San Marcos brand chiles are ready to go. |
Do you have a cherished family holiday recipe? Remembering my grandmother’s pound cake, my aunt’s thumbprint cookies, and my mother’s pumpkin chiffon pie gives me warm feelings.
I decided
to start my legacy early by recording favorite holiday dishes. I’m only going to include dishes with a Southwestern
flair, which of course means chiles must be featured. This is a modified version of a recipe I
found on bonappetit.com several years ago.
It’s really easy! Here’s what you
do.
Chipotle
Cranberry Sauce (makes about two cups)
Buy a
12-ounce package of fresh cranberries. They can be purchased early and frozen
in the bag.
Combine cranberries,
three-fourths cup Splenda sugar blend (or one and a third cups sugar), two
chipotle chiles in adobo finely chopped, and three tablespoons lime juice in a
medium saucepan and stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves. Continue cooking about five minutes, stirring
occasionally. Cranberries will begin to
pop.
Add one
small chopped garlic clove, one-fourth heaping teaspoon of ground cinnamon,
one-fourth heaping teaspoon ground comino
(cumin) and cook about five minutes longer on simmer. Sauce will begin to thicken. Keep chilled.
And a great feature is that the sauce can be made up to one week ahead
of time.
This recipe
has helped me wean my traditionalist husband off of canned jellied cranberry
sauce. Not an easy task!
Stuffed Jalapeños
Buy an eight
ounce can of jalapeños, wash and cut in half lengthwise, and place in ice
water. (Did you know that washing and
soaking jalapeños reduces their ability to set your mouth on fire?)
Cream an
eight-ounce package cream cheese, a small jar of processed cheese spread, one
tablespoon grated onion, and one tablespoon half and half. Add a dash each of Tabasco sauce and Worcestershire
sauce.
Drain
jalapeños and fill cavities with cheese mixture. Can top with pimentos for holiday
garnish. Refrigerate.
My recipe
for this dish is so ancient that it is written on a half sheet of a Big Chief
writing table in my large handwriting from schoolgirl days and is dotted with
brown splashes. Stuffed jalapeños will liven up a traditional holiday meal for
sure!
If you try these recipes, let me know how they work for you. And send me recipes for your favorite Southwestern holiday dishes. I"ll be sure to include them on the next post. Happy cooking!
They sound delicious, my friend. Yum Yummy. Wish I could say I had some holiday dishes but I do not. I am happy to know others who do, though. You have always been a great cook! Love ya, pc.
ReplyDeleteThanks for comment. What is a favorite dish that you have eaten at one of your Thanksgiving dinners ?
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