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Showing posts with label chipolte. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chipolte. Show all posts

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Blackened Tomato and Chipolte Salsa

It's harvest time which means that I have been making sooo much food for the freezer or preserving somehow. I have tomatoes up to my eyebrows, so I've been on the hunt for great new recipes to use them all.

In a very rarely used book called "Whole Food" by Jude Blereau, I came across this recipe which I thought was perfect because I had the following random ingredients:

tomatoes
chipolte peppers in adobo that I opened a while ago, froze, then thawed thinking it was tomato paste (note to self: start identifying items prior to putting them in your freezer)
fresh apple juice from all the apple pies I made the other day

And I like salsa. And it gives me an excuse to buy tortilla chips.

Makes 2 cups

6 ripe tomatoes
1-2 fresh red chilies (I used three from our garden. Another random ingredient needing attention due to copious quantities)
3-4 garlic cloves (I used 3)
a full medium chipolte in adobo, pureed or minced
2 tsp of fresh apple juice

Blacken your tomatoes and chilies on the bbq over a nice hot flame. Make sure you really blacken them, especially the chilies, because they are a pain in the ass to peel if the skin hasn't blistered from the flesh. Remove to a bowl and cover with a plate. Or steam them a way that works for you, I find baggies work well too.

Roughly peel the tomatoes and chili. I mostly seeded my tomatoes too since I'm not a huge fan, though I kept the seeds from ONE chili for some heat.

Place your tomatoes, chili and garlic in a food processor and purée. Turn into a frying pan over low-medium heat. Add your chipolte and apple juice and simmer for about 15-20 minutes stirring occasionally until the salsa begins to thicken and turn a nice, deep red. Check for taste, adjust with more chipolte or apple juice as necessary and reduce further if needed. I simmered for about 25 minutes until it was the consistency I wanted. It'll further thicken as it cools as well.

Serve with chips. It tastes like a creamy tomato-y sauce right off the bat, then it deepens into a gentle 'mmm' of heat, then finishes with a pow of heat. It's addictive, I'm going to go eat more right now.

And no photos because I'm not organized. Sorry!