Tucson Tostadas

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40 minutes Prep: 30 minutes Cook: 10 minutes
394 calories per serving view nutrition facts
6 servings suggest servings

Ingredients

3each flour tortillas
1/2pound cheese oaxaca, shredded
1/2pound monterey jack cheese shredded
1/3pound cheese anejo, grated
1/2pound poblano peppers (or any other mild chili pepper)
1/4cup coriander fresh, finely chopped
1x lard or oil, for frying

Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

If you are using fresh poblanos, roast them and remove their skins and seeds, If you are using canned poblanos, wash and drain them.

Slice the peppers into thin decorative slices.

In a big frying pan, fry a tortilla in lard or oil until it is golden brown.

Remove to paper towels, drain well, then place on a baking sheet or pizza pan.

Although lard is bad for you, the grim truth is that tortillas taste very much better when they have been fried in lard.

Live dangerously.

When the tortilla has cooled and hardened, cover it with a thin layer of Oaxaca cheese, then with the jack cheese.

Crumble anejo on top of those layers, then sprinkle finely-chopped coriander on top of that.

Arrange the pepper slices in a geometric pattern on top of the cheeses.

Bake for 5 minutes, or until the cheese has melted but not browned.

Remove from the oven, and use a pizza cutter to slice into individual portions.

Serve immediately.

NOTES: * A toasted cheese tortilla snack popular in southern Arizona -- I first discovered this recipe in 1978 when I went to Tucson to visit my prospective in-laws.

The secret is to use Mexican cheeses.

Yield: Serves 6.

* Oaxaca (pronounced "oh-HOCK-a") cheese is a Mexican string cheese.

You can substitute any Mexican cheese marked "asadero"

(melting cheese).

If you're desperate, you can use Armenian mozzarella, which has the right texture but the wrong flavor.

Monterey jack is a bland American cheddar; you can substitute good-quality Muenster.

* Anejo cheese is somewhat like Parmesan, dry and crumbly.

You can substitute Mexican cotija cheese, but that is probably pointless, because a store that carries cotija will probably also carry anejo.

Fresh-ground parmesan will do in a pinch, though it is not the right flavor.

: Difficulty: easy once you have found the ingredients.

: Time: 10 minutes each.

: Precision: no need to measure.

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