I
had been wanting to cook something southwestern that was not overly fattening
so when Debbie published the recipe for Stuffed Poblanos with Cheddar &Chicken on her A Feast For The Eyes blog, it quickly got my attention as we had some
poblanos ready to pick. I saved the link
but when I returned to her post, it wouldn’t bring up the recipe card so I went
to the Fine Cooking recipe as it was Debbie’s starting point. Check out Debbie's blog for some great how to shots.
I only had two large and one smaller poblano so I also picked a sweet
pepper.
Poblanos
Stuffed With Cheddar Cheese And Chicken – slightly adapted from Fine Cooking
Ingredients:
4
large poblano chiles
2
medium tomatoes, chopped
1/2
medium white onion, chopped
1
large clove garlic, chopped
1
tsp. dried oregano, crumbled
1
tsp. ground cumin
Generous
pinch ground cinnamon
Kosher
salt
1
Tbs. olive oil
2
cups shredded cooked chicken (Larry used boneless thighs)
1-1/2
cups cooked white rice
2
cups grated extra-sharp white Cheddar
1/4
cup chopped fresh cilantro
1
Tbs. lime juice
Preparation:
1. Sprinkle
the chicken with Adobo Seasoning and grill to an internal temp of 165F and shred
when cool enough to handle (I did this the previous day)
2. Put
a small slit in the chiles to allow steam to escape and grill on high until
skin is blackened on all sides or do it under a broiler. Add to a plastic bag for 10 minutes then cool, peel off the skin, slit the pepper, and remove the seed pod, membranes and loose seeds. 3. Larry nuked the
sweet pepper for a few minutes to get is as soft as the poblanos then halved, and removed the seeds for stuffing.
4. Purée
the tomatoes, onion, garlic, oregano, cumin, cinnamon, and 1/2 tsp. salt in a
food processor.
5. Heat
the oil in a 12-inch skillet over medium heat. Add the purée and cook, stirring
frequently, until the liquid has evaporated and the mixture looks thick and
pulpy, 8 to 11 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat. Stir in the chicken and
rice, and then 1 cup of the cheese, the cilantro, and the lime juice. (leave the heat on if the rice and chicken are cold). Season to
taste with salt.
6. Divide
the filling among the peppers, wrapping the sides of the peppers up and around
the filling, some of which will still be exposed.
7. Broil
the peppers until the cheese is melting and the top is beginning to brown,
about 4 minutes. Top with the remaining 1 cup cheese and broil until the cheese
is completely melted, about 2 minutes.
Since my filling was only warm after stuffing the peppers, Larry completely
assembled and baked them at 300F for about 15 minutes.
For eating, I
started with the smaller poblano and a sweet pepper half and Bev stated with a
larger poblano but after one bite she wanted my sweet one so we traded. As it turned out, the stuffing was very good and
will be used again, but our poblanos were much hotter than the usual ones.
Photos
can be enlarged by clicking on them and the blue words are links.
Have
a great day and thanks for stopping by Almost Heaven South.
Larry
7/18/19
event date
That looks pretty tasty, the hot peppers I would love but never for Suzie. Not even sweet peppers either.
ReplyDeleteLarry, A bit too much heat for Bev! Still, all in all, it sounds like your foray into Southwestern cuisine worked out OK. Take Care, Big Daddy Dave
ReplyDeleteI think this would be great even without the peppers. Even baked in a tomato!
ReplyDeletePoblanos can be a bit unpredictable in their heat index. But with that said, they've got such great flavor. I'm glad you used Chicken thighs - I would have done the same. Much more flavor. Looks delish Larry.
ReplyDeleteMy mother loved stuffed peppers. I'm allergic to peppers, so I skip them. Yours look really pretty.
ReplyDelete