Office holiday party
Today’s the best office party of the whole year: the one at the big boss’s house where there’s lots of beer and food. Plus it starts at 3 p.m., so I get two hours off work for free. It’s a potluck thing (my friend Ken told me today that Baptists don’t have potlucks because nothing is luck, it’s all Providence–hilarious. They just have shared dinner events), and I invented a dish for the occasion. It’s a variation on my special pork burritos in tomatillo sauce, but this is more of an appetizer-type thing.
Empanadas de cerdo en salsa verde (fancy-talk for little pork turnovers in green sauce)
INGREDIENTS:
- enough pie crust for 4 9-inch crusts (I cheated and bought frozen)
- half a pork loin, about half a pound, cut into small cubes (hint: this is easier to do if it’s semi-frozen) (you could also use chicken or garbanzo beans)
- 1 Tbsp olive oil
- 24 small pieces (about .75 inch x .75 inch x .25 inch) Monterrey jack cheese (I wanted queso fresco but didn’t see any at Hy-Vee)
- 1 egg
- paprika
- 1 tsp cumin
- 1 small container sour cream
- 1/2 cup fresh cilantro, finely minced
- 1 cup tomatillo sauce (see recipe below)
METHOD:
- Preheat oven to 400 F.
- In a frying pan, heat the olive oil on medium. Sauté the pork until it is cooked through.
- Add the tomatillo sauce and stir. Heat through. Reduce heat to a simmer.
- Roll out the pie dough to about 1/8 inch thickness. Using a round cookie cutter (I used a glass that was about 3 inches in diameter), cut out circles.
- Moisten your finger with some water and run it around the outer edge of the circle. This will help it adhere to itself once it’s stuffed.
- Place a piece of cheese in the center of the circle. Place two pork cubes on top of the cheese.
- Fold the circle into a half moon, sealing along the edges. Place on a cookie sheet.
- Repeat, occasionally picking up the scraps of pie dough and re-rolling them so you don’t waste it. You should be able to make about 2 dozen or so.
- Beat the egg and use a basting brush to give the empanadas an egg wash. Sprinkle generously with paprika (chile powder would be good too).
- Bake for about 25 minutes, or until golden brown. It’s ok if they burst a little.
- While they’re cooking, mix the cilantro, sour cream, and cumin. Serve it in a pretty bowl to use as a topping or dip.
Tomatillo Sauce: This is slightly labor-intensive, so I’m glad I had some in the freezer. This is good on burritos or enchiladas.
INGREDIENTS:
- 2 lbs. tomatillos (they look like little green tomatoes, but they’re actually different)
- 2 cans green chiles
- 1 cup fresh cilantro, loosely packed (use more or less depending on how much you like cilantro. I myself love it)
- 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
- several cloves of garlic, coarsely chopped
- 2 whole jalapeños (fresh), coarsley chopped (1 if you’re a weiner)
- 1 Tbsp ground cumin
- 1/2 cup sour cream
- 1/2 cup chicken stock
METHOD:
- Rinse the tomatillos and peel off the papery husk. Using a kitchen torch (aka fire squirter), squirt fire on the tomatillos one at a time until they are scorched and blackened all over. You could also do this over a gas stove, or you can do it in a pan, but the pan method takes forever and makes the kitchen smokey. I recommend the fire squirter method.
- If the tomatillos are large, cut them in half. Drizzle some olive oil into a large pan and saute the tomatillos, half the onion, the garlic, and the jalapeños over medium heat until the tomatillos are dull green and squishy.
- Put the contents of the pan into a blender. Blend until relatively smooth. Add the green chiles, cilantro, the cumin, and about 1/4 cup of sour cream. Blend, adding chicken stock a little at a time until it is a sauce consistency. Add salt and pepper to taste.