When I saw Chef Lea Ann’s recipe for Pork Green Chile Stew on her "Cooking On The Ranch” blog, I thought it would work well for our Hispanic food loving Friday card group. So, when this chilly, drizzly Friday came along, it became the meal choice.
One her blog, Lea Ann described it as “A hearty stew
brimming with Chile Peppers, cubed pork loin roast, potatoes and hominy.
Slightly spicy, slightly tangy and mostly mouthwateringly delicious.” I made it
sorta by the recipe except I used canned chilies, but the original along with pics
can be found by clicking on the above link.
Pork Green Chile Stew – Adapted from Cooking On The Ranch
The Ingredients:
4 tablespoons olive oil divided
1 large sweet onion diced. About 1½ cups
3 pounds pork loin roast cut into bite sized pieces
1 tablespoon Kosher Salt divided
2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper divided
1 pint green chile peppers roasted, stem removed, skin
removed, seeds removed. (Larry used canned chopped chilies, undrained).
8 cups chicken broth or more, if more liquid needed.
Divided (see Verdict)
2 14½ ounce cans crushed tomatoes or canned chopped
tomatoes. Undrained (Larry used a quart of thick, homemade whole-tomato juice)
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1 tablespoon Mexican oregano
2 teaspoons New Mexico Red Chile Powder (Larry used 1 tsp.)
1½ pounds Yukon gold potatoes cut into bite sized pieces
10½ ounce can cream of chicken soup
24 ounce can hominy, drained (Larry used two 14½ oz cans)
½ cup homemade roasted tomatillo salsa or your favorite
jarred salsa verde
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar, optional
The Instructions:
Cut pork roast into bite-sized chunks.
In a large skillet, heat part of the oil. When oil is hot,
add pieces of pork. Do not crowd the meat. You will need to brown in 2 – 3
batches. Sear pork until browned, salt and peppering each batch as you sear and
adding more oil as needed. Remove seared pork to a plate.
Add diced onion to the skillet and cook until starting to
soften, about 2 minutes. Be sure to scrape up that pork flavor from the bottom
of the skillet.
Transfer onions and pork to a 7-quart Dutch Oven.
Pour in 3 cans (or about 6 cups) chicken broth, canned
tomatoes, chopped chile peppers, cumin, oregano, and chile powder.
Cover partially and let simmer on low for two hours.
Cut the potatoes into bite-sized pieces. If using Yukon Gold potatoes, you don't need to peel them. This skin is tender.
Add potatoes, hominy, cream of chicken soup, green chile
salsa to the pork mixture. Add the additional 2 cups of chicken broth.
Cook for 30 minutes to allow the potatoes to become tender and flavors to blend. Amend S&P as needed.
Stir in a tablespoon of apple cider vinegar (to brighten the flavors).
Serve with corn chips, or flour tortillas.
My bowl before the Fritos.
The Verdict:
We all thought it was delicious and a big hit with our Friday
group. I ended up only using five qts.
of chicken broth which was plenty for the way I like soup.
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
11/10/23 meal date
Yay, so glad you liked the recipe, and I'm honored that you'd chose it for your Friday Night Cards group. Which by the way, I ordered that game, it arrived yesterday. Sounds fun.
ReplyDeleteHearty, filling, and flavorful. It looks and sounds tasty!!!
ReplyDeleteLarry, Love green chilis and salsa verde so this would be right in my wheelhouse. Cold weather feast for sure! Hatch chilis are my go to...a little spicy for some folks...but I buy hatch chili flavored sausages for snack food. Take Care, Big Daddy Dave
ReplyDeletePerfect for a chilly drizzly day. I find these style of stews to be very comforting.
ReplyDelete