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Title: El Charro Salsa De Chile Colorado (Basic Red Chile Sauce)
Categories: Mexican Sauce Salsa Southwest
Yield: 1 Servings

12 Dried red chiles
2qtWater, boiling
3tbOil
1/4cGarlic puree, *
1/2tsSalt, or to taste
3tbFlour

* Garlic Puree - peel 8 whole heads of garlic by smashing the cloves with the side of a wide knife; the peel will slip off easily then. Put the peeled garlic in a blender with about 2 cups of water, and puree. Drain, if necessary, and store in a tightly closed glass jar in the refrigerator.

Salsa De Chile Colorado is used in countless Mexican dishes. It is available canned and is usually called enchilada sauce. But nothing commercial is as good as the sauce you make yourself from dried red chile peppers.

To prepare a sauce, the peppers are softened in boiling water, then ground into a rich red paste. The paste is thinned with the cooking liquid for use as a sauce for enchiladas, et cetera. Left unthinned and spiced with oregano and vinegar it becomes adobada and is used as a marinade for carne (beef) adobada or puerco (pork) adobada.

Wash chiles in cold water and remove stems. Cook in boiling water until tender. Remove chiles and reserve the cooking liquid.

Place a few of the chiles in a blender, along with 1/2 cup resreved liquid, and blend to a paste. Remove to bowl. Repeat with remaining chiles. (It is now unseasoned red chile paste).

Heat oil in a large skillet. Add garlic puree and flour, stirring until four browns. Add the chile paste, stirring constantly until it boils and thickens. Season with salt. Thin slightly with cooking liquid.

Yield: 2 quarts

From: El Charro Cafe Favorite Recipes By Carlotta Dunn Flores, El Charro Cafe, Tucson, Arizona

MasterCook formatted by Garry Howard, Cambridge, MA garhow@tiac.net Garry's Home Cookin' Website http://members.aol.com/garhow/cooking

Recipe by: El Charro Cafe Favorite Recipes By Rooby on Apr 15, 1997

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