Showing posts with label Goya Chorizo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goya Chorizo. Show all posts

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Tomatoey, tomatoey, tomatoey, tomatoey

Say that four times fast. Now don' t you feel silly?

This is one of those mongrel dishes born of necessity. I'll call it Native American pasta because it's got succotash in a Mexican-style pasta with pulled chicken and a Spanish recipe chorizo.

Actually, I used pulled turkey meat because I had leftover turkey in the freezer from last year's Thanksgiving. But I don't recommend turkey. You would get a better tasting dish with chicken.

I started with La Moderna fideo (a short-stem pasta). La Moderna is a Mexican import made in four cities across the country. I found it at Winn Dixie in Florida, which impressed me, (distributed to the USA through InterAmerican Foods Corp. in Laredo, Texas).

Fideo is traditionally cooked with pulled chicken and a little bit of onion, and chicken broth. The recipe calls for 2.5 quarts of water for a 7-ounce packet.

But I don't want soup. I want pasta. So I boiled the fideo for 7 minutes in three cups of water, then drained.

This is a lot of pasta, and with the other ingredients, you end up with enough food to easily serve four hungry people.

Moving on, I still have some Goya chorizo. This is a Spanish-style smoked chorizo that is sold unrefrigerated, like jerky (it's not quite that salty, though). Chorizo is usually used for breakfast meals, but this is something that can be an ingredient in a lunch or dinner dish. Like I've said before, it's similar to pepperoni.

Keep in mind the paprika in this chorizo makes it tart. It has a pronounced sharp taste, like a real sharp cheddar cheese, so go light on the chorizo. And that's why I suggest chicken to provide more protein without overwhelming your dish.

Slice up two links of chorizo, and grill in the skillet. After the grease is flowing and sizzling, add some canola oil to avoid burning the chicken. Toss in the cooked chicken (a half-pound of pulled thigh or breast meat should do), and stir.

Succotash was introduced to Europeans by Narragansett Indians in New England as a mix of corn and lima beans. I just opened a can of cooked lima beans, and measured off an equal portion of frozen corn an tossed that over the meat.

Get a jar of pasta sauce. I used roasted garlic Ragù. This is a 1 lb-10 oz jar. Use all of it, but three-quarters of a jar will do if you're a little short.

Gently dump in the pasta so you don't splash anything, and bring it to a simmering boil for a couple minute - not too long because the pasta is already cooked; you're just trying to heat up the sauce and succotash by this time.

So, what's so great about fideo versus spaghetti? Well, spaghetti tends to be clumsier to deal with. I don't know the origins of fideo, but I suspect a no-nonsense Mexican mother got really pissed off at watching her kids slurp-suck up long-stem pasta, splattering sauce all over their faces and giggling at the result at the dinner table, and she decided to snap the pasta stem just to spoil their fun.

If you've got a more accurate version of history, I'd like to hear it. In the meantime, buen provecho!


Sunday, March 13, 2011

Goya Chorizo: a New York tradition

Having grown up in Texas, I always saw Goya products in the groceries. But I always assumed they were Mexican imports. Goya has always targeted the Hispanic market and it's one of the few Latino brands I see everywhere.

They stock more kinds of products in Latino groceries than any other brand. Well, surprise, surprise. The company started in Lower Manhattan, New York in 1936. Don Prudencio Unanue and his wife Carolina, immigrants from Spain, started with one grocery store.

I came across a Goya Chorizo at my local Winn Dixie and that led me to investigate a company that, product-wise, is as diverse as well-known giants like Del Monte Food Brands.

Goya Chorizo
This chorizo is packaged in Secaucus, N.J. and does not need refrigeration until you open it. I found it located next to the El Miño brand, which was a two-link package for about half the price. Goya's product is four links and weighs 3.5 ounces.

When cooking it, I found it to be higher in fat content than El Miño. The Goya chorizo behaves exactly like pepperoni when cooked. I sliced it into coin sections and let it sizzle on medium heat on the skillet.

Let's talk breakfast!

Since I'm dealing with a Spanish sausage, not Mexican, I took one liberty with a traditional Mexican breakfast recipe. I made mild 'huevos a la Mexicana' and added one stalk of chopped bok choy.

Traditional huevos a la Mexicana is scrambled eggs with onion, serrano pepper and tomato. I used onion, bok choy and tomato. No hot sauce here. (Actually, I sprinkled on a hot sauce after I cooked this and that's not in the second photo; I just couldn't resist, but I'm trying to put out a plate that anybody can try without worrying about searing their taste buds).

I separated some yolk from two eggs (watching that cholesterol), and poured the egg white over vegetables that had been cooking in canola oil for about three minutes. Separately, I put two northern Mexican-style chicken-filled tamales in the microwave and heated that for 1 minute (I say northern Mexican because I've seen tamales in Florida that come in aluminum packets, and I know southern Mexican tamales are cooked in banana leaves).

I chopped fresh Anaheim pepper (very mild and just a little section), and spinkled that over the tamales. The chorizo is laid out on the plate between the tamales and the 'huevos-not-so-Mexicana.' Nice, orderly looking plate - that should appeal to a Cuban's sensibilities. Maybe?
I had this with a mocha coffee. I used a packet of Ganocafé Mocha, which is a powdered cocoa with ganoderma, an Indonesian mushroom that has been dessicated. It's distributed in the USA through Dallas and my dad loves this stuff.

I put a few ounces of milk in a cup, mixed in the powder, the pour in the coffee and stir. It's great, but the taste is slightly different from regular coffee mocha because of the mushroom, which is supposed to have health benefits. I don't know about that, but it is pleasant on the palate.

The meal turned out very nice. Goya's chorizo is decent enough, but I'm going to have to say that given a choice between El Miño and Goya (both being in the unrefrigerated category), I'd go with El Miño because it was less greasy. I know, that's a contradictory thing to say for someone raised on uncooked Mexican chorizos that are really greasy!

Both Goya and El Miño are smoked, but I get the impression El Miño is smoked longer. The flavor is more pleasant (I'm a sucker for well-smoked meats) and I just think if you're going to buy a meat that is marketed as 'no refrigeration required' go for the one that has less grease.

Buen provecho!