Author name: admin

Cowboy-Style Ranchero Eggs with Beans

187 Reviews
4.5/5
Facebook
Pinterest
WhatsApp
Print

Directions

Step 1

Pour the red sauce and the chicken stock into a pot. Bring to a boil. Taste and season with salt and pepper.

Step 2

Gently brush the tortillas with cooking oil and cook them on a griddle for less than one minute per side.  

Step 3

Spread the refried beans on the tortillas. 

Step 4

Add La Costeña Diced Chipotle Peppers and cooked shrimp. 

Step 5

Add a teaspoon of cooking oil to a skillet and fry the eggs sunny-side-up.

Step 6

Place the tortillas on the serving plates, carefully top each with an egg and coat with red sauce

Step 7

Garnish the dish with La Costeña Nopalitos. 

Ingredients

Author

Mexico Rico recipe

La costeña 2022

Key Product: Homestyle Mexican Salsa & Chipotle salsa

Pizza Mexicana con Arrachera y Cebollitas

¡Share your recipe with us!

Salsa can be enjoyed as an appetizer with tortilla chips or on its own — making it great for snacking! For an extra kick of flavor, try adding salsa to your favorite recipes like soups, sauces and chili. There is no limit to how creative you can be when it comes to salsa — why not give it a go? With salsa, you can add a bit of spice to any dish.

Who knows — you might find your new favorite food! You can also use salsa as an ingredient in dishes like tacos, burritos and salads. It’s also a great topping for grilled meats, eggs and even seafood. The best part is that salsa comes in many different flavors, so you can find something to suit your tastes. Start experimenting today and discover all the salsa possibilities!

What is salsa?

Salsa is a popular and flavorful salsa that originated in Mexico. It has become essential to many Mexican dishes, including tacos, burritos, enchiladas, and more. Salsa is made from tomatoes, onions, jalapeños, chili peppers, garlic, and cilantro. Salsa is a great way to add flavor without adding too many calories.



The history of the salsa condiment

Salsa dates back to the early 1900s and has since become a popular accompaniment for dishes such as tacos, fajitas, and tamales. In the US, salsa is famously enjoyed with tortilla chips. Today, salsa can be found on tables worldwide, from Mexico to South America and Asia to Europe. 

Salsas have been a part of Latin American cuisine for centuries. Even before salsa was a condiment, it was used to add flavor and spice to dishes. Salsa is believed to have originated in the Aztecs, who would pound tomatoes, chiles, onions, and garlic together in a molcajete (a mortar and pestle made from volcanic rock). This salsa mixture was called “salsas,” which translates to “seasonings” or “sauces.” 

During the 16th century, salsa became widely adopted by Spanish settlers, who added ingredients, such as cilantro and lime juice, to the salsa mixture. This salsa was often served over grilled meats, fish, and vegetables.

Best way to enjoy salsa 

Salsa is most commonly consumed with tortilla chips as an appetizer or snack. Often a free treat at restaurants, chips and salsa is Tex-Mex and Cali-Mex must, aside from this typical enjoyment. Salsa is a common ingredient in many dishes. 

The best way to enjoy salsa is by discovering a salsa that you like and experimenting with different recipes. Salsa is used in various dishes — from tacos and burritos to hearty salads and salsa-topped sandwiches. Salsa can also be used as a marinade for grilled or roasted chicken, fish, beef, or vegetables. Mix up your favorite salsa ingredients, and let your protein marinate for at least an hour before cooking. The salsa will impart a delicious flavor and help keep the meat moist as it cooks.

Add salsas to dishes for an extra kick of flavor. Our favorite salsas are Ranchera Salsa, Taquera Salsa, and Homestyle Salsa. Our La Costeña family loves salsa atop cheesy enchiladas and Pizza Mexicana con Arrachera y Cebollitas. 

 

There’s no limit to what you can do with salsa. So get creative and enjoy the delicious flavor of salsa in all kinds of dishes.  

Need to grab your jar of salsa? Find your favorite salsa.

Directions

Pati Note's

Step 1

Plae the flank or skirt steak on a small to medium baking dish. Cover with the marinade or juices from one can of La Costeña chiles toreados, leaving the chiles and onions aside. Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour and up to overnight, turning the meat once.

Step 2

In another plate, palace the spring onions or scallions and cover with the marinade or juices from one can of La Costeña chiles toreados. You can also marinade the same amount of time as the meat.

Step 3

When ready to make the pizza, remove the steak from the marinade. Place in an oven-proof dish and broil for 4 to 5 minutes per side. Alternatively, you can grill it for the same amount of time over medium-high heat. You want to cook the meat no more than medium at this point, as it will still cook a bit more over the pizza. Set aside to rest for 5 to 10 minutes, covered, then slice and cut into 1 to 2-inch pieces, across the grain.

Step 4

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. Place pizza crust on a baking sheet. Spread on 1/2 cup of the Taquera Salsa or enough to leave a 1/2-inch border all the way around. Top with 3/4 cup mozzarella cheese, place the meat and onions (without their marinade) all over. Reserve the onion marinade for people to add as extra sauce once the pizza is done. Add the remaining mozzarella cheese. Place in the oven and bake until cheese is melted and crust is crisp, about 12 to 14 more minutes (we need to check instructions with pre-made pizza crust we get).

Step 5

Transfer to a cutting board and serve the pizza topped with sliced avocado and lime wedges. Have reserved onion marinade and more Taquera Salsa for people to add on as they like, too.

Pati Note's

Just as much as Americans love tacos, Mexicans love pizza. And you will find pizza restaurants in corners all over the country, but Mexican cooks have put their Mexican stamp on it! Whenever you eat pizza in Mexico you always get the toppings include one salsa or another or pickled jalapeños or toreados. You can think of this as another Mexamericana mish-mash of a carne asada taco, Mexico city style, and the cheesy pizza.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Key Product: Homestyle Mexican Salsa & Chipotle salsa

Shrimp Tostadas

¡Share your recipe with us!

Directions

Pati Note's

Step 1

In a small bowl combine the mayo with the lime juice and zest, season with salt and pepper and mix well. Set aside.

Step 2

In a large skillet set over high heat, add 1 of the tablespoons of oil and 1 of butter. Once hot and bubble has melted and is bubbling, add half the shrimp, season with salt and pepper and cook about 1 minute per side, until browned on the outside but still plump and crunchy inside. Scrape onto a bowl and cook the remaining shrimp. Set aside.

Step 3

Layer a couple tablespoons of the prepared mayo on the tostada. Add a layer of sliced avocado and then top with the tomato. Add cooked shrimp on top and garnish with the lettuce. Spoon guacamole salsa and chipotle salsa and chiles toreados to your liking and eat fast!

Pati Jinich's Notes

Ate so many shrimp tostadas like these on the coast of the Sea of Cortez, along the shores of the states of Sinaloa and Sonora. Very norteño food. Just like people dont think about seafood when they think about northern Mexico, I had no idea this was how they ate their tostadas.
The tostadas, rather than refried beans go slathered with mayo and then the quickly seared or many times fresh and raw seafood, and salsas galore. Can pile up as high as you want.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Key Product: Homestyle Mexican Salsa & Chipotle salsa

Diablo Shrimp Tacos

¡Share your recipe with us!

Directions

Pati Note's

Step 1

Season the shrimp with salt and pepper.

Step 2

In a large and heavy sauté pan set over high heat, let the butter melt into the oil. Once it starts to sizzle, add the shrimp. Let it cook for 1 minute, flip to other side, add the garlic; and cook for another minute. Add the chipotle salsa, and let it cook for another minute. Serve along with warm corn tortillas, slices of avocado, green onions, cilantro to garnish for the tacos. Offer lime to squeeze fresh juice to taste.

Pati Note's

This takes me back to beach palapas, in Mexico’s Pacific Coast. where it is so common to get the shrimp on the menus offered either al ajillo (with tons of garlic) or a la diabla -with some very spicy seasoned sauce covering the plump and browned shrimp ready to be tucked into tacos.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Mexican Hot Dogs

¡Share your recipe with us!

Directions

Step 1

On a cutting board, roll one slice of bacon around each hot dog. Place the tip of the hot dog over one end of the bacon slice, then roll the sausage around and around on the diagonal so that the bacon wraps around it and covers it entirely. If you get to the end of the hot dog and there is still some bacon left, roll back in the other direction until the whole strip of bacon is rolled around the hot dog.

Step 2

Heat a large skillet over medium heat. Add the bacon-wrapped hot dogs and cook, turning every 2 to 3 minutes, until crisped and browned on all sides. Remove from the heat.

Step 3

To make the salsa especial, heat the oil in a medium skillet over medi-um heat. Add the onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until it is tender and the edges are beginning to brown, 3 to 4 minutes. Stir in the tomato and cook for another minute or so, until the tomato has softened a bit. Stir in the jalapeños, habaneros, ketchup, and mustard and cook just until heated through, about 2 minutes. Remove from the heat.

Step 4

Preheat the oven or a toaster oven to 350°F.Open the buns but try not to separate the tops from the bottoms. Top the bottom or both halves (to taste) with cheese (break up the cheese if desired) and place on a baking sheet. Bake for 2 to 3 minutes, until the cheese has melted and the buns are lightly toasted.

Step 5

Place a bacon-wrapped hot dog on the bottom half of each bun and top with a generous amount of salsa especial. Cover with the top halves and serve right away.

Pati Note's

Growing up in Mexico City, I used to stop at the Galan hot dog stand with my 3 older sisters on the way back home from school. We got in trouble as we would show up at meal time already full, after my mom had prepared food for the family, so my dad threatened that there would be no more homemade meals and we would just have to eat these hot dogs on the way home every day, which we weren’t upset about at all, so plan backfired. 

This is exactly how he used to make them, but I am adding habaneros to the mix because I love the heat.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Key Product: Green Salsa

Cheesy enchiladas

¡Share your recipe with us!

Directions

Pati Note's

Step 1

Preheat the oven to 400℉, with a rack in the middle. Heat a comal or large skillet over medium-low heat for at least 5 minutes.

Step 2

One or two at a time, heat the tortillas on the comal or skillet, without overlapping, for about a minute per side, until malleable and warm. Cover or wrap in a kitchen towel to keep warm.

Step 3

Pour about 1 cup of the salsa into a 9-x-13-inch baking dish and spread it evenly over the bottom. One by one, place each tortilla on a cutting board and sprinkle about 1/4 cup of the chicken evenly down the middle. Roll up into a chubby soft taco and place seam down in the baking dish. Pour the remaining salsa over the enchiladas. Cover with the grated cheeses and sprinkle the Cotija over the top.

Step 4

Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, or until the cheese has completely melted and begun to lightly brown around the edges. Serve hot and garnish with the crema, avocado and slcied scallions.

Pati Note's

Comfort food at its best. What makes or breaks an enchilada is most times the salsa! Here taking it over the top w a killer salsa and lots of melty cheese and the addition of the salty and crumbly Cotija.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Key Product: Guacamole Salsa and Taquera Salsa

Crispy Chicken taquitos

¡Share your recipe with us!

Directions

Pati Note's

Step 1

In a deep skillet, preheat 1 inch deep of oil to 350 degrees, set over medium heat. Or you can also test if the oil is ready for frying the flautas, by dipping a flauta or tortilla to see if the oil actively bubbles around it.

Step 2

In a medium saucepan, heat the taquera salsa until simmering. Add the shredded chicken and toss to combine, let it cook and the chicken absorb the sauce for a few minutes. Turn off the heat.

Step 3

Place a comal or a dry skillet over medium heat until hot, then heat the tortillas on the comal for about 30 seconds per side; this will prevent them from breaking when rolling them into flautas.

Step 4

Place 2 or so tablespoons of shredded chicken on each tortilla and roll them tightly. They should be thin, not chubby rolls. You can insert wooden toothpicks through 2 to 3 flautas at a time, so they will fry evenly and hold their shape.

Step 5

Once the oil is hot, gently dip the flautas in it. Fry them until they have crisped and turned golden, about 2 to 3 minutes. Flip them over so they will brown evenly, for another minute. Remove the flautas from the oil and put them on a plate or tray lined with paper towels.

Step 6

Alternatively, you may want to toast the flautas on a comal or bake in the oven lightly brushed with oil at 375, for 15 to 20 minutes.

Arrange them on a serving platter and garnish with lettuce,  salsa, cheese, Mexican cream, or let your guests tailor to their taste.

Pati Note's

Tacos dorados, crispy taquitos are one of Mexico’s most loved antojos or cravings. Found in street food stands, fondas and so many restaurants they are also a standard of Mexican family food. Dressed here w a salsa that is a cross between a guacamole and a Green Salsa.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Key Product: Homestyle Mexican Salsa & Chipotle salsa

Meatballs in Chipotle Sauce

¡Share your recipe with us!

Directions

Pati Note's

Step 1

In a large mixing bowl, combine the ground meat with the eggs, minced garlic, breadcrumbs, 1/2 teaspoon salt and 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper. Mix thoroughly with your hands or a spatula.

Step 2

Place Mexican salsa along with chipotle salsa in a medium saucepan along with the chicken broth and bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium and at a medium simmer, and gently add the meatballs, one by one. They should be anywhere from 1 to 2″. Once you have shaped all the meatballs, simmer over medium-low heat for 25 to 30 minutes.

Step 3

Preheat oven at 375 degrees. Slice the subs open, add enough meatballs to cover, spoon sauce on  top, add pickled jalapeño slices and cover with cheese. Bake for 5 to 7 minutes until toasted and cheese is completely melted.

Pati Note's

Albondigas, Mexican style meatballs, are usually eaten with a side of rice or beans. They are typically cooked in a seasoned thick tomato sauce and it is very popular to have them seasoned with chipotles in adobo sauce. Here we are taking the all American meatball sub and pumping up el sabor with Mexican style chipotle meatballs, and added kick of pickled jalapeños and tons of melty cheese. A Mexican American mash-up, putting two things that are irresistible in diff cultures all tucked into one.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Key Product: La Costeña chipotles peppers

Tarascan Soup

¡Share your recipe with us!

Directions

Step 1

Place the tomatoes and garlic in a saucepan. Cover with water, bring to a boil over medium high heat and cook for about 10 minutes, until the tomatoes are completely cooked through and rehydrated.

Step 2

Transfer tomatoes and garlic to a blender or food processor, along with 1 cup of the cooking liquid, the white onion, and 1 teaspoon of the salt. Puree until smooth.

Step 3

Heat the oil in a large soup pot over medium-high heat. Add the pureed tomato mixture and cook for 6 to 7 minutes, stirring occasionally, until it darkens in color and thickens in consistency.

Step 4

Meanwhile, rinse your blender, add the refried pinto beans, and 2 cups of the chicken broth and puree until smooth.

Step 5

Reduce the heat to medium and stir the bean puree, remaining broth and remaining ½ teaspoon of salt into the thickened tomato mixture. Simmer for about 10 or until the soup has seasoned and has a creamy consistency. Taste for salt and add more if needed.

Step 6

Ladle the soup into bowls, drizzle with a tablespoon of the cream, top with some cheese, a handful of tortilla strips, chicharrones and diced avocado. You can also place the garnishes in bowls on the table to let your guests decide how much of each garnish they want to add to their bowls.

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Born and raised in Mexico City, Pati is host of the 3x James Beard Award-winning PBS television series “Pati’s Mexican Table” and the PBS primetime docuseries “La Frontera.” She is resident chef at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., and a cookbook author.

Key Product: Green Salsa & Homestyle Mexican Salsa

Huevos divorciados en cazuela

Facebook
Pinterest
WhatsApp
Print

Directions

Step 1

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Step 2

In a medium skillet set over medium-low heat, heat a teaspoon of vegetable oil. Once hot, crack in 2 eggs at a time, Cook for about 3 minutes, until eggs are set, but not fully done, and the yolk is gooey. Repeat with the remaining eggs.

Step 3

In a medium casserole, ovenproof bowl or baking dish, spoon refried beans, add slices of turkey or ham, and 2 pairs of the cooked eggs. Ladle in a generous amount of salsa ranchera to one side and a generous ladle of Green Salsa on the other to completely cover. It does not matter if they start combining. Cover with the shredded cheese on top. Assemble the rest of the casseroles. Alternatively, it can be made in individual casseroles or a larger one.

Step 4

Place in the oven until the cheese has completely melted, about 4 to 5 minutes.

Pati Note's

here are two main camps of salsas in mexican cooking red or green. And you can say there is a split 50/50 in terms of preferences in Mexico! Within the red, there is the traditional salsa roja mexicana which is the base of huevos Rancheros. The concept of divorciados is for people who cant make up their mind about what salsa they want on their dish (which is many of us!), green or red salsa, so it is called divorciados. Can be eggs, tacos, sopes but most famously, eggs They start separated with one salsa dressing one egg and the other salsa dressing the other egg, however, as soon as people start eating, the salsas start combining which is a delicious mess. With the sweetness of the tomatoes of the red salsa being balanced by the tart and bright from the tomatillos in the green one.  Literally, I will bet, that every coffee  shop or Mexican style dinner in at least in Mexico city and central Mexico, has huevos divorciados on their menu -or it is something that you can request, even at the airport in mexico city!. 

We can make that delicious mess happen and be even intensified by, rather than saucing the sunny side up eggs on a plate (usually has tortilla, refried beans, eggs, sauce, crema and cheese), making them in a cazuela (in a clay or baking dish), pouring the two sauces and adding plenty of melty cheese on top and making that magic mix happen in the oven. 

Ingredients

Author

Pati jinich

Purus arcu netus placerat dictum suspendisse magna id semper finibus gravida porttitor