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Chicken & Green Salsa Tamales Recipe

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This recipe for Chicken & Green Salsa Tamales is from "The Heyne Family Cookbook" , one of the cookbooks created at FamilyCookbookProject.com. We'll help you start your own personal cookbook! It's easy and fun. Click here to start your own cookbook!


Category:
Category:

Ingredients:  
Ingredients:  
For the tamales:

25 dried corn husks, soaking in warm water

3/4 cup lard, vegetable shortening or seasoned vegetable oil (to make seasoned oil, heat oil over medium heat and cook a slice of onion and 3 to 4 garlic cloves for 15 minutes, strain before using)

1/2 teaspoon kosher or coarse sea salt, or to taste
1 teaspoon cold water
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 pound (about 3 1/4 cups) instant corn masa for tortillas or tamales
3 1/2 cups chicken stock, add more if needed

For the filling:

1 recipe for cooked salsa verde.
2 cups shredded cooked chicken

Directions:
Directions:
To make the filling: Make the salsa verde, combine it with the shredded chicken, and set aside or refrigerate, if made ahead of time.

To make masa for the tamales: Place lard, vegetable shortening or seasoned oil in a mixer and beat, until very light, about 1 minute. Add salt and 1 teaspoon cold water, and continue beating until it is white and spongy, a couple more minutes. Add baking powder, and then take turns adding the instant corn masa and the chicken stock. Continue beating until dough is homogeneous and as fluffy as can get.

You know the tamal masa is ready if, when you drop 1/2 teaspoon of the masa in a cup of cold water, it floats.

To prepare the tamalera or steamer: Place hot water in the bottom pan of a steamer (only enough so the water is just under the basket with the tamales and not touching them) and bring it to a simmer. Line the steamer basket with one or two layers of soaked corn husks. Use dough to form about 18 cornhusk wrapped tamales.

To make the tamales: Soak dried corn husks in hot water for a couple minutes, or until they are pliable, and drain. Lay out a corn husk with the tapering end towards you. Spread about 3 tablespoons of masa into about a 2- to 3-inch square, the layer should be about 1/4-inch thick, leaving a border of at least 1/2-inch on the sides. Place 1 tablespoon of filling in the middle of the masa square.

Pick up the two long sides of the corn husk and bring them together (you will see how the masa starts to swaddle the filling) and fold the folded sides to one side, rolling them on same direction around tamal. Fold up the empty section of the husk with the tapering end, from the bottom up. This will form a closed bottom and the top will be left open.

Prepare all the tamales and place them as vertically as you can in a container. When you have them all ready, place them again, as vertically as you can on the prepared steamer, with the open end on top. If there is space left in the steamer, tuck in some corn husks, so the tamales won’t dance around. Cover with more corn husks, and steam covered for 50 minutes to an hour. You know the tamales are ready when they come easily free from the husks. They will still be moist, and as they are released from the husks, you will see the moistness, like when you remove good moist muffins from their paper baking cups.

Finished tamales will stay warm for about 1 to 2 hours in the steamer. They can be made ahead several days before and stored in refrigerator, well wrapped. They can also be frozen for months. In either case, reheat in a steamer. For refrigerated tamales, it will take about 15 minutes, and for frozen tamales about 45 minutes.

Number Of Servings:
Number Of Servings:
18
Preparation Time:
Preparation Time:
2 hours
Personal Notes:
Personal Notes:
I had no idea how to make tamales until I ran across some recipes in a cookbook and watched aTV show explaining how simple they are to make. You can find the ingredients in any specialty store. The only hard thing to find is the corn husk and those are relatively easy to find if you know where to look. Everything else is really kind of dumb simple. It's great for having the family come together like we used to do when we made dumplings when my kids were little. The amazing thing about tamales is there must be tens of thousands of types of stuffings for them. Once you know how to make the Masa (see basic Masa recipe) you can stuff them with literally anything. Be creative and have fun. It doesn't have to be Mexican either. You can stuff a tamale with literally anything you can dream up. Have fun and enjoy.

 

 

 

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