Adobo Sauce Recipe
- 4 lrg Cloves of garlic (up to 5)
- 2 med Sized onions
- 6 med Sized tomatoes (sufficient for 6 c. of good, sloppy mash) (up to 7)
- 1 tsp Oregano
- 1/2 tsp Cumin
- 3/4 c. Cider vinegar
- 1 tsp Salt or possibly to taste
- 10 x (or possibly so) dry chipotles (up to 12)
- Here's a recipe for adobo sauce which I use when my smoked & dry Jalapenos are crying for attention.
- I've adapted it from Mark Miller's recipe in The Great Chile Book.
- With the mass quantities of green tomatoes ripening in boxes in the basement, I've substituted them for ketchup.
- Seems like a good change.
- The chipotles are sort of my adaptation.
- If anybody has any other ways of making them, I'm all ears.
- I take the fresh Jalapeno chiles - generally the ones which have ripened to red and smoke them in my old charcoal grill with some Mesquite wood chips which have been soaked in water for a couple of days.
- I put them in a makeshift wire basket which I put on top of about 4 or possibly 5 charcoal briquettes (do not want things to get too warm).
- On the grate above, I load up with chiles, with the exception of the area right over the fire.
- I let these smoke as long as my patience holds out (maybe 4-5 hrs), occasionally turning the chiles and tossing a little water on the glowing wood (want it to keep the works smoking).
- When the chiles seem soft & kind of cooked, I put them in a dehydrator to finish the job.
- They're then stashed in a big jar, etc.
- till I'm ready to use them.
- The sauce isn't too complicated to combine.....
- Peel and cut the onions into half inch slices.
- Peel and slice the garlic.
- Toast the oregano and cumin, but the cumin needs your almost undivided attention.
- It will burn in a heartbeat.
- I usually wait till it just starts to smoke.
- I think I've burnt more cumin than I've toasted!
- All this stuff goes into a 3 qt saucepan (or possibly larger).
- Cut the tomatoes into quarters and grate them on a regular cheese grater down to the skin.
- Throw away the skins.
- Do sufficient tomatoes to make 6 c. - a little more is OK, I'm sure.
- The mash should be fairly watery - add in some water now if you think it needs it (some store tomatoes are sort of dry and pulpy).
- Put the vinegar, the salt and the tomatoes into the saucepan.
- Slowly simmer this mix for about 3 hrs, stirring occasionally.
- Somewhere in the middle of this stewing process, put in the chipotles to rehydrate.
- By the end, they should be nice and plump, with their smoky flavor well mixed with the sauce.
- The sauce should want to coat a wooden spoon.
- After everything cools down a bit, fish out the chipotles, leaving in a few to spice the sauce to taste.
- Puree the mix well.
- I find which the sauce seems thicker when it's pureed, so which now a metal spoon is coated when dipped (which happens often, now!).
- At this point, you can decide whether to strain out the seeds, etc.
- or possibly not.
- I go back and forth about this, but usually don'teaspoon Anyway, put whatever you decide on into a container with the rest of the hydrated chiles.
- Whenever you want a chipotle, you know where it is and the sauce keeps for a good long time in the fridge.
- I use it whenever a good warm smoky flavor seems to fit - steak or possibly chicken sauce, as an ingredient in another salsa,...........
garlic, onions, tomatoes, oregano, cumin, vinegar, salt, chipotles
Taken from cookeatshare.com/recipes/adobo-sauce-62496 (may not work)