Ingredients
1/2 cup dried chanterelle mushrooms
1/2 cup dry sherry
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided
1/2 cup thinly sliced red onion
1 poblano pepper, seeded and thinly sliced
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 pinch salt, plus more to taste
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1/2 cup sliced button mushrooms
1 1/2 cups shredded Monterey Jack cheese
1 1/2 cups Oaxaca cheese (or other melting Mexican cheese)
2 handfuls huitlacoche (corn smut); this stuff is NOT attractive when you open the can or jar, but it is seriously good!
1 tablespoon crema Mexicana (or sour cream if you can't find crema)
1/4 cup pecan pieces, toasted in a dry skillet
1/4 cup currants
1 bunch warm tortillas (I like a combination of flour, spicy flour, and corn to suit all tastes)
Ingredients
  1. In a small bowl, soak the dry chanterelles in the sherry until they have rehydrated. I sometimes place them in the microwave them for 1 minute to speed things up.
  2. Melt 1 tablespoon butter in a skillet over medium heat. Add in the onion, poblano, and cumin, and a pinch of salt. Sauté until the onion and pepper are just tender but not mushy. Remove from the skillet and set aside.
  3. Drain the chanterelles and roughly chop them. Melt the remaining tablespoon of butter in the skillet still on medium heat, and add in the garlic. After a couple of minutes, add the chanterelle and button mushrooms and salt to taste. Sauté until they are cooked through and soft.
  4. Heat the oven to 375° F. Butter a baking dish (or an iron skillet—whatever you are going to serve the Queso in—make it large enough to accommodate all of the ingredients). Toss the cheese together with the onion and pepper mixture. Spread that into the skillet, then top with the mushroom mixture. You can just spread it over top, or arrange it in a line down the middle, which I think is prettier. Spoon the huitlacoche over too, if you are able to find some. Pop the dish into the oven until the cheese is melted and bubbly, roughly 15 minutes. You can wrap the tortillas in foil and put those in the oven to warm at them same time.
  5. Remove the queso from the oven, top with the dollop of crema, and sprinkle the toasted pecans and currants on top. Serve with warm tortillas.
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Slow-Cooked Tuscan Kale with Pancetta, Bread Crumbs, and a Poached Egg
Before discovering Suzanne Goin's slow-cooked Tuscan kale, I thought I knew nearly every possible way to prepare dark leafy greens: sautéed quickly with garlic and red pepper flakes; raw, sliced thinly, and massaged with dressing; and boiled four ways à la Zuni Cafe. But Goin's recipe, which calls for blanching the kale first, then cooking it slowly with sautéed onions for 30 minutes, was unlike any method I had ever tried. The kale essentially cooks until it turns black and is crispy at the edges, and it has become one of my favorite things to eat. The only trouble with the recipe is that it never makes enough -- I can eat a pound of this kale in one sitting. But when it's beefed up with toasted bread crumbs and crispy pancetta, and when it's topped with a poached egg or served over creamy polenta, it starts becoming a meal. Slow-cooked kale is a nice addition to so many dishes from pastas to grain salads to pizza, but it seems to pair particularly well with eggs -- it is delicious tucked into an omelet with feta cheese. Notes: This is my favorite way to prepare/use slow-cooked Tuscan kale, but know the recipe can be adapted to your liking. You can omit the pancetta and use an additional tablespoon of olive oil. You can use crushed red pepper flakes in place of the chile. You can top it with a fried or soft-boiled egg. I've learned not to skimp on the olive oil and to not rush the kale-cooking process — the key is to not stop cooking until the kale is black.