Tamales911

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htc

Head Chef
Joined
Sep 8, 2004
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I have tossed around the idea of making tamales soon. I've never made any so wanted to see if anyone has advice for me. The last time I tried to make "real mexican" food, it was a soup and it was TERRIBLE!!! I did something wrong (think it was roast the dried peppers) too long and it turned out bitter and I tossed the soup.

Lugaru, if you're out there, maybe you can give me a few pointers on tamales.
 
I have made tamales myself, many times. While there are lots of different kinds, they are all made out of this basic stuff and they are quite easy to make, too.

Here are the basic ingredients and procedure

You need
- Masaharina or Maseca (corn flour)
- chicken broth
- Fat (it can be butter, margarine, pork fat, vegetable oil, etc But pork fat is the best kind for 100% original tamale recipes)
- Salt
- Seasoned tomato sauce (This is called "recado" in Spanish. It may be as thick or thin as you like. It may also be mild or hot. See below for ingredients)
- Aluminium foil
- A large pot with boiling water

Recado (tomato Sauce)

- Tomatoes
- green and/or red peppers
- Chilli peppers (if you want it hot)
- onions (sliced)
- vegetable oil
- cilantro
- salt, oregano and pepper to taste.

Bake the tomatoes, onions and peppers (yup, bake as in "stick them in the oven, until tender" Use a greased (with oil) cookie sheet or Pyrex dish)
When done, wait until they cool off and peel the skin off the veggies. Then liquify with cilantro, oregano, salt, pepper and chilli peppers. Ad chicken broth if you like it thin, let it be if you like it thick.


Procedure
Make a dough with the corn flour and fat. The consistency should be like "Play Doh". Season to taste with salt. if you want to make "light" tamales, use chicken broth instead of fat. They will taste good but they will turn out dry. Or you can combine broth and fat. In this case, first ad the broth and THEN, when you have a smooth dough (no lumps) ad the fat.

Once you have your "Play Doh" consistency dough, make tennis ball size tamales and wrap them in aluminium foil. Let them simmer in the boiling water for 20 minutes. Take them out of the heat and dry the wrapped balls with a kitchen towel, then unwrap, serve on a plate and cover with your tomato sauce and sprinkle with "queso duro" (hard cheese) which looks and kinda tastes like parmesan cheese.

This is the quick and easy way to make tamales. It can't go wrong. Unless your dough is too soft..., Which you can fix by adding more corn flour to the dough, BEFORE you cook it.

Hope this helps a bit... Good luck
:roll:
 
I have little to add after Magia... man you rock and roll!

Also in the thread that alix linked to I have the recipy for completely from scratch sinaloa style sweet and buttery corn tamales. Southwestern is yet another option which Im not the biggest fan of but sometimes it's interesting, somewhat like wrapped cornbread with some cayene.
 
Wow, thanks so much for the all the info, and the other link.

I friend of mine who has made tamales before is going to come and supervise me! :)

One quick question...can I use a metal asian steamer? I don't think I've ever seen what a tamale steamer looks like...mine is multi level. the bottom has water, the next level has a tray w/ big holes in it and then it has a lid. I use it to make asian bao all of the time...
 
htc said:
Wow, thanks so much for the all the info, and the other link.

I friend of mine who has made tamales before is going to come and supervise me! :)

One quick question...can I use a metal asian steamer? I don't think I've ever seen what a tamale steamer looks like...mine is multi level. the bottom has water, the next level has a tray w/ big holes in it and then it has a lid. I use it to make asian bao all of the time...

A "proper" tamale steamer is a total "cheapware" metal pot made out of that hollwed out metal, I forget what you call it in english. So in other words yeah, your asian steamer is probably 3 times better than the real thing.
 
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