Feed Me That logoWhere dinner gets done
previousnext


Title: Cheese Grits With Green Chiles (Ala Ashley)
Categories: Cheese Corn Side Spice
Yield: 1 Servings

6cWater
2cQuick-cooking grits,
  Uncooked
2tsSalt
1tsPaprika
1tsGround red cayenne pepper
3lgEggs
4cShredded Munster cheese
1cMuMex green chiles, roasted,
  Peeled and seeded, chopped

Prepare as in the first recipe, except place the grit mixture directly into greased custard cups instead of a baking dish. Bake the grits as above and let to cool. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

When ready to serve, reheat the cups of grits in a mircowave and inverted onto dinner plates. Serve as the starch accompaniment to a meal. Garnish with slivers of roasted red bell pepper or a good salsa.

Probably best with grilled meats.

I served the grits with another recipe in the article: Roasted Serrano Salsa. I'm very partial to roasted (grilled) vegetables, especially, root vegetables and thought this salsa was an excellent accompaniment.

Made with either set of ingredients, the dish is rather tame, although tasty. But then, we all know how to improve on the tame part.

My SO proclaimed, that "This is company food". An ultimate complement for grits from a Vermonter. I thought it was very good and would serve it as an entree accompaniment in a meal served to southern guests (UK and AU subscribers read: "guest from the southern USA". Grits are a southern cultural thing, unique to the south.). However, I feel that grits' course texture keeps it from being an extraordinary dish (Please! ... don't shoot). I'd also increase the amount of green chiles.

Notes: A friend recently gave me a copy of an article from Southern Living, August 1995, page 73-75 entitled "A Taste of Red Hot Success". It was a brief article on Jean Andrews' new book _Red Hot Peppers_ (no bibliography or even ISBN was listed). Three recipes were included. The one which caught my southern friend's eye was "Cheese Grits with Green Chiles".

For UK, AU and some northern North American List subscribers: grits, plural noun (used with a sing. or pl. verb) (1) A ground, usually white meal of dried and hulled corn kernels that is boiled and served as a breakfast food or side dish. (2) Coarsely ground grain, especially corn.

May your food be wonderfully pungent, Lynn. Lynn Ashley <73744.3234@compuserve.com>

|-------------------------------------------------------------| | Lynn Ashley (lajiao ren) Arlington, Virginia, USA | | 73744.3234@compuserve.com 38.904N 77.120W 105mAMSL | |-------------------------------------------------------------| From the Chile-Heads Recipe Collection URL: http://chile.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu:8000/www/recipe.html

previousnext