Rice & bean burritos, covered with enchilada sauce, cheese & avocado.
Enchilada sauce is home made from this recipe; this is the 3rd time I've made it, and after the first time, I doubled it.
Source~~Homemade Enchilada Sauce
Author: Cookie and KatePrep Time: 3 minsCook Time: 7 minsTotal Time: 10 minutesYield: 2 cupsCategory: CondimentCuisine: Mexican
INGREDIENTS
3 tablespoons olive oil
3 tablespoons flour (whole wheat flour, all-purpose flour and gluten-free flour blends all work!)
1 tablespoon ground chili powder (scale back if youre sensitive to spice or using particularly spicy chili powder)
1 teaspoon ground cumin
½ teaspoon garlic powder
¼ teaspoon dried oregano
¼ teaspoon salt, to taste
Pinch of cinnamon (optional but recommended)**
2 tablespoons tomato paste
2 cups vegetable broth
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar or distilled white vinegar
Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
INSTRUCTIONS
This sauce comes together quickly once you get started, so measure the dry ingredients (the flour, chili powder, cumin, garlic powder, oregano, salt and optional cinnamon) into a small bowl and place it near the stove. Place the tomato paste and broth near the stove as well.
In a medium-sized pot over medium heat, warm the oil until its its hot enough that a light sprinkle of the flour/spice mixture sizzles on contact. This might take a couple of minutes, so be patient and dont step away from the stove!
Once its ready, pour in the flour and spice mixture. While whisking constantly, cook until fragrant and slightly deepened in color, about 1 minute. Whisk the tomato paste into the mixture, then slowly pour in the broth while whisking constantly to remove any lumps.
Raise heat to medium-high and bring the mixture to a simmer, then reduce heat as necessary to maintain a gentle simmer. Cook, whisking often, for about 5 to 7 minutes, until the sauce has thickened a bit and a spoon encounters some resistance as you stir it. (The sauce will thicken some more as it cools.)
Remove from heat, then whisk in the vinegar and season to taste with a generous amount of freshly ground black pepper. Add more salt, if necessary (I usually add another pinch or two). Go forth and make enchiladas!"
**I like the cinnamon in this alot, it seems to 'add something'
I keep the extra in a jar in the fridge, I add it to stuffed poblano peppers, or Mexican-Spanish style rices. I made extra rice yesterday, knowing that I'd use that today, the rice was a brownish red after cooking. I have used it on chicken thighs, and mixed in with scrambled tofu in a Mexican b-fast scramble.