Chilaquiles a la Lydia Child

- Total Time
- 50 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- 2tablespoons bacon fat
- 1tablespoon vegetable oil (or you can use all bacon fat)
- 4 to 6dry tortillas, of the kind described as having ‘‘seen better days,’’ quartered
- 3cloves garlic, smashed and chopped
- ½medium red onion, chopped small
- ½red or yellow pepper, chopped small
- 1 to 2teaspoons coarse salt, to taste
- 4 to 4½cups large chopped fresh or canned tomatoes (no juice if from can)
- ½tablespoon pickled spicy chiles, or a few dashes Tabasco or other hot sauce
- 4eggs
- 1full cup cilantro or mint, stems removed, left as leaves
- 2limes
- Grated or crumbled Cheddar or queso blanco (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Preheat oven to 400. In a heavy low-sided casserole, heat the bacon fat and vegetable oil (or just bacon fat) over medium-high heat, until a speck of salt just sizzles if dropped in.
- Step 2
Fry tortilla pieces in 2 batches until just lightly browned, removing to a plate.
- Step 3
Lower heat to low, and add the garlic, onion, chopped pepper and salt. Cook about 3 minutes, until onion has started to become translucent.
- Step 4
Add tomatoes. Cook 5 minutes, stirring often, for fresh tomatoes. If you’re using canned, add a drizzle of water, and cook 8 minutes, until they have become lightly stewy. Add pickled chiles. Add fried tortillas, and stir. Add a drizzle of water now, to keep them from sticking. Lower heat, and partly cover the pot for about 20 minutes, opening to stir every few minutes.
- Step 5
When the stew has been cooking about 15 minutes, remove a tortilla, and taste a sliver. Cook until the tortillas are completely tender. Make 4 little wells in the stew.
- Step 6
Crack eggs, one by one, into a teacup or ramekin, then tip each into a well. Salt yolks and white lightly.
- Step 7
Put egg-topped stew into oven for 5 to 8 minutes, until whites are set and yolks still very slightly runny.
- Step 8
Remove, top with fresh herbs and serve in a casserole or pot, with wedges of lime for each person to squeeze. Serve cheese alongside, if you want.
Private Notes
Comments
Take your tortillas and put them directly on your hot stove burner.let them smoke a little, then use them in the recipe.The flavor is doubled and no frying.
definitely corn tortillas
I think it should be corn tortillas, but it would be nice if they would specify.
I didn’t have any peppers so I substituted a quarter can refried beans and it was so good.
Easy to make in my Dutch oven, and definitely a hit!
Here in Mexico City, they usually pour/layer the sauce over the chips at the end to retain the crunch rather than baking them in. Sure, the entire impetus of chilaquiles was using old tortillas (as this recipe calls for), but I'm sure many people making it simply use (old?) chips (here you can find thicker chips specifically for chilaquiles, too) -- and baking them in makes it kinda soggy.
Advertisement