The source for this recipe is my FAVORITE cooking experts, America's test kitchen. I LOVE their shows, I love their explanations of why they added a certain amount of an ingredient, and all the different ways they tried it. I love the scientific theory behind cooking they share. I love their food and equipment reviews. They are the best! They really do have the best, most well developed recipes in my opinion. I've never tried any I haven't liked. This particular recipe was on Cook's Country, and I wouldn't have considered it had it not been from america's test kitchen. It sounded like a weird combination. But I am SO glad I saw that episode! They are now our favorite tacos and Jay chooses this every time its his turn for a favorite meal. On Saturdays, our family takes turns picking a splurgy meal. I make whatever they want, pizza, chicken nuggets, ramen noodles, whatever). Every six weeks, when it is Jay's turn, we have this.
INGREDIENTS
2-3 tbsp butter
1 heaping tablespoon minced garlic
1 tablespoon chipotle chilies in adobo sauce
1/2cup orange juice (or 2 tbsp orange juice concentrate)
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
3/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro leaves
1 1/2 lbs chicken breast
1 teaspoon yellow mustard
Salt (to taste)
Flour tortillas (we use the raw ones usually)
INSTRUCTIONS
The first thing I do is chop up my chilies. I pull them out one by one, and scrape all of the ribs and seeds out. Then I chop them up as small as I can, and measure them, making sure I add some of the adobo sauce as well. While you are chopping, you can start melting the butter in the pan. Then add the chilies and garlic and let them cook for just a minute. Then I add the chicken and everything but the salt and cilantro and let it all cook together. I usually make Jay and the kids pull off the cilantro leaves while I am cooking it, and we add it in whenever they finish. I add the salt at the end. I don't know why, that is how they did it, so I copied. This recipe is done when all of the liquid is cooked out. I don't like to pour off any flavor, and usually, by the time the water cooks out the chicken is falling apart and perfect. A couple of times when it has excess water, I have poured some of it into a little sauce pan and let that reduce while I'm reducing the sauce in the chicken. If you don't multiply the recipe, you shouldn't have as much problem with too much liquid anyway. I have tripled or quadrupled the recipe for a crowd, or just when Jay wants to eat leftovers for days! Part of my problem with excess water is also because I always forget to thaw my chicken and it always goes into the pan partially or completely frozen. When the chicken is cooked, I use a star chopper from pampered chef to chop it up. This is one of my favorite things they sell by the way! It is a black stirring instrument. If you look at it from the bottom, it looks like an asterisk. I use it to chop up spaghetti or ramen for my kids, or hamburger meat, and for these and my southwestern egg rolls it does a great job of both chopping it up and mixing it together. ( I think it is actually called mix and chop...)
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