Posts tagged ‘mozarella cheese’

May 6, 2010

Steak Burrito

I’d bought some tortilla wraps weeks ago, and I hadn’t used them so I decided to try and make some burritos.

I bought:

  • Steak tips ($3.14 made 8 burritos)
  • pack of sliced mushrooms
  • 1 hot red pepper
  • shredded mozarella cheese
  • spinach (bag)

I chopped up the mushrooms, chopped the steak tips into smaller pieces and sliced the hot pepper into tiny pieces.  I pan fried all of this at once.

Then I put some of the mozarella in the center of the tortillas and put a decent portion of the stir fry mix on top of the mozarella.  I took the tortilla with all of this on it in the pan, then allowed it to heat until the cheese melted.

I took some of the spinach and put it on top of the cheese, peppers, mushrooms and steak then rolled it up into a burrito.  I ate it with some guacamole and corn chips.  Freakin delicious.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get a picture.

November 16, 2009

Chiles Rellenos

I’ve been wanting to try to make chiles rellenos for a while.  Some of my methods were stolen from an episode of “throwdown with bobby flay” that I saw a few weeks back,  and some of this was just me trying to make it my own.

I bought 2 large green poblano chiles.  Poblanos have a distinctive shape and are hard to mistake

I selected two large ones, as well as a pound of ground beef, a bag of sliced mozarella cheese, some black beans and corn meal mix (self-rising).

When you cook with chiles, one of the first things you want to do is to to peel the chiles.  There are plenty of ways to do this, but I decided to roast the chiles on my gas stove (that filth predates my arrival)

I placed the chiles directly on the rack above the stove.  You’ll notice a popping noise similar to if you threw a green leaf into a fire.  You want to roast the entire chile, from end to end, until the whole thing is slightly charred.

When this is done, you need to place the chiles in a plastic bag to let them “sweat” for a little bit (a few minutes is enough).  Letting them sweat makes it easier to get rid of the skin during peeling.

There are plenty of ways to get the skin off, but when it’s done, you want it to look a little something like this: (this was my first time peeling chiles and I didn’t do a great job)

I put the beef in a pan and browned it, then I cut a slice out of the top of the peppers and filled the inside of the pepper with the cheese and ground beef.

I wanted to add some kind of crust to the chile, so I mixed up a bit of the corn meal mixture and rolled the pepper in it.

I then filled a pan with oil and heated the oil for a few minutes.  When I felt like it was warm, I put the peppers into the oil pan and then turned them around until all sides of the chile looked like the corn meal mixture was done.

I added some heated black beans to the side and then ate it!  I will toot my own horn – this is one of the best tasting meals I’ve ever made on my own.

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