Chorizo, Onion And Potato Tacos With Salsa Verde

  1. Place potatoes in a single layer in a 2 tiered steamer** with a few inches of hot water in the bottom. Cover and turn heat to high. In a few minutes, once steam begins to rise, cook 3-4 minutes until just tender when skewered. Remove domed lid and set tiers on empty pots and/or in front of open windows to cool.Do not rinse. (Retain the covered steamer with hot water in case you want to add more potatoes to the recipe after tasting the mixture.)
  2. Saute chorizo in a little hot oil over medium heat until browned and some fat has been released. Remove from the pan, leaving the fat in the pan. Saute onions in that fat over medium high heat until soft and translucent or lightly browned. Add cooked potatoes and stir to coat. Add chorizo and salsa verde. Simmer 5-10 minutes to blend flavors. Don't let it be too dry or too soupy.Taste and adjust ingredients as needed. (It will be very salty from the salsa verde and the chorizo, but the yoghurt will counter that nicely.)
  3. One at a time, toast tortillas over a wire rack over a medium flame- on both sides. Keep them warm, wrapped in a kitchen towel. (Or heat 1/4" vegetable oil til hot, briefly saute tortilla on each side til slightly crispy but still pliable, drain on paper towelsl.)
  4. When all tortillas are toasted, fill each with about 1/3 cup of the hot chorizo mixture, top generously with plain yoghurt and chopped cilantro, and serve.rnThe tangy yoghurt counters the salty spiciness perfectly.
  5. We allow 3-4 chorizo tacos per hungry adult.rnMakes 6 cups filling (about 18 tacos)
  6. Notes*:rnI do not care for the cinnamon notes in Mexican chorizo. For this recipe, I prefer Portuguese chorizo, like Gaspari.
  7. Notes**: I have become a major fan of steaming instead of blanching or boiling. It is quicker, uses less water and fuel,requires no dangerous boiling water, and is far more nutritional, as the steamed food retains its nutrients rather than discharging them into a big pot of water. I love my 2- tiered aluminum Chinese dome-topped steamers which I bought in a Chinatown restaurant supply store. The tiers are flat (think 'flat colander'' or 'cake pan with holes all over') and they are so space efficient, both for setting over another pot to cool, and for stacked storage.They have an interior diameter of 10" and hold alot of food in a single layer. They also have a good rim around each tier, making it easy to grasp them. You can improvise a steamer by placing a disposable aluminum pan (that you have punctured all over with a skewer tip) over a water filled can or a cake rack -into a larger pot with a few inches of water in the bottom, and a tight fitting lid. Or you can use the standby fold-up 'steamer basket', opened up as wide and flat as possible, to hold more food.

vegetable, chorizo, gold potatoes, onion, salsa, corn tortillas, person, cilantro, salt

Taken from food52.com/recipes/16871-chorizo-onion-and-potato-tacos-with-salsa-verde (may not work)

Another recipe

Switch theme