On Father's Day I chose to celebrate it by making one of my husband's favorites, Tasajo (Tesajo). Depending on where you are from in Mexico, there are several versions of this meat. My husband's family is from Cholula, Puebla, and this is the recipe my sister in law gave me years ago. Traditionally, this meat is marinated in the chile mixture then hung to dry in the hot desert sun then grilled when ready to eat. This dish will transport you to Mexico's countryside with your first bite. Don't be afraid of the chile heat on this one. Guajillo chiles are mild and don't have the heat that other chiles have. Serve this with warm tortillas, Mexican Rice, beans, pico de gallo and guacamole.
Tasajo (or Tesajo depending on where you are from ;-) )
(serves 4-6)
2-3 lbs pork, country-style ribs or thick pork chops or steaks
6-7 guajillo chiles (can be purchased at most supermarkets in the ethnic food section or latino stores)
2 T. roasted ground cumin (McCormick's)
4 cloves garlic
3 T. vinegar
salt to taste
Reconstitute the chiles by placing in bowl and add boiling water over the top and cover. While chiles are softening, prepare the pork by cutting into long strips. To make strips, cut in a spiral from the outside in to make long strips of meat. Place strips in a large ziploc bag.
Once chiles have softened, reserve liquid. Pull out and discard stems, seeds and inner membrane of chiles. Place chiles in blender with remaining ingredients and puree for several minutes. If mixture is too thick add reserved water from chiles to loosen. Texture should be like thick ketchup consistency. Taste to ensure enough salt has been added. Add puree to ziploc bag, seal and make sure all meat strips are coated with marinade. Marinate meat for up to 24 hours.
Heat grill to medium flame and cook until done. Serve with warm corn tortillas.
Mexican Rice
2 T. corn or vegetable oil
1 1/2 c. long grain rice
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 Roma tomato, pureed
3 c. chicken broth
Optional substitution for chicken broth:
3 c. water
1 large cube chicken boullion or 2 small cubes or 1 T. chicken base (omit if using chicken broth)
In medium pot, heat oil over medium high heat. Add rice and cook until it appears white, stirring constantly. Add pureed tomato and garlic and cook an additional 30 seconds until liquid has absorbed. Add chicken broth (or water and bouillon and stir until bouillon has dissolved). Taste water to ensure that enough salt has been used.
Cover and cook for approximately 20 minutes over medium low heat until water has been absorbed. Set aside and let rest for 5-10 minutes covered to ensure all remaining liquid is absorbed.
Pico de Gallo
3 Roma tomatoes
1 large onion
2 jalapenos, seeded and white ribs removed or not, depending on how much heat you want
1 large handful of cilantro (1/2 c. chopped)
juice of half a lime
salt
Dice tomatoes, onion, jalapenos, cilantro and add to a bowl and combine. Add lime juice and salt to taste.
Guacamole
3 avocados
4-5 large spoonfuls of pico de gallo
salt to taste
Cut avocados in half, remove seed and spoon out inner flesh into bowl. Mash with a fork and mix in pico de gallo till combined. Salt to taste.
Finger-licking goodness
I am so blessed to have a brother that is a foodie like me. His area of expertise is barbeque. Nothing says home to me like falling off the bone ribs with sauce dripping off your chin. Jeremy has always been a great cook, however, he has mastered the art of the grill. He has been competing professionally on the BBQ circuit competitions and have won a few. And let me tell you, that is one tough crowd to beat. Lucky for me, he has given me an all access backstage pass to his secrets that I will share with you. Here are his secrets to perfect St. Louis-style ribs. Get your bibs and napkins ready!
Jeremy's Spare Ribs
Step 1. Watch this video on how to prepare your ribs. Rib Video
Step 2. Once you trim and prepare your ribs. Season ribs on all sides with Rib Rub Seasoning. Place on baking sheet and cover overnight in refrigerator.
Rib Rub Seasoning
2 T. kosher or sea salt
1 T. pepper
1 T. granulated garlic (not powder)
1 tsp. chipotle chili powder (if you can't find powder then take a whole dried chipotle and grind it in a spice or coffee grinder)
3 T. McCormick's Grill Mate Pork Rub
Step 3. Prep the smoker
I initially tried smoking on my gas grill. Not such a great idea. It does not allow the smoke to be trapped in the grill to properly penetrate the meat. Use a kettle style grill like Weber or any type of regular smoker.
Soak Apple, Cherry or Pecan wood chips in water for 30 minutes. Drain water and make a package out of heavy duty foil for your wood chips and vent top by making a few 2 inch slits with knife, or use smoker box if you have it. Once your smoker is at temperature you will put this package directly on the coals or heat source. Meanwhile, prepare your smoker by regulating the temperature to a steady 225-250 degrees. IMPORTANT!!! USE AN OVEN THERMOMETER TO REGULATE YOUR HEAT. Grill and smoker thermometers are usually always off. It is imperative that you get the right temp to ensure the best results. If using a grill, make sure you are setting the coals to one side for indirect heat.
Step 4. Place meat on smoker and relax
Do not put your meat directly over your heat source. This will char your meat. If you realize that you don't have enough grill space for your ribs you can use a grill rack that stands the ribs on the side to conserve grill space or form your ribs into a circle and secure with toothpicks and stand on their side. Smoke your meat for 6-7 hours or until the meat starts to pull away from the bone, exposing the bare bone on the end. Baste ribs during the last 30 minutes of cooking with a BBQ sauce such as Head Country. For those of you who live up north and can't get this one, find a sauce that is mostly a tomato and vinegar base as the first 2 ingredients. Sauces that use high-fructose corn syrup as the main ingredient will result in a gummy sauce once smoked. I found that Dinosaur Original BBQ sauce worked well for me which was available at my local Walmart here in upstate NY.
Step 5. Let your meat rest for about 15 minutes.
Once cooled, cut ribs into individual pieces, serve with your favorite BBQ sauce and enjoy!
I realize that this may seem like a lot of work but trust me, it is worth every minute when you sink your teeth into this finger-licking goodness.
Stay tuned for more BBQ recipes and sides to go with this.
Jeremy's Spare Ribs
Step 1. Watch this video on how to prepare your ribs. Rib Video
Step 2. Once you trim and prepare your ribs. Season ribs on all sides with Rib Rub Seasoning. Place on baking sheet and cover overnight in refrigerator.
Rib Rub Seasoning
2 T. kosher or sea salt
1 T. pepper
1 T. granulated garlic (not powder)
1 tsp. chipotle chili powder (if you can't find powder then take a whole dried chipotle and grind it in a spice or coffee grinder)
3 T. McCormick's Grill Mate Pork Rub
Step 3. Prep the smoker
I initially tried smoking on my gas grill. Not such a great idea. It does not allow the smoke to be trapped in the grill to properly penetrate the meat. Use a kettle style grill like Weber or any type of regular smoker.
Soak Apple, Cherry or Pecan wood chips in water for 30 minutes. Drain water and make a package out of heavy duty foil for your wood chips and vent top by making a few 2 inch slits with knife, or use smoker box if you have it. Once your smoker is at temperature you will put this package directly on the coals or heat source. Meanwhile, prepare your smoker by regulating the temperature to a steady 225-250 degrees. IMPORTANT!!! USE AN OVEN THERMOMETER TO REGULATE YOUR HEAT. Grill and smoker thermometers are usually always off. It is imperative that you get the right temp to ensure the best results. If using a grill, make sure you are setting the coals to one side for indirect heat.
Step 4. Place meat on smoker and relax
Do not put your meat directly over your heat source. This will char your meat. If you realize that you don't have enough grill space for your ribs you can use a grill rack that stands the ribs on the side to conserve grill space or form your ribs into a circle and secure with toothpicks and stand on their side. Smoke your meat for 6-7 hours or until the meat starts to pull away from the bone, exposing the bare bone on the end. Baste ribs during the last 30 minutes of cooking with a BBQ sauce such as Head Country. For those of you who live up north and can't get this one, find a sauce that is mostly a tomato and vinegar base as the first 2 ingredients. Sauces that use high-fructose corn syrup as the main ingredient will result in a gummy sauce once smoked. I found that Dinosaur Original BBQ sauce worked well for me which was available at my local Walmart here in upstate NY.
Step 5. Let your meat rest for about 15 minutes.
Once cooled, cut ribs into individual pieces, serve with your favorite BBQ sauce and enjoy!
I realize that this may seem like a lot of work but trust me, it is worth every minute when you sink your teeth into this finger-licking goodness.
Stay tuned for more BBQ recipes and sides to go with this.
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