Braised Birria

  1. Preheat oven to 275u0b0F. Bring ancho chiles and 4 cups water to a boil over medium-high. Remove from heat and let cool.
  2. Meanwhile, toast peanuts on a rimmed baking sheet, tossing once, until golden brown, 15-20 minutes. Let cool.
  3. Toast cumin seeds and peppercorns in a dry small skillet, tossing occasionally, until very fragrant, about 2 minutes. Let cool, then finely grind in spice mill or with mortar and pestle with garlic powder and cinnamon.
  4. Puree ancho chiles and soaking liquid, peanuts, spice mixture, and chocolate in a blender until smooth. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve into a Dutch oven or other large heavy pot, reserving any solids. Return solids in sieve to blender and add 3 cups water. Process until smooth and strain back into Dutch oven; discard any solids.
  5. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high. Season meat generously with salt. Cook, turning occasionally, until browned all over, 12-15 minutes total. Carefully add meat to Dutch oven and add bay leaves. Bring liquid to a simmer over medium-high. As soon as it just begins to bubble, lower heat, cover pan tightly with foil, then lid. Braise meat until meat shrinks off of bones and is fork-tender, 3-3 1/2 hours (check periodically to make sure liquid is at a gentle simmer).
  6. Meanwhile, puree chiles de arbol, tomatoes, broth, and oregano in a clean blender until smooth. Strain through clean sieve into a large saucepan and bring to a simmer over medium heat; cook 10 minutes to let flavors meld. Season with salt; keep sauce warm.
  7. Increase oven to 400u0b0F. Let meat cool, uncovered, in braising liquid 30 minutes. Transfer meat to a rimmed baking sheet and roast until edges begin to brown, 13-17 minutes. Pull or slice meat into servings. Divide among shallow bowls along with tomato-chile sauce.
  8. Serve meat with onion, cilantro, lime wedges, and tortillas alongside.

ancho chiles, peanuts, cumin seeds, black peppercorns, garlic, ground cinnamon, chocolate, vegetable oil, kosher salt, bay leaves, uerbol, tomatoes, lowsodium, oregano, white onion, a spice mill

Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/mexican-braised-lamb-birrieria (may not work)

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