How many recipes I actually made: 7. How many new recipes I made: 5. When we were planning to eat this meal: Friday night. What we ended up eating Friday night: leftover Mexican rice supper. What got added to the menu because of the delay: a reprise of Frontera’s Gold Margaritas. When we did get to eat the meal: last night. Verdict on whether it was worth the wait: definitely!
Ok, so seriously, here is what we made (I had a lot of help from John this time; especially on the mole and the margaritas): VBRED9 Classic Mexican “Pot” Beans, VBRED10 Classic Mexican Fried Beans with Onion and Garlic, TEOCE17 Poached Chicken (here’s repeat number 1), EF10 Essential Sweet-and-Spicy Ancho Seasoning Paste, TEOCE16 Simple Red Mole Enchiladas with Shredded Chicken, D10 Creamy Lime Pie, and WAM1 Frontera’s Gold Margaritas. I guess it was sort of silly to think that we could make the mole and eat it in one evening. Unlike Julie Powell, I’m not a big fan of dinner at 11pm.
The beans were both easier than they seem (VBRED9 was the base of VBRED10) and delicious. I used pintos, per Rick’s suggestion of what would go well with the mole. Most of the time is spent letting the beans simmer in water, onion, and here’s the key, bacon fat (which I had saved from making last weekend’s BLT sandwiches). Then you fry up more onion, garlic and then add and mash the beans to make the final product which as I said were wonderful. They were almost sweet and the perfect palate cleanser for the spice of the mole.
When Rick titles this mole Simple, it is perhaps a tad misleading. Ok, let’s not sugarcoat it. This recipe is not simple. There are 20 ingredients including two other recipes (EF10, which involves the usual toasting and rehydrating of dried chiles among other things, and poached chicken, which involves, well, poaching a chicken), as well as bread, raisins, Mexican chocolate, onion, tomato, etc. There is also a considerable amount of simmering, which was really the downfall of our Friday night meal. All that said, it really is not difficult to make, just a little time-consuming. If you’ve mastered reading and following instructions, I’m sure you can make it too, and you should, because it’s really good. And when I say good, I actually mean fantastic, and spicy, sweet, rich, and complex. The moles are really the best recipes and the primary reason I bought Mexican Kitchen in the first place.

The pie was also pretty easy to make although the crust was a bit of a challenge. Although, it’s possible that the problem lies elsewhere. Let’s just say that pie crust and I aren’t fast friends. Don’t get me wrong, I can make pie. In fact, I love baking in all its forms, I just can’t seem to make pretty pies. Rarely, do my crusts not crumble into pieces, having to be re-formed like a puzzle into the pan. When a recipe calls for a lattice-crust, I just mentally plan for a solid top crust. I’ve come to understand my limitations and accept them. I really should take a pie class some time. So when Rick describes transferring the rolled dough as follows: “I find it easiest to roll the dough onto the rolling pin, then unroll it onto the pie pan”, I was skeptical. As I should have been. No lightly floured surface was going to prevent this crust from sticking. Also, the amount of dough was not exactly generous. Certainly there was not enough for the purported 12-inch circle, which, according to the recipe, I should have been able to decoratively crimp. Oh well, in the end, it was fine. Actually, it was more than fine, the crust was delicious! And so I accept that it was not beautiful. As for the filling, living up to its name, it was creamy at first taste, and then tart. One more thing about the pie. I was supposed to dribble Crimson Prickly Pear Sauce (aka D11) around the slices of pie. However, the amount of prickly pears that I would have needed for the recipe would have been about $16 at Whole Foods, so I decided to save making the sauce until I return to La Casa del Pueblo.

One more note for this week’s houseguests, in case you’re reading, I’m planning Menu 21 (Rustic Jícama Appetizer with Red Chile and Lime and Achiote-Roasted Pork Tacos with Pickled Red Onions) for Thursday evening with the addition of D9 Crunchy Amaranth Tart, if my amaranth arrives in time. So for those of you following, that means that I have been unable to find puffed amaranth in the store and so had to pay a ridiculous $8.72 to have it shipped the less than 10 miles to my house.