Homemade Corn Tortilla Chips

You haven't lived until you've made your own tortilla chips. And once you try these, your standard industrially-manufactured Tostitos will never taste the same again.

These chips are best when eaten just a bare minute or two after they've been cooked and seasoned to your liking. The hot oil caramelizes the starches in the corn tortilla, giving these chips a subtle, slightly sweet taste that you'll never find in the store-bought version.


**************************
Homemade Corn Tortilla Chips

Ingredients:

Corn oil, for frying
Fresh corn tortillas

Directions:
1) Heat oil in a deep, non-stick pan
to medium/medium-high heat. Use enough oil so that it is at least 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch deep (note: do not heat the oil so much that it begins smoking).

2) Drop handfuls of tortillas at a time into the oil. Flip them over as necessary.

3) Fry until golden brown. Drain on paper towels and season with a dash of salt, pepper or other desired spices.
**************************
A few recipe notes:
1) Don't confuse flour and corn tortillas. You must use corn tortillas for this recipe.

2) I suggest using smaller, 6-inch or so diameter corn tortillas. You'll find it easiest to process that size into chip-sized wedges. All it takes is three quick cuts with a knife:


3) These chips are made the same way our Tapas-Style Potato Chips were made, except that you can make these guys even more quickly and easily. But note that because they cook through in just a couple of minutes, you've got to stand there and keep an eye on them.

4) On seasonings: You can use whatever seasonings you choose, and I encourage you to experiment. However, I don't recommend oversalting--it will mask the subtly sweet taste of these chips. We used just a few flakes of kosher salt and a few liberal shakes of cayenne pepper. Pure heaven. You can try all sorts of spice modifications: thyme, hot curry, chipotle powder, cumin, paprika--or a combination of any or all of the above!

5) Frugality alert: You don't have to dump out the oil after just one use. We've reused frying oil up to four or five times without problems. In fact, on days when we're feeling particularly lazy but still want to have tortilla chips or patatas fritas again tomorrow, we'll just leave the oil in a covered pan and reheat it the next day. Obviously, though, never leave hot oil unattended in the kitchen, especially if you have young kids in the house.

6) I'd be remiss if I wrote a fried food recipe and I didn't address any health and diet questions surrounding the type of oil I used and why. Since I can quickly see this issue going way beyond the scope of a simple recipe post, I'll leave you with a one-sentence rule of thumb: Try and always use oils that are liquid at room temperature, because they're more likely to stay liquid when they're floating around in your arteries. I used corn oil (rather than olive oil, which I typically prefer) because it smokes at a higher temperature, and thus is better suited for deep frying.

Oils which are solid at room temperature, including hydrogenated oils of all types, may have certain shelf-life and culinary advantages (especially for industrial snackfood manufacturers), but they have few redeeming health advantages. Those are the types of oils I generally avoid, except in rare instances.

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! Another way you can support me is by submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like delicious, digg or stumbleupon.




Related Posts:
How to Live Forever in Ten Easy Steps
Using Salt = Cheating
How to Make Burritos
Tapas-Style Potato Chips



CK Food Links--Friday July 25, 2008

Here's yet another selection of particularly interesting food-related links from around the internet.
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Soupsong.com
This site, by cookbook author Patricia Solley, contains a lifetime's worth of delicious soup recipes, ranging from the simple and basic (try the laughably cheap American Bean Soup) to the ethnic and exotic (try the Bolivian Peanut Soup). Also, be sure to check out her book on Amazon: An Exaltation of Soups: The Soul-Satisfying Story of Soup, As Told in More Than 100 Recipes.

8 Rules of Thumb for a Succesful Potluck from Post Punk Kitchen
Important etiquette for a quintessential American tradition. There's always a goofball who shows up to a potluck empty-handed. Don't let it be you.

Carnitas, Houston-style at Homesick Texan
Glorious. And so easy! And it's an extra bonus to read Homesick Texan's peaceful, poetic writing tone.

Chinese White Cut Chicken at Sunday Nite Dinner
When I saw this recipe, which is a happy combination of ethnic, easy and inexpensive, I just had to bring it to my readers. This is exactly the kind of interesting-yet-easy fare Casual Kitchen wants to bring to the masses.

Three Cheese Basil Pasta from The Delicious Chronicles.
One of the great privileges of writing Casual Kitchen is I get to learn about other interesting food blogs from people directly emailing me, linking to me, or leaving comments. This particular recipe, from an enthusiastic blog from a young culinary student, stood out to me because of its simplicity and how it uses a creative mix of ingredients-on-hand. If you can improvise a recipe like this, then you've got real cooking talent and creativity.

Let me throw in one non-cooking related post, but a particularly arresting post all the same:
Escaping the Amish from Tim Ferriss' blog.
One of the more compelling reads I've found in a while. Worth scanning through the comments too, as this young Amish escapee really gets into it with the commenters.




How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! Another way you can support me is by submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon.

How to Cut Up and Prepare a Pineapple

Today I'm going to share a convenient and easy technique you can use to slice up and prepare a pineapple.

This is a particularly timely subject for us here at Casual Kitchen because we're planning to spend a meaningful portion of the coming year in Hawaii. And during my stay there, I fully intend to eat so much pineapple that I actually get sick of this healthy, antioxidant-rich, and surprisingly inexpensive fruit.

Unfortunately the instructions (if any) that come with a typical store-bought pineapple tend to be cryptic and with little detail. But it's actually fairly easy to deal with this fruit, and after today's post--and a little practice--you too will be able to reduce a pineapple to a pile of delicious, bite-sized chunks in short order and with little mess.

Let's get started!

First, start by cutting of the top of the pineapple.

Then hack off the bottom with a clean and straight cut, so our topless and bottomless pineapple will be stable can stand up firmly on its own.

Now it's time to remove the outer husk. Make your first cut down the side of the pineapple, cutting away the outer skin. You have to cut in far enough to remove the "eyes" of the pineapple, but not so far in that you waste too much of the fruit.

Continue to work your way around the sides of the pineapple, letting the pieces of the outer husk pile up on the side of the cutting board.

After you're down to the bare, huskless pineapple, clear up your workspace a bit and get rid of all the detritus. We're about to get to the really fun part.

Pick a place about 1/2 an inch away from the core and make one cut straight down the entire pineapple:
Then follow it up with three more perpendicular slices around that core:



















We're almost done! Now you'll have four pineapple slabs of varying sizes laying about your cutting board. Lay each one flat-side-down and make cuts lengthwise....


And then cut them crosswise to make cubes of whatever size you prefer.

Repeat this with the other three slabs of pineapple and you're finished! Pile them up on a platter, take a photograph, and then dig in and enjoy.


Related Posts:
Eat Right to See Right: Foods for Better Eye Health

The Cutting Board Debate: Wood or Plastic?
Tapas-Style Potato Chips

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! Another way you can support me is by submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon.

Favorite Food Photography Links: CK Food Links--Friday July 18, 2008

Here are some of my personal favorite links on food photography.

When I started Casual Kitchen, I had no absolutely no clue how to take food photographs (heck, I didn't even know that food photography was a discipline at all). But over the past year or so, I've been paying much more attention to this aspect of my blog, and I've even surprised myself with an occasional halfway-decent food photo.

Here are the articles and sites that have helped me the most in my efforts to learn how to take better photographs of food:

Shoot First, Eat Later from Food & Wine.com
Nine concise and rapid-fire tips for taking better food photos. Basic and extremely helpful.

Tasteful Food Photography from O'Reilly Digital Media
A great post on how to get professional-grade food photos with a minimum of expense and equipment. Useful suggestions here on using closeups and styling with inexpensive garnishes.

Two instructive posts on food photography from the Digital Photography School:
1) Food Photography Tips and Techniques
Great ideas on composition, angles and styling.
2) Food Photography: An Introduction
An older post on the same site with still more useful hints.

Our Approach to Food Photos from Smitten Kitchen
This article, when it came out last fall, was a key catalyst that got me interested in food photography. If Deb and Alex can take such amazing food photos as amateurs, perhaps I can too!

A Few Observations About Photography from Use Real Butter
In my opinion, Jen Yu is one of the most gifted amateur food photographers out there, so I was really happy when she recently posted her insights on the subject.

An Insider's Look at Food Photography from Shutterbug
Fascinating discussion of the various various tricks of the trade used by the professional food photographers. Won't be terribly useful for amateurs who actually plan to eat the food they photograph (mmm....glycerin) but interesting nonetheless.

The Dirty Tricks of Food Photographers from Photocritic.org
Still more, and even grosser, tricks of the trade. Amusing to read all the indignation in the comments.

Finally, at Flickr, there is a massive amount of information in the food photography discussion boards. I'm still scratching the surface there.

How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by subscribing to my RSS feed, or submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon.


The Rice Cooker: Addendum

A few extra (and scattered) thoughts on the merits of owning a rice cooker occurred to me since my initial post on the subject:

1) Different Grains
Rice cookers enable you to cook any kind or rice and still be certain that the rice will come out well. Thus you can try more dainty types of rice that might not hold up quite as well in a pan. Imagine, instead of making plain old run of the mill rice, what about beginning a regular habit of trying different rice varieties? You could try extra-fragrant rice varieties such as basmati or jasmine rice, or try the thick starchy goodness of arborio rice. Any of these rice types can be cooked in a rice cooker without difficulty.

2) Would You Like Your Rice Al Dente?
You can also make any type of rice "softer" or "harder" in texture by modifying slightly the amount of water you add to the pan. Do you prefer your rice a bit al dente? Just fill the rice cooker with water to a bit below the appropriate numbered line. Do you prefer your rice a bit mushier and softer? Fill it a bit above the line.

After you've made your fair share of batches of rice with your new rice cooker, you'll be well on your way to becoming a rice epicure.

3) Rice and Diet
A quick follow up thought on using rice to stretch out meals. Last time, we talked about how many of our favorite recipes, like Groundnut Stew and Crockpot Chili, could be served on top of rice. This extra serving of rice was a great way to stretch out meals as much as 30% or more, making meals all the more laughably cheap and letting us cook a little less often. The problem is, if you're the type of person who eats 30% more food at every meal as a result of using a rice cooker, all of my savings assumptions obviously collapse in a heap of pure white carbs. White rice is not necessarily a healthy food when eaten to excess.

4) An Irrelevant Comment on Outsourcing
Back when I got my rice cooker, the consensus opinion was that you had to get a Japanese-made rice cooker. Amusingly, even my Chinese classmates had Japanese rice cookers and viewed them as superior and much more reliable.

Now, of course, all of the Japanese rice cooker makers outsource their manufacturing to China. So I suppose these distinctions are meaningless now.

But I think I can still safely say my rice cooker, which was a college graduation gift dating back more than 17 years ago, turned out to be the most reliable item in the entire history of our kitchen. It's paid for itself dozens of times over.

Now that's a worthwhile kitchen tool.




* Full disclosure: if you enter Amazon via a link on my blog and buy something, I'll get a small commission on that purchase. Please think of it as my "tip jar"--and thanks so much to readers for all of your support.

Recipe Index

A list of all recipes in Casual Kitchen broken out by food categories, followed by a complete alphabetized recipe index.

Be sure to take a look at the Top Ten Most Popular Posts, the Best of Casual Kitchen page, and the full Index of Posts too!
******************
Recipes By Food Category:

Appetizers/Side Dishes
Beer Bread
Cornbread
Crispy Tangy Pierogies
Fattoush (Middle Eastern Salad)
Green Bean Salad
Homemade Corn Tortilla Chips
Mock Wild Rice
Pickled Beets
Pickled Eggs
Red Lentils and Rice
Spicy Brown Rice
Steamed Asparagus
Swiss Chard
How to Make Your Own Tabasco Sauce
Tapas-Style Potato Chips

Baked Goods and Breads
Beer Bread
Blueberry Coffee Cake
Wheat and Lime Muffins
Cornbread

Beef
Beef and Beer Stew
Burritos
Cajun Meatloaf
Chili
Corned Beef and Cabbage
Crockpot Beef Stew
Goulash Soup

Breakfast
Blueberry Coffee Cake
Boiled Eggs
The Granola Blogroll
An Easy Granola Recipe
Jazz Up Your Morning Eggs
Pickled Eggs
Frittata
Waffles
Wheat and Lime Muffins

Chicken
African Peanut Stew
Casbah Curried Chicken
Chicken Marsala
Chicken Mole
Thai Pasta Salad

Crockpot
Chili
Corned Beef and Cabbage
Crockpot Beef Stew

Desserts
Apple Pie
Blueberry Coffee Cake
Chocolate Mousse (Paul Prudhomme)
Mint Melt Cookies

Drink Recipes
Acapulco
Gimlet
Gin and Tonic
Mojitos
Quickfix (How to Make Your Own Sports Drink)
Shandy
Tequila Sunrise

Eggs:
Frittata
Pickled Eggs
Boiled Eggs
Eggs, jazzed up

Energy-Dense Meals (read: not low-fat)
Barbecued Shrimp (Paul Prudhomme)
Beef and Beer Stew
Braised Pork in Guajillo Chile Sauce
Cajun Meatloaf
Corned Beef and Cabbage
Frittata
Navy Bean and Kielbasa Soup
Pickled Eggs
Viennese Potato Soup
Pernil (Roast Pork Shoulder)
Rumbledethumps

For the Grill
Grilled Tuna Steaks

Pasta
Arrabbiata Sauce
Chickpeas, Pasta and Tomato Salad
Farfalle with Mushrooms and Gorgonzola Cheese
Greek Pasta with Spinach, Olives, Tomatoes and White Beans
Italian Sausage and Tortellini Soup
Pasta with Ken's
Pasta Puttanesca
Pasta with Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
Pasta with Tuna, Olives and Roasted Red Peppers
Penne Pasta Salad
Sauteed Penne with Broccoli and Chickpeas
Shells with Artichoke Hearts in Lemon-Oregano Vinaigrette
Thai Pasta Salad

Pork
Braised Pork in Guajillo Chile Sauce
Curried Pork with Apples
Mexicali Pork Chops
Pernil (Roast Pork Shoulder)

Salads
Chickpeas, Pasta and Tomato Salad
Fattoush (Middle Eastern Salad)
Farfalle with Mushrooms and Gorgonzola Cheese
Green Bean Salad
Pasta with Tuna, Olives and Roasted Red Peppers
Penne Pasta Salad
Salad Dressing Recipes
Sauteed Penne with Broccoli and Chickpeas
Savory Moroccan Chickpeas
Shells with Artichoke Hearts in Lemon-Oregano Vinaigrette
Thai Pasta Salad

Soups/Stews
African Peanut Stew
Beef and Beer Stew
Casbah Curried Chicken
Catalan Mushroom Soup (Sopa de Bolets)
Chili
Crockpot Beef Stew
Corn Chowdah
Fresh Corn and Tomato Soup
Garden Gumbo
Goulash Soup
Groundnut Stew
Italian Sausage and Tortellini Soup
Lentil Soup
Mushroom, Barley and Swiss Chard Soup
Navy Bean and Kielbasa Soup
Portuguese Kale and Potato Soup
Smoky Brazilian Black Bean Soup
Sopa de Lima
Southern Black-Eyed Pea Soup with Collards
Spanish Chickpea and Garlic Soup
Spicy Eggplant Ratatouille
Easy Split Pea Soup
Viennese Potato Soup
White Bean and Black Olive Soup
Wintry Tomato Vegetable Soup

Shrimp
Barbecued Shrimp (Paul Prudhomme)
Camarones Ajillo (Shrimp in Garlic Sauce)
Lime and Chipotle Shrimp
Shells with Artichoke Hearts in Lemon-Orgeno Vinaigrette
Shrimp in Tomato Sauce

Vegetarian
Arrabbiata Sauce
Beer Bread
Black Beans and Rice
Catalan Mushroom Soup (Sopa de Bolets)
Chickpeas, Pasta and Tomato Salad
Cornbread
Farfalle with Mushrooms and Gorgonzola Cheese
Fattoush (Middle Eastern Salad)
Fresh Corn and Tomato Soup
Frittata
Garden Gumbo
Greek Pasta with Spinach, Olives, Tomatoes and White Beans
Green Bean Salad
Groundnut Stew
Homemade Corn Tortilla Chips
Lentil Soup
Mushroom, Barley and Swiss Chard Soup
Pasta with Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
Penne Pasta Salad
Pickled Beets
Portuguese Kale and Potato Soup
Red Lentils and Rice
Risotto
Rumbledethumps
Sauteed Penne with Broccoli and Chickpeas
Salad Dressing Recipes
Savory Moroccan Chickpeas
Smoky Brazilian Black Bean Soup
Southern Black-Eyed Pea Soup with Collards
Sopa de Lima
Spanish Chickpea and Garlic Soup
Spicy Brown Rice
Spicy Eggplant Ratatouille
Spicy Sauteed Beets
Easy Split Pea Soup
Steamed Asparagus
Swiss Chard
Thai-Style Tofu in Coconut and Lime Sauce
Versatile Vegetable Stock
Tapas-Style Potato Chips
Wheat and Lime Muffins
White Bean and Black Olive Soup
Wintry Tomato Vegetable Soup

Rice
Black Beans and Rice
Collard Greens with Rice and Kielbasa
Fried Rice
Mock Wild Rice
Red Lentils and Rice
Risotto
Spicy Brown Rice

Seafood
Barbecued Shrimp (Paul Prudhomme)
Camarones Ajillo (Shrimp in Garlic Sauce)
Grilled Tuna Steaks
Lime and Chipotle Shrimp
Pasta with Tuna, Olives and Roasted Red Peppers
Seafood Stock
Shrimp in Tomato Sauce


Alphabetized Recipe List:

A
Acapulco
African Peanut Stew
Arrabbiata Sauce
Apple Pie
Steamed Asparagus

B
Barbecued Shrimp (Paul Prudhomme)
Beef and Beer Stew
Beef Stew (Crockpot)
Beer Bread
Beets, pickled
Black Beans and Rice
Southern Black-Eyed Pea Soup with Collards
Blueberry Coffee Cake
Braised Pork in Guajillo Chile Sauce
Brown Rice, Spicy
Burritos

C
Cajun Meatloaf
Caldo Verde
Camarones Ajillo (Shrimp in Garlic Sauce)
Casbah Curried Chicken
Catalan Mushroom Soup (Sopa de Bolets)
Chicken Marsala
Chicken Mole
Chickpeas, Pasta and Tomato Salad
Savory Moroccan Chickpeas
Chili
Chocolate Mousse (Paul Prudhomme)
Collard Greens with Rice and Kielbasa
Corn and Tomato Soup
Corn Chowdah
Corn Tortilla Chips, Homemade
Cornbread
Corned Beef and Cabbage
Crispy Tangy Pierogies
Crockpot Beef Stew
Curried Pork with Apples

E
Eggs, boiled
Eggs, jazzed up
Eggs, pickled
Spicy Eggplant Ratatouille

F
Farfalle with Mushrooms and Gorgonzola Cheese
Fattoush (Middle Eastern Salad)
Fresh Corn and Tomato Soup
Fried Rice
Frittata

G
Garden Gumbo
Gimlet
Gin and Tonic
Goulash Soup
An Easy Granola Recipe
The Granola Blogroll
Greek Pasta with Spinach, Olives, Tomatoes and White Beans
Green Bean Salad
Grilled Tuna Steaks
Groundnut Stew

I
Italian Sausage and Tortellini Soup

K
Portuguese Kale and Potato Soup

L
Lentil Soup
Lime and Chipotle Shrimp

M
Meatloaf, Cajun
Mexicali Pork Chops
Mint Melts (cookies)
Mock Wild Rice
Mojitos
Mole Sauce
Mushroom, Barley and Swiss Chard Soup

N
Navy Bean and Kielbasa Soup

P
Pasta Puttanesca
Pasta with Ken's
Pasta with Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
Pasta with Tuna, Olives and Roasted Red Peppers
Penne Pasta Salad
Pernil (Roast Pork Shoulder)
Pickled Beets
Pickled Eggs
Pie, Apple
Portuguese Kale and Potato Soup
Sauteed Penne with Broccoli and Chickpeas

Q
Quickfix (How to Make Your Own Sports Drink)

R
Red Lentils and Rice
Risotto
Roasted Red Pepper Sauce, with Pasta
Roast Pork Shoulder (Pernil)
Rumbledethumps

S
Salad Dressing Recipes
Sauteed Penne with Broccoli and Chickpeas
Savory Moroccan Chickpeas
Seafood Stock
Shandy
Shells with Artichoke Hearts in Lemon-Oregano Vinaigrette
Shrimp, Barbecued (Paul Prudhomme)
Shrimp in Garlic Sauce (Camarones Ajillo)
Shrimp in Tomato Sauce
Shrimp, Lime and Chipotle
Smoky Brazilian Black Bean Soup
Sopa de Bolets (Catalan Mushroom Soup)
Sopa de Lima
Southern Black-Eyed Pea Soup with Collards
Spanish Chickpea and Garlic Soup
Spicy Brown Rice
Spicy Eggplant Ratatouille
Spicy Sauteed Beets
Easy Split Pea Soup
Stock, Vegetable
Swiss Chard

T
How to Make Your Own Tabasco Sauce
Tapas-Style Potato Chips
Tequila Sunrise
Thai Pasta Salad
Thai-Style Tofu in Coconut and Lime Sauce
Tortilla Chips, Homemade
Tuna Steaks, Grilled

V
Versatile Vegetable Stock
Viennese Potato Soup

W
Waffles
Weiner Kartoffelsuppe
Wheat and Lime Muffins
White Bean and Black Olive Soup
Wintry Tomato Vegetable Soup


How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by linking to me, subscribing to my RSS feed, or submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon.