Chicken Flautas Ahogadas

- Total Time
- 45 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1small white onion, peeled
- 1pound tomatillos, husked and rinsed
- 2serrano chiles
- 1large garlic clove, peeled
- 2cups shredded white and dark meat (about 10 ounces) from half a rotisserie chicken
- ¾teaspoon ground cumin
- ½teaspoon Mexican oregano
- Kosher salt and ground pepper
- 1tablespoon canola oil, plus about 2 cups for frying
- 12corn tortillas
- ½cup Mexican crema
- ¾cup crumbled cotija cheese (about 4 ounces)
- ½cup cilantro leaves and stems
Preparation
- Step 1
Fill a large saucepan halfway with water and bring to a boil over high. Thinly slice half the onion crosswise into thin rounds, leaving the remaining onion half in one large piece. Add the onion wedge, tomatillos, chiles and garlic to the boiling water, reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer, stirring occasionally, until softened and tomatillos take on a yellow-green hue, about 10 minutes. Reserve 1 cup cooking water and pour the remaining contents of the saucepan into a colander to drain.
- Step 2
While tomatillos cool, toss the chicken with the cumin, oregano, ½ teaspoon salt and ¼ teaspoon black pepper.
- Step 3
Coarsely chop the cooked onion, garlic and chiles, discarding chile stems. Transfer to a blender with ¼ cup reserved cooking water and blend until chunky. Add the tomatillos and another ½ cup reserved cooking water and blend until smooth.
- Step 4
Heat 1 tablespoon oil in the saucepan over medium. Add the sauce and 1 teaspoon salt. Pour the remaining ¼ cup reserved cooking water into the blender jar, swirl around to catch any remnants in blender, then pour the mixture into the saucepan. Simmer over low, stirring often, until flavors meld, about 10 minutes. Cover and keep warm.
- Step 5
While the sauce cooks, wrap the tortillas in a damp dish towel and microwave, 1 minute. Shuffle the tortillas to redistribute the heat, then microwave, 1 minute more. Transfer to a dry dish towel and wrap tightly to keep warm.
- Step 6
Heat about ½-inch oil in a large, heavy skillet over medium-high. To test if it’s hot enough, tear off a small piece of tortilla, add to oil and flip after 30 seconds; the tortilla should turn light golden-brown. (You’ll need to make sure the oil is properly heated so the flautas become crisp.) Working with one at a time, pull out a warm tortilla and add about 2 tablespoons chicken in a line down the center of the tortilla. Roll tightly and secure crosswise using two toothpicks.
- Step 7
Once you’ve rolled all 12 tortillas, gently transfer them to the hot oil using tongs and cook, seam side down, until golden brown on all sides, turning occasionally, about 4 to 5 minutes. (Work in batches to avoid crowding.) Using tongs, tilt flautas over skillet to allow excess oil to drain, then transfer flautas to a paper towel-lined platter and carefully remove and discard toothpicks.
- Step 8
To serve, divide the sauce among 4 shallow bowls (about ½ cup per serving). Divide the flautas among bowls and slather flautas with crema. Top with cheese, sliced onion and cilantro and serve immediately.
- You can also bake these at 400 degrees for about 30 minutes, turning halfway, until dark-golden brown.
Private Notes
Comments
I make this sauce regularly but I roast the vegetables instead of boiling them. I also change up the chiles, using whatever's available at the market... jalapeno, hungarian, etc. Roasting gives the sauce so much flavor!
Having grown up in El Paso where Chico's Tacos reigns, I decided to add two ripe tomatoes to the boiling water & added them in my blender. When cleaning my blender, I added 1/2 Tbsp tomato paste. The sauce was reminiscent of the combination of Chico's tomato sauce topped with tomatillo salsa. A recommendation for the sliced onions (from a Rick Bayless tip): Put the sliced onion in a bowl & top with boiling water for 30 secs. Then transfer to a bowl of iced water to take away the bitterness.
Amazing flavor, easy recipe. The only thing I changed was to lay out all the tortillas at once to even out the amount of filling. It did take a bit longer than the 45 minutes, I guess chopping time is extra.
Delicious! Loved these so much!
Made this with my boyfriend, ended up being delicious and very fun to make. These would be very kid friendly, but if I was making it for children I might only add one serrano. We didn’t have toothpicks so we put four of them on a skewer at a time and just lowered them into the frying pan. Worked great. The recipe makes way more sauce than flautas, so plan on making something else with salsa verde soon.
I absolutely love this and make it all the time! The sauce is amazing. The toothpicks placement was a little tricky the first time around, but trying it again made it easier. The warming up the tortillas in the microwave part is ESSENTIAL to getting a good wrap - don't skip that part!
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