1 lb lean
ground beef
1 medium
onion, chopped ½ cup
½ cup sour
cream
1 cup
shredded cheddar cheese
2
tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
¼ teaspoon
pepper
1/3 cup chopped
green bell pepper
2/3 cup
water
1 tablespoon
chili powder
1 ½
teaspoons fresh oregano
¼ teaspoon
ground cumin
1 can (4 oz)
chopped green chilies, drained
1 clove
garlic, finely chopped
1 can (15
oz) tomato sauce
8 tortillas
Shredded
cheese, sour cream, and onions if desired
1.
Heat oven to 350
2.
In 10 inch skillet, cook beef over medium heat 8
to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until brown; drain. Stir in onion, sour cream, 1 cup cheese, parsley
and pepper. Cover and remove from heat
3.
In 2 quart saucepan, heat bell pepper, water,
chili powder, oregano, cumin, chilies, garlic, and tomatoes sauce to boiling,
stirring occasionally; reduce heat.
Simmer uncovered 5 minutes. Pour into ungreased 9 inch pie plate.
4.
Dip each tortilla into sauce in pie late to coat
both sides. Spoon about ¼ cup beef mixture onto each tortillas; roll around
filling. Place seam side down in ungreased 11x7 inch glass baking dish. Pour
remaining sauce over enchiladas
5.
Bake uncovered about 20 minutes until
bubbly. Garnish with shredded cheese,
sour cream and onions.
When you’re learning how to cook,
just like when you’re learning how to bike, it’s always good to have someone
close by, just in case you fall or almost dump too much of something in (unless
it’s vanilla; my brother claims you can never put in too much vanilla). Fortunately for me, Hannah was busy reading
the literary theorist Spivak, who is about as dense as the ingredient list, when
I happened to comment that I thought this recipe called for a lot of
garlic. Hannah inquired how much, and I
held up the whole garlic (which I now know, thanks to Google, is called the
head). She gave me a quizzical look, and
asked “are you sure it called for that?”
To which I replied, “Yeah, it called for one clove of garlic.” Hannah laughed, and said that a clove of
garlic was actually just one little chuck of the garlic head. Thanks to Hannah, disaster was averted.
While
the rest of the cooking went as smoothly as possible for someone of my talent,
with me only almost forgetting to mix in the first four ingredients with the
beef, the enchiladas turned out to be edible.
Hannah like them more than I did, but sour cream doesn’t sit well with
my taste buds; I naïvely thought that the sour cream flavor would bake out,
just as the rum bakes out in a rum cake.
As usual, my logic ended up proving false. The onions also were a bit of a spoiler,
since I forgot to cook them with the beef so when they came out of the oven and
into my mouth, they were a bit crunchy. Next time, I think I’ll make extra
sauce to mix in with the meat, since the sauce was quite good. However, they were much improved the next
morning. I made the full recipe so I had
eight enchiladas to eat, so I figured that I better beat the moldy microbes to
my Mexican fiesta.
Laura, I have a favorite site that you might enjoy. It melds the scientific with the art of cooking, doesn't assume knowledge and is all around my favorite. You may have seen it on T.V -pbs: America's Test Kitchen. Enjoy the journey! terri pearson
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If you’d like to contact us with any questions or comments, please visit our website.http://www.americastestkitchen.com/
Bubs, I tried this recipe and it turned out okay. It was actually better the next day. Of course if I used the full fat version of stuff it might have been better!
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