![]() |
I need a little help
Decades ago in Long Beach, CA, a Mex./Amer. landlady used to invite me to
her family dinners. The food, my god, the food was to die for. Her chile rellenos were so good that I begged her to teach me how to make them, and she did. She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also a particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What she called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet just using the ingredients, but to no avail. Does anyone here know what I'm looking for? If not, is there another food newsgroup that would know? I thank you for any help. ev -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
On Aug 16, 1:35*am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also a > particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What she > called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet just > using the ingredients, but to no avail. I am reminded of Eagles song, "Hotel California"... "On a dark desert highway, cool wind in my hair, warm smell of colitas rising up through the air." Eriogonum jamesii is a species of wild buckwheat known by the common name James' buckwheat and Antelope sage. It is native to southwestern North America (Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico). Do Mexican cooks use native plants such as sage to flavor such dishes, or does the recipe include chiles de arbol (colitas de rata)? |
I need a little help
On Aug 16, 4:35*am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> Decades ago in Long Beach, CA, a Mex./Amer. landlady used to invite me to > her family dinners. The food, my god, the food was to die for. Her chile > rellenos were so good that I begged her to teach me how to make them, and > she did. > > She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also a > particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What she > called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet just > using the ingredients, but to no avail. > > Does anyone here know what I'm looking for? If not, is there another food > newsgroup that would know? > > I thank you for any help. > ev > > --http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ Sounds like "Quelite". Wikipedia states: Quelite can mean any of a number of different plants eaten in Mexico for their leaves, as leaf vegetables or herbs, including but not limited to: Amaranthus, Chenopodium or Coriandrum species. Maybe it was just Coriander (Cilantro)? Good luck............ jack |
I need a little help
"Nunya Bidnits" > wrote in message ... > EmmyBlue said: >> Decades ago in Long Beach, CA, a Mex./Amer. landlady used to invite >> me to her family dinners. The food, my god, the food was to die for. >> Her chile rellenos were so good that I begged her to teach me how to >> make them, and she did. >> >> She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was >> also a particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron >> skillet. What she called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have >> searched the Internet just using the ingredients, but to no avail. >> >> Does anyone here know what I'm looking for? If not, is there another >> food newsgroup that would know? >> >> I thank you for any help. >> ev > > This sounds wonderful and I would also like to know the recipe. But this > NG > is pretty dead. You should try posting in rec.food.cooking if you don't > mind > navigating around a lot of trash posts, or alt.food.recipes, or > rec.food.recipes. > > But if you could, would you kindly post that rellenos recipe you > mentioned? > > MartyB in KC ~~~~~~~~~ Well, it's not really a recipe... Blackening and peeling the Anaheim peppers is the most time consuming part. You put them directly in the flame of the burner...after they're black and blistered, put them in a paper sack or a plastic bag for about 20 min, then they peel pretty easily. Then you slit the pepper down the side about half way, cut through the seed pod just under the inside of the stem and pull it out carefully. Stuff the peppers with Monterey Jack cheese and roll them in flour. People are scared of the batter...but you just separate your eggs and beat the whites until stiff....beat the yolks with salt and a spoon of flour and *carefully* fold into the beaten whites. The key is to not deflate the whites too much. Dip peppers in batter and fry in 2" oil in a cast iron skillet. I like mine with sour cream and a fresh pico de gallo (chopped tomatoes, fresh chiles, onions, cumin, salt, and lime juice)...or bottled salsa if I'm lazy. You can also make baked chile rellenos -- Lay the stuffed peppers in a greased casserole and pour the batter over. Sprinkle w grated cheese and bake about until batter is done and lightly browned on top. Now let's talk about Tamale Pie....made with masa harina...I'm collecting recipes in my quest for the perfect one. EmmyV in OK -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
"Jack" > wrote in message
... On Aug 16, 4:35 am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote: > Decades ago in Long Beach, CA, a Mex./Amer. landlady used to invite me to > her family dinners. The food, my god, the food was to die for. Her chile > rellenos were so good that I begged her to teach me how to make them, and > she did. > > She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also > a > particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What she > called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet just > using the ingredients, but to no avail. > > Does anyone here know what I'm looking for? If not, is there another food > newsgroup that would know? > > I thank you for any help. > ev Sounds like "Quelite". Wikipedia states: Quelite can mean any of a number of different plants eaten in Mexico for their leaves, as leaf vegetables or herbs, including but not limited to: Amaranthus, Chenopodium or Coriandrum species. Maybe it was just Coriander (Cilantro)? Good luck............ jack ~~~~~~~~ Hmmm...I wonder what the Mexican word for mustard greens is... ev -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
"little man upon the stair" > wrote in message
... On Aug 16, 1:35 am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote: > She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also > a > particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What she > called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet just > using the ingredients, but to no avail. I am reminded of Eagles song, "Hotel California"... "On a dark desert highway, cool wind in my hair, warm smell of colitas rising up through the air." Eriogonum jamesii is a species of wild buckwheat known by the common name James' buckwheat and Antelope sage. It is native to southwestern North America (Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico). Do Mexican cooks use native plants such as sage to flavor such dishes, or does the recipe include chiles de arbol (colitas de rata)? ~~~~~~ Ah, I love the Eagles...always thought colitas is a flower. You know, my landlady used baby talk a lot, called enchiladas 'enchiladees'...maybe that's a clue. emmyv -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
On Aug 20, 4:35*am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> Hmmm...I wonder what the Mexican word for mustard greens is... Mustard spinach is called "espinaca mostaza". The yellow mustard flowers that grow wild everywhere are called "ajenabe". Hay mucho mas aqui: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brassica_nigra La mostaza negra o ajenabe (Brassica nigra) es una planta herbácea anual, cultivada por sus semillas, que se emplean como especia. http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brassica Brassica perviridis: tender green (verde tierno), mustard spinach (espinaca mostaza) Brassica juncea: mostaza india (indian mustard), mostaza marrón y de hoja (brown and leaf mustards), mostaza Sarepta. |
I need a little help
On Aug 20, 4:40*am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> You know, my landlady used baby talk a lot, called enchiladas > 'enchiladees'...maybe that's a clue. Well, here's a major clue: The names of Mexican dishes often refer to the cooking process, and other dishes that use the same cooking processes are based upon other ingredients. For instance, "cocido" just means "cooked", but if you went into a taqueria and saw "cocido" listed on the wall menu, it would probably be Mexican- style beef stew, which is made without any gravy at all. "Fritada" simply means "fried". Everybody knows that you can fry anything you throw into a skillet, but "fritada" probably means "fried fish" to a Mexican. Finally, back to "enchilada". To an American, an "enchilada" is rolled-up tortillas in red chile sauce with beef or cheese inside and melted cheese on top. But in Mexico, an "enchilada" is *anything* in a chile sauce or with chile sauce in it. For instance, "queso enchilado" is a spicy Mexican cheese. |
I need a little help
On Aug 20, 4:35*am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> "Jack" > wrote in message > Sounds like "Quelite". Wikipedia states: Quelite can mean any of a > number of different plants eaten in Mexico for their leaves, as leaf > vegetables or herbs, including but not limited to: Amaranthus, > Chenopodium or Coriandrum species. Maybe it was just Coriander > (Cilantro)? http://groups.google.com/group/alt.f...n&q=huazontles Read Rolly Brook's website, especially his glossary of Mexican food terms. And, if you decide you want to cook up a dish containing Mexican "greens", be sure to buy them from a grocery store that sells traditional Mexican produce, since some similar-looking plants that grow wild in the USA may be poisonous... |
I need a little help
"little man upon the stair" > wrote in message ... On Aug 20, 4:40 am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote: > You know, my landlady used baby talk a lot, called enchiladas > 'enchiladees'...maybe that's a clue. Well, here's a major clue: The names of Mexican dishes often refer to the cooking process, and other dishes that use the same cooking processes are based upon other ingredients. For instance, "cocido" just means "cooked", but if you went into a taqueria and saw "cocido" listed on the wall menu, it would probably be Mexican- style beef stew, which is made without any gravy at all. "Fritada" simply means "fried". Everybody knows that you can fry anything you throw into a skillet, but "fritada" probably means "fried fish" to a Mexican. Finally, back to "enchilada". To an American, an "enchilada" is rolled-up tortillas in red chile sauce with beef or cheese inside and melted cheese on top. But in Mexico, an "enchilada" is *anything* in a chile sauce or with chile sauce in it. For instance, "queso enchilado" is a spicy Mexican cheese. ~~~~~~~~~ Thanks for the enlightenment. evb -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
"EmmyBlue" > wrote in message ... > Decades ago in Long Beach, CA, a Mex./Amer. landlady used to invite me to > her family dinners. The food, my god, the food was to die for. Her chile > rellenos were so good that I begged her to teach me how to make them, and > she did. > > She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also > a particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What > she called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet > just using the ingredients, but to no avail. > > Does anyone here know what I'm looking for? If not, is there another food > newsgroup that would know? > > I thank you for any help. > ev > > -- > http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ Try this: Dimitri For breakfast I wanted Chilaquiles. I still haven't made enchilada sauce so I used my good ol' standby. I was too lazy to fry up some old tortillas so I used pre-made tostada shells. These I usually have on hand also. They are great for ceviche tostadas. I got together the enchilada sauce, tortillas, onion and cheese. http://i31.tinypic.com/2hi002t.jpg Poured a little of the sauce into the baking pan. Just enough to coat the bottom of the pan. http://i30.tinypic.com/f051qb.jpg Add broken up tortillas, http://i32.tinypic.com/fu0qqb.jpg and layer in some cheese and onion. http://i26.tinypic.com/2s1n11f.jpg Repeat. Top layer should be sauce and cheese and onion. http://i29.tinypic.com/29vcl54.jpg Place in a 350* oven until hot and bubbly. While the chilaquiles were baking I fried some bacon and scrambled up some eggs. http://i28.tinypic.com/6gk65t.jpg This made a great breakfast with some sliced heirloom tomatoes. http://i26.tinypic.com/fxe9uh.jpg koko -- There is no love more sincere than the love of food George Bernard Shaw www.kokoscorner.typepad.com updated 08/09 |
I need a little help
"Dimitri" > wrote in message
... > > "EmmyBlue" > wrote in message > ... >> Decades ago in Long Beach, CA, a Mex./Amer. landlady used to invite me to >> her family dinners. The food, my god, the food was to die for. Her chile >> rellenos were so good that I begged her to teach me how to make them, and >> she did. >> >> She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also >> a particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What >> she called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet >> just using the ingredients, but to no avail. >> >> Does anyone here know what I'm looking for? If not, is there another food >> newsgroup that would know? >> >> I thank you for any help. >> ev >> >> -- >> http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ > > > Try this: > > Dimitri > > For breakfast I wanted Chilaquiles. I still haven't made enchilada > sauce so I used my good ol' standby. I was too lazy to fry up some old > tortillas so I used pre-made tostada shells. These I usually have on > hand also. They are great for ceviche tostadas. > I got together the enchilada sauce, tortillas, onion and cheese. > http://i31.tinypic.com/2hi002t.jpg > > Poured a little of the sauce into the baking pan. Just enough to coat > the bottom of the pan. > http://i30.tinypic.com/f051qb.jpg > > Add broken up tortillas, > http://i32.tinypic.com/fu0qqb.jpg > > and layer in some cheese and onion. > http://i26.tinypic.com/2s1n11f.jpg > > Repeat. Top layer should be sauce and cheese and onion. > http://i29.tinypic.com/29vcl54.jpg > > Place in a 350* oven until hot and bubbly. > > While the chilaquiles were baking I fried some bacon and scrambled up > some eggs. > http://i28.tinypic.com/6gk65t.jpg > > This made a great breakfast with some sliced heirloom tomatoes. > http://i26.tinypic.com/fxe9uh.jpg > > koko ~~~~~~~~~ How scrumptious! I'd kill for those heirloom tomatoes. I just scrambled some eggs with leftover fried rice, sprinkled it w grated cheese and rolled it all up in a flour tortilla and dipped it in tomato salsa. I like to scramble eggs with onions, peppers and broken bits of tortilla chips...sprinkled with grated Pepper jack while still warm. ev -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
On Aug 23, 9:43*am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> I like to scramble eggs with onions, peppers and broken bits of tortilla > chips...sprinkled with grated Pepper jack while still warm. Most mornings I microwave about 2 tablespoons of El Mexicano chorizo for 1 or 2 minutes so most of the grease and chile sauce separates from the meat. Then I break two eggs into a small styrofoam bowl and stir the eggs up with some grated cheese and the chorizo and nuke that mixture on medium for three minutes. That makes a nice Mexican-style omelette I wish I could figure out how to make loose scrambled eggs in the microwave... |
I need a little help
"little man upon the stair" > wrote in message
... On Aug 23, 9:43 am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote: > I like to scramble eggs with onions, peppers and broken bits of tortilla > chips...sprinkled with grated Pepper jack while still warm. Most mornings I microwave about 2 tablespoons of El Mexicano chorizo for 1 or 2 minutes so most of the grease and chile sauce separates from the meat. Then I break two eggs into a small styrofoam bowl and stir the eggs up with some grated cheese and the chorizo and nuke that mixture on medium for three minutes. That makes a nice Mexican-style omelette I wish I could figure out how to make loose scrambled eggs in the microwave... ~~~~~ I'm old school, I like my eggs cooked a skillet over a low flame...low and slow in butter is the key to perfect scrambled eggs. I use my microwave mostly to melt things, or reheat. I love old fashioned cooking, love the dance of fire and knives. ev -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
On Aug 23, 6:34�pm, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> I'm old school, I like my eggs cooked a skillet over a low flame...low and > slow in butter is the key to perfect scrambled eggs. I always thought that I liked the taste of eggs, but it turned out I actually liked the taste of the butter on my toast. > > I use my microwave mostly to melt things, or reheat. I love old fashioned > cooking, love the dance of fire and knives. I like the convenience and speed and the automatic operation of a microwave. For instance, I can assemble a tamale pie in about 15 minutes and nuke it for 20 minutes and I can walk away and do something else while it steams itself inside the covered Pyrex bowl for another half hour or 45 minutes. I make a hearty pozole (Mexican white hominy stew) in the microwave in the same way. I could spend hours doing those things "authentically" in an outdoor horno, or a pib, but microwaving on my kitchen countertop is so much easier... |
I need a little help
"little man upon the stair" > wrote in message ... On Aug 23, 6:34?pm, "EmmyBlue" > wrote: > I'm old school, I like my eggs cooked a skillet over a low flame...low and > slow in butter is the key to perfect scrambled eggs. I always thought that I liked the taste of eggs, but it turned out I actually liked the taste of the butter on my toast. > > I use my microwave mostly to melt things, or reheat. I love old fashioned > cooking, love the dance of fire and knives. I like the convenience and speed and the automatic operation of a microwave. For instance, I can assemble a tamale pie in about 15 minutes and nuke it for 20 minutes and I can walk away and do something else while it steams itself inside the covered Pyrex bowl for another half hour or 45 minutes. I make a hearty pozole (Mexican white hominy stew) in the microwave in the same way. I could spend hours doing those things "authentically" in an outdoor horno, or a pib, but microwaving on my kitchen countertop is so much easier... ~~~~~~~~ Like I said, I LOVE to cook...for just me or a group of friends. It relaxes me, it's fun, not a chore that takes me away from other things. I have a glass of wine, play music...shut out the problems of the world and get into the zen of cooking. Besides, I have invested so much money in my lovely pans.... ;) -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
On Aug 24, 2:01*am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote:
> Like I said, I LOVE to cook...for just me or a group of friends. It relaxes > me, it's fun, not a chore that takes me away from other things. I have a > glass of wine, play music...shut out the problems of the world and get into > the zen of cooking. > Besides, I have invested so much money in my lovely pans.... I can certainly understand the female vs. male viewpoint as regards cooking and how much TLC you ladies add to everything you prepare. Most of what we Americans think of as Mexican "cuisine" is rather casually prepared, in a short time from limited fresh ingredients and is often eaten just as casually, out-of-hand, like a taco or a burrito, or maybe it's a Mexican salad dish that takes minutes to prepare. All those things can be found at the casual Mexican grills called "taquerias". Such items are called "antojitos" which means "little trifle" in Spanish. I once had a list of about 50 similar antojitos that were basically made from ground white corn masa, some sort of meat or poultry and a chile sauce. There are also "platas fuertes", main course dishes which take hours to prepare. Since Mexican peasants living in isolated villages in the central highland usually didn't have electricity or refrigeration, whatever meat they included in their platas fuertes was usually freshly butchered and unaged, so it required more cooking to make it tender. So it was skillet browned and then boiled until it was falling apart like the pork in a pit barbecue. When you can shred the pork with two forks, it's called a "tinga" or "hash". But I don't want to hang around watching a pot boil... I prepare platas fuertes like frijoles con puerco (beans with pork) or birria de chivo (a lamb or goat stew) in a slow cooker so I can go off and do something else as the low heat slowly tenderizes the meat. |
I need a little help
"Nunya Bidnits" > wrote in
: > EmmyBlue said: >> Ah, I love the Eagles...always thought colitas is a flower. > > It's pot, but otherwise that is correct, referring to unpollenated > flower bud, but a rather arcane term probably known only to children > of the sixties and anyone who has analyzed those lyrics in detail. > > MBKC > > > > reading on colitas- http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1053/in-the- song-hotel-california-what-does-colitas-mean |
I need a little help
On Aug 24, 9:01�am, "Nunya Bidnits" <NunyaBidn...@eternal-
september.invalid> wrote: > Care to share that quick tamale pie recipe? Mix your instant masa a little thicker and stickier than you would if you were making tamales in corn husks so it will stick to the sides of your Pyrex bowl. Grease or apply vegetable oil to the sides and bottom of the bowl so the masa won't stick. Pour whatever meat and chile sauce filling you've previously prepared into the masa-lined bowl and cover it with a layer of masa. Microwave on high for 15~20 minutes, then let it sit and steam itself for 45 minutes before taking the lid off. A lot of people get hung up over the way they think some particular Mexican dish should *look*, instead of how it should taste. But I'm after the flavors first, and I want to enjoy flavors instead of admiring appearances. After all, I am going to tear everything apart with knife and fork and chew it up within a matter of minutes... You can even make an "inside out tamale" if you want. Just make some little 1/2 inch diameter balls with instant masa and drop them into your chile sauce as it simmers on the stove top. That makes a sort of corn meal dumpling which is called a "bollito" or something like that. |
I need a little help
On Aug 25, 7:23*am, "Nunya Bidnits" <NunyaBidn...@eternal-
september.invalid> wrote: > By instant masa, are you referring to masa harina? Yes. "Masa" is dough, but most people simply call maseca or masa harina "masa", assuming that the reader *knows* what they're talking about. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masa There are recipes like pambazo where the "masa" referred to is made with ordinary wheat flour and holdajres (sp?) where the masa uses a pastry flour mix. |
I need a little help
"mack the knife" > wrote in message ... > "Nunya Bidnits" > wrote in > : > >> EmmyBlue said: >>> Ah, I love the Eagles...always thought colitas is a flower. >> >> It's pot, but otherwise that is correct, referring to unpollenated >> flower bud, but a rather arcane term probably known only to children >> of the sixties and anyone who has analyzed those lyrics in detail. >> >> MBKC >> > reading on colitas- http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1053/in-the- > song-hotel-california-what-does-colitas-mean ~~~ Aha - 'little buds' makes perfect sense. evb...child of the early 70's when a 3-finger lid was $10 -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
"Nunya Bidnits" > wrote in message
... >[..] > > Thanks! Do you ever use poblanos instead of rellenos? I make a baked > stuffed > poblano, I guess technically that makes it a relleno. I fill the roasted > and > peeled peppers with a mixture of grilled or smoked chicken, cream cheese, > chihuahua cheese, chiliancho paste, and a little chipotle, then top with > cheese and bake till heated through and melted. > > It's the batter which always worried me, and managing to keep the filling > inside when frying. Have you deep fried these? > > MartyB in KC ~~~~~~~~~ No, never used any peppers but Anaheims, which is what my landlady used. They are plenty hot too, if you leave too many seeds and veins in. Yes, I have deep-fried them, the batter isn't as scary as you think...it puffs up immediately and holds the filling in. Your chicken mixture sounds good...sort of like something I saw that PBS chef wot travels Mexico and cooks rustic authentic dishes...can't think of his name. Last saw him on Food Network in a chef throw-down. evb -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
"little man upon the stair" > wrote in message ... On Aug 24, 2:01 am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote: > Like I said, I LOVE to cook...for just me or a group of friends. It > relaxes > me, it's fun, not a chore that takes me away from other things. I have a > glass of wine, play music...shut out the problems of the world and get > into > the zen of cooking. > Besides, I have invested so much money in my lovely pans.... I can certainly understand the female vs. male viewpoint as regards cooking and how much TLC you ladies add to everything you prepare. [..] ~~~~~~~~~ Now, now...there are more famous male chefs than female...and I have many male friends who love to cook the old-fashioned way...straight too. ;D evb -- http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ |
I need a little help
On Aug 26, 9:37*am, "Nunya Bidnits" <NunyaBidn...@eternal-
september.invalid> wrote: > Since you brought up chorizo, I've got a question. The chorizo in stores > around here comes in a chub, Supremo and Cacique are two common brands. They > are very difficult to work with, rendering a large percentage of it's weight > in grease and the meat is tough and fibrous. I can get fresh chorizo at a > couple local markets but it doesn't have as much flavor. How do you work > with this stuff in the chub to make it more palatable? I don't buy the fresh stuff. I can buy the El Mexicano chorizo in a 16-oz tube at the 99 Cents Only store and just squeeze a few ounces onto a paper plate and microwave it for two minutes and the excess grease runs out and I throw the paper plate away. I could buy fresh chorizo on a styrofoam tray and spend several minutes frying it and draining off half the weight in grease and then I have a greasy skillet to wash, and that takes another five minutes to wash and dry. So, like the guy in the Beatles song, "Day Tripper", I've got a good reason for takin' the easy way out... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chorizo#North_America "Mexican chorizo comes in two varieties, fresh and dried, the fresh being much more common. Chorizo can be made from a variety of meat cuts, including lips, lymph nodes, and salivary glands. The meat is finely ground and stuffed in plastic tubes to resemble sausage links, though traditionally natural casings were used. Before consumption, the tubes are usually cut open and the nearly paste-like mixture is fried in a pan and mashed with a fork until it resembles finely minced ground beef." |
I need a little help
Thanks for shareing-you made it sound simple enought to try-i wouldlove
to try more mexican dishes but have been afraid as some sound so complicated-thanks again will try this,Mary |
I need a little help
"Jack" > wrote in message ... On Aug 16, 4:35 am, "EmmyBlue" > wrote: > Decades ago in Long Beach, CA, a Mex./Amer. landlady used to invite me to > her family dinners. The food, my god, the food was to die for. Her chile > rellenos were so good that I begged her to teach me how to make them, and > she did. > > She made a pinto beans and greens dish with bacon and onion that was also > a > particular favorite of mine...cooked in a big cast iron skillet. What she > called it sounded like "ka-lee-tees." I have searched the Internet just > using the ingredients, but to no avail. > > Does anyone here know what I'm looking for? If not, is there another food > newsgroup that would know? > > I thank you for any help. > ev > > --http://soonerblue.bloghi.com/ Sounds like "Quelite". Wikipedia states: Quelite can mean any of a number of different plants eaten in Mexico for their leaves, as leaf vegetables or herbs, including but not limited to: Amaranthus, Chenopodium or Coriandrum species. Maybe it was just Coriander (Cilantro)? Good luck............ jack Just ran across this bit on greens that may help: http://mexicocooks.typepad.com/mexic...-the-unam.html or http://tinyurl.com/yk6lbfu |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:38 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter