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The Great Chiles Rellenos Book
 
 
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The Great Chiles Rellenos Book [Paperback]

Janos Wilder (Author), Laurie Smith (Photographer)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 1, 2008
James Beard award-winning chef Janos Wilder offers more than 30 recipes for delicious chiles rellenos, ranging in complexity to suit beginning and expert home cooks alike. Wilder introduces regional Mexican rellenos, then provides contemporary interpretations, including jalape?±o poppers, roasted poblanos, sauces, and more. From choosing the right chiles to preparing them for stuffing, THE GREAT CHILES RELLENOS BOOK provides plenty of inspiration for anyone craving a taste of the Southwest.
  •  The only complete chile relleno cookbook, including 30 traditional Mexican recipes and modern variations from the Southwest and beyond.
  • Includes recipes for batters and crusts, salsas and sauces, and salads and relishes.
  • Reviews "Janos Wilder has written an entire book on the subject that offers so many different variations on chiles rellenos that you could literally make a different one for more that a month."-New York Daily News

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    Editorial Reviews

    From the Publisher

    * Includes recipes for batters and crusts, salsas and sauces, and salads and relishes.

    About the Author

    Named Best Chef: Southwest by the James Beard Foundation, JANOS WILDER opened his groundbreaking restaurant Janos in 1983 and recently opened the acclaimed Kai Restaurant at the Sheraton Wild Horse Pass in Chandler, Arizona. This is his second book. He lives in Tucson, Arizona.

     THE AUTHOR SCOOP

    When did you know you were a writer?I’ve been writing since I was a kid and have always liked it. My Dad was the first one to teach me how to write. When I was about 10 or 11, I’d write in long, puffed up sentences using the biggest words I knew. When I’d proudly show my writing to my dad, he laugh and tell me that “I was enamored with the sound of my own words.” It took me a while to understand what he was trying to tell me: that good writing is about communicating with your reader. It’s the same thing with cooking. Good cooks don’t cook for themselves but for their guests.What was your first job?Washing dishes in a Chinese food restaurantWhat's the first concert you ever attended?I’m the youngest of three raised in the Bay Area. In 1968, I was 13 and my sister was 15. This was soon after the Summer of Love in San Francisco and my sister had been bugging our mom to let her go to a rock concert. My Mom was not about to let her go on her own so she took us both to see the Jefferson Airplane and Buffalo Springfield and the University of San Francisco Gymnasium. What's the history of your name?My given first name is John. I was given the name Janos by a Native American Chef I worked with in Boulder, CO in the mid-70’s.  For the last 20-25 years I’ve been working with a lot of ingredients originally, and in many cases, still farmed by Native Americans. Many of our guests like the link between the name and the ingredients we use. In fact, it’s purely coincidental. Janos is not a Native American name. The truth is there were just too many Johns in the kitchen at the time and the Chef, Robert, just started calling me by a nickname, which stuck.Who would you cast as yourself in a movie of your life?Danny DiVito

    Product Details

    • Paperback: 144 pages
    • Publisher: Ten Speed Press (May 1, 2008)
    • Language: English
    • ISBN-10: 1580088546
    • ISBN-13: 978-1580088541
    • Product Dimensions: 4.6 x 0.5 x 10.2 inches
    • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
    • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
    • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #515,015 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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    Customer Reviews

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    8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars "Cooking chiles are a religion here, you know", November 11, 2009
    This review is from: The Great Chiles Rellenos Book (Paperback)
    Janos Wilder asserts that:

    "Chiles rellenos, like most Mexican foods, are of the people. Recipes are handed down from generation to generation, and like all great dishes, everyone has an opinion about them - the best ways to make them, whose mother makes them best, or where to get the best one."

    He teaches a specific approach to creating all Mexican dishes. Take for example a simple dish of beans and/or rice, an enchilada and salsa. Salsa is "the high note that opens your palate and titillates your senses. The beans or rice are typically not made to be spicy hot but are used to put out any fire caused by the salsa. The enchilada contains the primary flavors of the dish and will have flavor profiles that, in terms of heat, will range between the salsa and the rice and beans. While this is a simplistic example, the pattern holds throughout the region."

    He starts with three types of chiles: Anaheim, the mildest except in the fall; poblano, a little spicier with deeper flavors and the largest; and jalapeño , smallest and hottest, which make great "poppers".

    A friend in Albuquerque warns, however, that outside New Mexico "Chile nomenclature is a total mess. The Anaheim is the mildest of the green chiles and is a cousin of the New Mexican chile. Ancho is a fairly large chile, 2 inches wide, 3 inches long. Known as ancho in both fresh and dried forms, it is called poblano (when green) probably because it came from the Puebla Valley near Mexico City. In some areas it's known as pasilla, even though the true pasilla chile is totally different: ancho, 5 inches long, tapering from 3-inch shoulders; true pasilla, 4-3/4 to 10 inches long, narrow (3/4 inch wide), curved and a dark brownish black. The name pasilla means "little raisin," which refers to raisiny appearance and aroma. It's mild."

    All that comes into play if you live outside of New Mexico: in New Jersey, the poblano is almost invariably sold as a green Hatch chile. But, "Hatch isn't the name of a chile variety, it's the name of a place. Chiles are grown in Hatch, New Mexico, but they aren't any better than chiles from neighboring towns. And there is no way tiny Hatch produces all the chiles that get sold under that name. Farmers from other parts of New Mexico and other states including Arizona ship green chiles to Hatch to be resold. Some Hatch chile producers are reportedly shipping seeds to Mexico and having the chiles grown south of the border, where water and labor are cheaper."

    Janos makes the point that different methods of roasting chiles will lead to different flavors and mouth feels. For many cooks, freezing roasted chiles (or buying roasted frozen chiles) is the most practical approach. Here's a friend's approach: "I think it's best to skin, de-seed and get rid of the stem before freezing. It reduces the volume considerably and makes it easier to use. Some people freeze with the skins on (they slip off easily when thawed), but it's more of a hassle to use. I freeze chile in one-gallon freezer bags and stack them on the freezer shelf. Then I hack off what I need." Fresh or frozen, if you are up to the task, Janos has a wonderful tutorial on the various techniques of roasting chiles.

    It's when we get to the fillings, however, that Janos really shines. The chile relleno, literally "stuffed chile", is often stuffed with a melting cheese, such as queso Chihuahua or queso Oaxaca meat made of diced pork, raisins, and nuts, seasoned with canella and covered in an egg batter or flour. It is often served in a tomato sauce but the sauces vary widely. Some of the innovative combinations Janos suggests are Holiday Apple and Walnut, Wild Mushroom and Madiera, Ham, Almonds and Goat Cheese,and dozens of others.

    Janos has come up with a wide variety of combinations, inspired by his general approach to Mexican food. The index here on Amazon will give a clear understanding of how he varies his fillings.

    Janos writes: "Making renellos is a blast and a great communal effort. So invite some friends over, make some limonada or a pitcher of margaritas, or crack open an icy beer, and let everyone get in on the action - from roasting the chiles to deciding what you're going to stuff into them, from soaking the beans to making them into silky refritos - enjoy the process and savor the results. Most important, have fun!"

    A vegetarian friend describes how well this approach works: "You can also do a variation of stuffed peppers and chile rellenos; skin and stuff the chiles with dead animal for the rest of the gang, cheese and rice for the nominal vegetarian. Then lay them as is in a baking dish, smother in some appropriate sauce (I like something mole-ish), then bake. Sprinkle with queso seco and chopped epazote." Both versions were delicious!

    This book is great fun to read, as is his Janos: Recipes and Tales from a Southwest Restaurant, and Janos greatly improved my understanding of how to make delicious Mexican foods, not only renellos, but any Mexican dish, using his specific approach to the three basic elements. I found The Complete Chile Pepper Book: A Gardener's Guide to Choosing, Growing, Preserving, and Cooking an excellent complement to Janos's volume.

    Robert C. Ross 2009
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    4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars Que viva el chile relleno!, November 23, 2008
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    This review is from: The Great Chiles Rellenos Book (Paperback)
    My favorite item on the menu of any Mexican/New Mexican restaurant is the chile relleno. It is THE item I gauge the quality of the restaurant by. Unfortunately most restaurants do not make the grade. I have also searched high and low for good recipes, some basic ones along with some a little more adventuresome....this book has them all! There are step-by-step instructions, side-bar hints, lots of great pictures, simple and not-so-simple recipes - all devoted to the chile relleno. I am very happy with this purchase.
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    1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great Chile Relleno Recipes, October 12, 2010
    Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
    This review is from: The Great Chiles Rellenos Book (Paperback)
    A wonderful little book full of great ideas for stuffing chiles (and a few other vegetables) with fillings both traditional and creative. Nicely produced and illustrated. This shows there's so much more to the food of Mexico than what's usually on offer in U.S. Mexican restaurants.
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    Inside This Book (learn more)
    Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
    serrano ham, lobster stock, queso casero, chiles rellenos casseroles, panko crumbs, chile strips, poblano chiles, agave nectar, blue cornmeal
    Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
    Monterey Jack, New Mexico, Lamb Barbacoa, Basic Beer Batter, Culichi Sauce, Frijoles de la Olla, Mexico's Heart, Granny Smith, Bread Salad, Cilantro Aioli, Traditional Recipes, Zarela Martinez, Figs Wrapped, Queso Fresco, Beer Batter
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    Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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