Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Pipian Verde with Guajolote (Turkey)


I appreciate Thanksgiving for the way in which the holiday brings together friends and family and reminds us to give thanks for each other and the goodness in life.  But I still often think about how Thanksgiving came about and the ways in which it misrepresents the relationship between America's first colonizers and its native people. (See our post about the origins of Thanksgiving here.)

Interestingly, none of the Hispanic countries (those colonized by Spain) of the Americas have such a holiday as far as I know. The Mexican mestizo soul is complex and opaque. Most Mexicans identify proudly with the indigenous people who blended with the Spanish colonizers to create the mestizo race. (However, don't be surprised to hear epithets hurled at either the indigenous culture or at their European ancestors when a little Tequila is going around. Mexicans know how to make light of these "problems of the psyche!")



This Thanksgiving, I thought it would be appropriate to give you a recipe that is quite possibly prehispanic and can be made with the native bird of the Americas and of this holiday: guajolote (nahuatl for turkey). I had to go through a stack of old handwritten recipes to find it. It's Tía Oralia's recipe for pipian verde, a kind of green mole, which is usually made for chicken. I see from my notes that she was dictating it to me and I was barely keeping up with my writing, but the essentials are here. It looks like my pipian sauce needed more broth, just add as you like to get the proper texture and serve this with a good white rice and warm corn tortillas.

To all those with a loved one who did not return from Iraq or Afghanistan, may your bounty of friends and relatives help dry your tears and  fill the void of the empty chair at your table.

Pipian Verde with Guajolote (Turkey)

Recipe Type: main, fowl, sauce, mole

Cuisine: Mexican

Author: Gilda Valdez Carbonaro

Prep time:

Cook time:

Total time:

Serves: 4

Pipian verde goes perfectly on a bed of white rice, cooked Mexican style.

Ingredients:
  • 1lb tomatillo
  • 1 serrano chile
  • ¾ cup raw, unsalted pumpkin seeds (pepitas)
  • 2 cloves peeled garlic
  • 1/2 onion
  • 1 sprig epazote (optional)
  • 3 green leaves, approximately, from radishes, swiss chard, kale, or collard greens
  • 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 cup roughly chopped cilantro (without stems)
  • 1 chicken cut up or 6 turkey drumsticks
  • salt to taste
  • 3 cups chicken or turkey broth
For broth:
  • 3 carrots
  • 2 sticks celery
  • 1 onion
  • salt to taste
  • 1 cut up chicken or 6 turkey drumsticks

Instructions:
  1. Bring water to a boil and place cut chicken pieces or turkey drumsticks, bringing the flame down to a low simmer.

  2. After about ½ hour, place the vegetables in the skimmed broth and add salt.

  3. Continue to cook at a low simmer for another 45 minutes, partially covered.

  4. Set the broth aside when it's ready, strain it and pull out the chicken or drumsticks, placing them on a plate, to be used later.

  5. Start preparing the pipian by browning the pumpkin seeds and the clove of garlic in half of the oil on a skillet for about 3 minutes, until they are puffy; take care not to burn them, as this will make them bitter; keep the flame low.

  6. In the meantime, boil the de-husked tomatillos with the serrano pepper and onion for about 10 minutes. (You can also broil them if you prefer)

  7. After this all cools, put the tomatillos, the serrano, the garlic, the sprig of epazote and the toasted pumpkin seeds (pepitas) in the blender with about a cup of the cooled broth, blending it until it's as smooth as possible.

  8. Place this mixture on a skillet again with the last half of the oil and begin to cook it again, to amalgamate it for about 5 minutes.

  9. Place the cilantro in the blender and the leaves of green along another cup of the cooled broth and blend together.

  10. Add this to your mixture in the skillet and add remaining broth, slowly to get the consistency you want.

  11. Add the pieces of chicken or turkey to your skillet and make sure you are able to turn the pieces so they can all be coated with the sauce.

  12. Cover and cook for another 5 minutes at a very low flame, checking that nothing sticks or the sauce doesn't become too thick.

  13. Arrange on a plate with a good white rice and warm corn tortillas.






2 comments:

  1. Gilda Valdez CarbonaroNovember 21, 2012 at 3:49 AM

    Pues, es así como me lo dictó tu mamá, Cotis hace tantos años, sería en el 'rancho' en alguna visita que hizo ella, sería en Laredo durante la Navidad, ¿quién sabe?. Pero nos pusimos a platicar y nunca terminé de escribir la receta. Por eso me faltó caldo para la salsa...esta parte no la escribí en mis apuntes, pero la corregí en la receta aquí en el blog.

    ReplyDelete

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