How to Make Traditional Mole Sauce | Mole Sauce Recipe | Allrecipes.com
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Do you have a favorite dish or an International restaurant that you regularly go to because they always make things just the way you like? Have you ever wondered how they do it? Welcome World Cuisine demystifies International food and shares the secrets behind popular restaurant dishes including Pad Thai, Tikka Massala, Pho, Sushi, and more! Watch how to make authentic Mexican mole, the traditional sauce that turns chilies and dark chocolate into a deeply flavorful sauce that's only mildly spicy.
In the video, you'll meet the mother and son team behind one of Seattle's most beloved Mexican restaurant, La Carta de Oaxaca. They'll show you how to develop a smooth, rich mole sauce and provide tips for adjusting flavors to suit your personal taste.
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How to make MOLE POBLANO From SCRATCH, The BEST Step BY Step Recipe + SECRET TIPS!!!
Ingredients for Mole Poblano
2 1/2 Ibarra Chocolate bars
6 mulato Chiles or Ancho chiles
6 Pasilla chiles
3 Chipotle chiles
1/2 cup of raisins
1/2 cup of sesame seeds
1/2 cup raw peanuts (no salt- not roasted)
1/4 cup of almonds
1/2 cup of gamesa animal cookies
1 platano macho (plantain)
1 piloncillo (total used was 1/4) OR 1/4 cup of sugar
6 garlic cloves
1/2 large onion or 1 med onion
1 tbsp salt + Extra
1/2 cinnamon stick
1/2 Tbsp cumin seeds
3 pieces of clove
1/2 tsp anis seeds
1/2 tsp coriander seeds
1 cup of lard + extra
1 corn tortilla
To prepare mole
1 to 2 cups of mole paste
3 to 4 cup of chicken broth
1 whole boiled chicken
Toasted sesame seeds
Step 1
Remove seeds from mulato and pasilla chiles (Save mulato seeds to toast in step 3)
Toast mulato and Padilla chiles
Soak in warm water 20 mins until soft
Fry chipotle chiles in 3 tbsp lard until fully- place in same bowl of soaking chiles
Step 2 Frying medium heat
Warm 1/2 cup lard
Fry raisins until fluffy then place in a bow of warm water (save 1/3 cup of raisin water)
Fry tortillas, garlic, onion, peanuts (10 minutes, almonds (15 secs), animal cookings until golden color, plantain until soft
Step 3 Toast on medium heat (continuously stir)
Toast following ingredients for 10 to 15 secs- Cinnamon stick, anis seeds, cloves, cumin seeds, coriander seeds, mulato Chile seeds, then set to the side
Toast 1 tsp salt + sesame seeds (save some for garnish)
Step 4 blend spice
Blend toasted spices first- cinnamon , anis seeds, clove, coriander seeds, sesame seeds, mulato Chile seeds
Add raisin + water, plantain, animal cookies, peanuts, almonds, garlic, onion, chiles + chili water
Blend slowly and starting picking speed.
⚠️‼️Suggestion
My blender was over worked! Try step 4 in batches of 3 to assure a smooth blend ????
If using a different blender than a vitamix save 3/4 of a cup of raisin water and 1 cup of Chile water to assist your blend as needed. Not to worry the excess water will dissipate when cooking. Add 15 minutes to cook and stirring time. You got this corazón!
Step 5 cooking on medium heat mostly (Constantly stirring once mole paste touches the pot)
Add 1/2 cup of lard to pot allow to warm up and then add your mole paste
Cook 15 minutes while constantly to avoid burning and even cooking
In a bowl of warm water add desired chocolate bars + piloncillo once dissolved add to mole pot
Cook another 10 to 15 minutes taste and adjust chocolate and piloncillo as needed
Once you achieve desired sweetness add salt adjust to taste and continue storing to complete 45 minutes of stirring
Last 5 to 10 minutes switch heat to low and continue stirring amoricito, don’t quit, you got this babe.
Once paste is cooked set in a bowl and allow to cool a few hours
Place in an air tight container or small freezer bag in portions
If kept clean will last in refrigerator 3+ months
Will last in freezer 6 months to a year if not more ????
Tips‼️
Have a lot of fun when making this recipe ????
If you see smoke while frying or toasting lower temperature
Please watch video for SECRET TIP to the most flavorful way to cook mole
Make all recipes comfortable for your home
????????
Refried beans recipe-
chicken, rice, and potatoes casserole-
Mexican Chicken and rice casserole w/ creamy chili sauce
Carne asada marinade-
Easy Salsa roja recipe-
#molerecipe #mexicanfoodrecipes #breakfast #lunch #dinner #cooking #mealprep
❤️If you are looking for a recipe. Search on YouTube “Views on the road _______“ and finish with the recipe you are looking for. If you don’t see it, make a request in the comment section and we will gladly upload the recipe for you.
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Mole Sencillo | Sweet Heat with Rick Martinez
Welcome to Sweet Heat with Rick Martinez. Twice a month, Rick will be bringing you recipes built on this favorite flavor profiles—sweet and heat—from his kitchen in Mazatlán. First up: Mole. One of the most famous sauces in Mexico because of their beautifully complex, smoky-sweet-hot flavor, their velvety smooth texture, and their rich, deep color. Rick created this Mole Sencillo—or “simple mole”—with only 10 ingredients and a handful of steps. Think of it as a starter mole that will help you master the techniques used in making basically any mole. GET THE RECIPE ►►
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro
01:51 Simple Ingredients Done Right
07:29 Build That Flavor
08:59 Fry Time
11:20 The Perfect Blend
15:26 Actually, It's Time to Eat!
INGREDIENTS
1 large (123g) Roma tomato, cored
1/4 large (71g) white onion
6 medium (60g) chile ancho, stemmed and seeded
1/3 cup lard or vegetable oil
1/3 cup (22g) animal crackers
1/4 cup (40g) raw almonds
1/4 cup (35g) raisins
1 tablespoon (10g) untoasted sesame seeds
1 whole star anise
2 tablespoons Diamond Crystal or 3 1/2 teaspoons Morton (15g) kosher salt
1 tablespoon (16g) piloncillo or dark brown sugar
1 1/4 ounces (35g) bittersweet chocolate, preferably 75% or more cacao
1 pinch toasted sesame seeds, for garnish
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As a one-stop shop for joyful living, Food52 connects discerning home cooks with the interests they're passionate about via award-winning food and lifestyle content across platforms. We provide our audience with the recipes and solutions they crave to eat thoughtfully, live joyfully, entertain beautifully, and travel differently.
Rick Martínez Makes Mole Negro | NYT Cooking
“I chose recipes that I felt were essential to my Mexican cooking journey — dishes from vastly different parts of the country — whose ingredients, methods and techniques have made me a better, more creative and fearless cook.” Rick Martínez is a cookbook author, New York Times contributor and a second-generation Mexican American. He shared the 11 regional Mexican specialties he adores most. Mole negro, a velvety black sauce that’s traditionally served over roasted poultry, is one of the dishes on that list.
Mole negro:
Rick Martínez’s Essential Mexican Recipes:
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How to Make Traditional Mole Poblano for Cinco De Mayo
Margarita Villegas Leal talks about celebrating Cinco de Mayo in her hometown of Puebla and shows us how to make mole poblano the traditional way.
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'Weeknight' mole poblano with pork tenderloin and limey lima beans
Thanks to National Pork Board for sponsoring this video! Bring flavor to everyday moments with pork. Learn more: #PorkPassport #RealPork
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***RECIPE, FEEDS 2-3***
An approx. 1 lb (454g) pork tenderloin
4-5 garlic cloves, peeled and lightly crushed
1-2 large shallots, peeled and roughly chopped
2 canned chipotle peppers
1 teaspoon peanut butter or tahini
1 teaspoon (at most) cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon (at most) ground cloves
3/4 teaspoon flour
1 teaspoon tomato paste
1-2 tablespoons any fruit preserves
salt
pepper
oil
2 tablespoons butter
toasted sesame seeds (optional)
For the beans:
6 oz (170g) bag frozen lima beans
1-2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
1 lime
fresh cilantro (optional)
salt
pepper
sugar
Trim silverskin off the pork and season with salt and pepper. Heat a non-stick or well-seasoned cast iron pan to medium, and put in a generous coating of oil. Lift the pork into the pan with tongs and keep moving it constantly as you sear all sides — imagine mopping up the oil with the meat. Once all sides have decent color, add in the butter, garlic and shallots, and reduce heat to medium-low. Cook the pork, flipping it frequently in the butter, until the interior temperature is 145ºF/63ºC — about 15 minutes total cooking time for a 1 lb tenderloin. Remove the meat and let it rest.
Stir the chipotles into the garlic and shallots and fry them for a minute. Do likewise with the following things, in order: the peanut butter, cocoa powder, remaining spices, flour and tomato paste. Deglaze with at least a cup of water and allow the sauce to simmer and reduce until it's quite thick. Turn the heat off, stir in the fruit preserves, and taste for seasoning. Either eat the sauce chunky, puree it, or push it through a sieve.
Transfer the sauce to a bowl and give the pan a quick rinse. Over medium, heat the sesame oil and stir in the frozen lima beans. When they're thawed and just starting to brown, turn off the heat, grate in the zest of the lime and squeeze in at least half the juice. Stir in salt, pepper and a pinch of sugar to taste. Stir in some fresh cilantro leaves at the last second.
Slice the pork against the grain, reheat the sauce in the microwave if necessary and spoon it generously over the meat (hot sauce will reheat the meat for you). Scatter sesame seeds over the sauce (optional) and serve with the lima beans.