Serving suggestion, complements of Swann chef and Printed & Manuscript Americana specialist Rick Stattler. |
Page from lot 403, circa 1825 manuscript book of Mexican recipes, featuring the original recipe for Chiles Reyenos de Picadillo. Estimate $1,500 to $2,500. At auction October 10. |
Chiles reyenos de picadillo
Se cojen los chiles poblanos se tuestan se pelan se desbenar se pica la carne ha coser echa huna bola y sal se ase el picadillo con gitomate todo picado y frito y se echa alli la carne picada se muele clabo canela cominos y asafran ha q’e ha erbido se le echa binagre y asucar perejil picado pasas almendras piñones jamon chilitos aseitunas y se reyenan y seler echan tantita harina por ensima y se frien con el huebo bien haliado se ase el caldillo con ajo en ebanaditas jitomate molido, el clabo canela ha q’e esta frito muy bien se le echa hagua s’el caldo de la carne ha que ha erbido bien se muele pan emojado y sele echa con asafran asucar binagre los tantos segun la cantidad que se aga rebanadas de man sana y de durasno se cuese en la caldyllo con los chiles.
1. Start with poblano chiles which have been roasted and peeled.
2. Cook chopped meat with salt, tomato, ground cinnamon, clove, cumin, and saffron
3. For the picadillo topping, boil vinegar and sugar, chopped parsley, raisins, almonds, pine nuts, ham, olives, and chilies.
4. Stuff the cooked meat mixture into the poblano peppers
5. Coat the stuffed peppers with flour and egg and fry them
6. Bake the fried stuffed peppers with tomato, ground garlic, clove, cinnamon, and meat broth, topped with bread crumbs
7. Pour the picadillo over the peppers later in the cooking
We recently prepared a batch of 15 poblano chiles, following this recipe to the best of our ability. The recipe is quite labor-intensive, and required about three hours of work. The result bears no resemblance whatsoever to the cheese-filled fare you will find in a typical Mexican restaurant here in the states. The dominant flavors are sweet (raisins, sugar), aromatic (cinnamon, cumin, saffron, and cloves), and tangy, with a little bite from the chiles. It is quite tasty, even putting aside the novelty of eating two-hundred year-old chiles rellenos.
Yum! Thanks to Swann's Printed & Manuscript Americana specialist Rick Stattler for this delectable post!