold and skim off the fat. Reserve
  the fat.
  
  Melt the lard and cook the onion and garlic, without browning, until they
  are soft.
  
  Add the meat and let it ook until it begins to brown.
  
  Crush the spices roughly and add them, with the rest of the ingredients to
  the meat mixture. Cook the mixture a few moments longer.
  
  Mash the tomatoes a little and add them to the mixture in the pan.
  Continue cooking the mixture over a high flame for about 10 minutes,
  stirring it from time to time so that it does not stick. It should be
  almost dry.
  
  Prepare the tomato broth:
  
  Blend the tomatoes, with the juice extracted from their seeds, with the
  onion and garlic until smooth.
  
  Melt the lard and fry the tomato puree over a high flame for about 3
  minutes, stirring to prevent sticking. Add the rest of the ingredients and
  cook them over a high flame for about 5 minutes, stirring.
  
  Add the pork broth and continue cooking the broth over a medium flame for
  about 15 minutes. By that time it will be well seasoned and reduced
  somewhat--but still a broth rather than a thick sauce. Add salt as
  necessary.
 
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