Pepper Sisters Pozole
Travesty. Pozole should have big chunks of pork. But this was super tasty, and pretty close to what I remember from Pepper Sisters.
Ingredients
6-8 cups vegetable stock
2oz Epazote (dried herb available in any Latin market)*
3 bay leaves
3 dried chilies (ancho, pasilla, guajillo or whatever)*
2 tsp olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic
1 tsp cumin
2 tsp coriander
3 carrots peeled and chopped
3 stalks celery peeled and chopped
1 28 oz can tomatoes (whole or diced)
1 28 oz can hominy, drained and rinsed.
2 zucchini seeded and chopped.
3 corn tortillas, chopped. (Optional)
Salt and pepper to taste.
Directions
- Remove stem and seeds from chilies. Toast in a dry pan until fragrant. Cover with hot water or stock. Let stand for 30 minutes, then add ½ cup of soaking liquid and chiles to a blender. Blend until smooth.
- Infuse stock. Add Epazote and bay leaves to stock. Let simmer while you do the rest of your prep.*
- Add olive oil to a dutch oven or heavy stock pot. Saute onions until they start to brown.
- Add garlic, cumin, coriander and a pinch of salt and pepper. Cook spices for about a minute then add carrots and celery. Saute for 2-3 minutes.
- If using whole tomatoes, crush by hand, then add to dutch oven along with chilies and hominy.
- Strain stock and add to soup, simmer for ~ an hour.
- Taste for seasoning. Add zucchini and tortillas if using. Summer but zucchini is tender and tortillas break down.
- Garnish with avocado and diced radish if you’re super fancy.
Cook’s notes:
This is based on a soup I love at Pepper Sisters in Bellingham, Washington. It’s also a pretty standard minestrone recipe with a very Mexican twist.
Epazote looks like weeds and smells a little like dill. More sour though. It’s distinctive and what, along with the chilies, makes this taste like pozole. I strained it out of the stock before I added it to the soup…because it looks like your lawn. Which you shouldn’t eat.
I used a combination of all three chilies because I happen to have them. I think whatever you had on hand would be fine.
In the end I wanted to add a little body to the broth so I added three chopped up corn tortillas and let them break down. You could also keep it brothy or serve it with crushed corn chips on top.
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