Adobo Pork Posole Caldo

  1. Cut pork shoulder into 1-inch cubes and pat dry with paper towels. Heat 2 tablespoons oil over medium high heat in a heavy Dutch oven. Add half of the pork and brown on all sides; remove from pan and repeat step with remaining oil and pork.
  2. Cut onion in half stem to root and then into thin slices crosswise. Add onion to pan with garlic and cook for 3-5 minutes, or just until onion starts to turn translucent.
  3. Place soaked ancho chiles and soaking water in blender along with vinegar and soy sauce; process until almost smooth. Strain through a fine wire mesh strainer into pan; discard remaining solids. Add sweet potatoes, diced poblanos, corn, kidney beans, hominy, tomatoes, tomato sauce, chicken stock, salt, pepper, chili powder, cumin, piloncillo/brown sugar and bay leaf plus 2 cups water. Stir to combine and bring to the boil. Reduce heat to medium to medium low, cover and simmer for 1-1/2 to 2 hours, or just until pork is fork tender. Remove and discard bay leaf and adjust seasoning to taste. (It may be necessary to add water to pot during cooking time.)
  4. Place approximately 1/2 cup cooked fideo vermicelli in bottom of serving and ladle caldo over pasta. Garnish as desired. Serve immediately.
  5. NOTE 1: If you have a well-stocked grocery store, the dried ancho chiles, Mexican tomato sauce, piloncillo, and fideo vermicelli can be found on the Mexican/international aisle. The Mexican crema and cotija cheese can be found on the dairy aisle.
  6. NOTE 2: The dried chiles can also sometimes be found in the produce department. The fresh poblanos can easily be switched with bell peppers (green, red, yellow, orange or purple); the flavor will be milder than poblanos.
  7. NOTE 3: Jicama can be found on the produce aisle, too. It looks kind of like potato; the texture and taste is kind of a cross between potato, apple, and pear. The brown outer peel is extremely tough and fibrous. Peel with a paring knife or serrated vegetable peeler before using.
  8. NOTE 4: Mexican tomato includes chiles and can be quite spicy hot. If Mexican tomato sauce in unavailable or you prefer a less spicy caldo, substitute regular tomato sauce.
  9. NOTE 5: Piloncillo can be found in a cone or disk shape or small nuggets. Use a fine holed box grater to use. A sharp knife can be used to shave segments off and crushed with the flat side of the knife or finely chopped. Dark brown sugar may be substituted.
  10. NOTE 5: Fideo vermicelli is a thin spaghetti-like pasta broken into tiny pieces. This product can be found on both the pasta and international foods aisles of well-stocked grocery stores. If it is unavailable, substitute thin spaghetti or angel hair pasta and break it into smaller pieces before cooking. You could also substitute ramen noodles for the pasta.
  11. NOTE 6: Mexican crema is similar to creme fraiche. The texture is thicker than regular sour cream and the flavor less tangy than sour cream. Greek yogurt could also be used instead of crema or sour cream. Recipes for homemade creme can be found online, too.
  12. NOTE 7: Cotija cheese is similar in flavor and texture to Greek feta cheese.

caldo, pork shoulder, vegetable, white onion, garlic, ancho chiles, rice wine vinegar, soy sauce, sweet potato, fresh poblano peppers, frozen kernel, dark red kidney beans, white, petite diced tomatoes, tomato sauce, chicken, coarse ground salt, ground pepper, ground chili powder, ground cumin, brown sugar, want, lime wedges, fresh cilantro, sour cream, avocado, cheese, jalapeno, slivered red radishes andor jicama, tortilla strips, peanuts, pepper, salsa, corn tortillas

Taken from food52.com/recipes/20677-adobo-pork-posole-caldo (may not work)

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