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Huevos rancheros

Mexican breakfast dish

Huevos rancheros

Summary

Mexican breakfast dish

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image5Mmm... Huevos rancheros with Mexican rice and braised pork.jpg
image6HeuvosRancheros.jpg
footerDifferent preparations of Huevos Rancheros
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countryMexico
courseBreakfast
main_ingredientTortillas, eggs, salsa, refried beans, avocado or guacamole

Huevos rancheros (, 'ranch-style eggs') is a breakfast egg dish served in the style of the traditional large mid-morning fare on rural Mexican farms.

History

The label "ranchero" refers to the rancheros or vaqueros (cowherds or cowboys), the men in charge of cattle and horses in the Mexican haciendas; the name can be translated as “cowboy eggs”. It was typical among the rancheros to cook their dishes, such as beef, pork, turkey, and even eggs, in a chile sauce (salsa). The original name of the dish, as it appears in 19th century Mexican cookbooks, was "huevos estrellados en chile colorado" (sunny side-up eggs in red chile sauce) or “huevos estrellados en chile verde” (sunny side-up eggs in a green chile sauce); the moniker “rancheros” was applied by people from the cities.

The eggs were simply cooked in a mixture of red or green chile sauce and lard. A recipe for the dish appears in Manuel Galvan Rivera’s “El Nuevo Cocinero Mexicano en Forma de Diccionario” (1845), where it instructs the reader to use pasilla and ancho chiles, both toasted and deveined, and roasted tomatoes for the red salsa, or green chiles and tomatillos for the green salsa. The salsa was then put in a pot with lard to fry, after which the eggs were cracked opened and dropped into it to cook. When ready, they were removed and served sprinkled over with “queso añejo rallado” or grated aged cheese.

Another recipe, but under the name "Huevos Rancheros", appears in a Puebla manual in 1898, and its the exact same recipe as the one in Galvan Rivera’s cookbook:

In her book Mexico as I saw it (1901), Ethel Brilliana Tweedie, while eating in a Mexico City restaurant, recounts:

In all three cases, there is no mention of tortillas or any other side dish, it was simply eggs cooked in a red or green chile sauce.

Basic dish

Huevos rancheros with eggs, refried beans, blue corn tortillas, carnitas, salsa, pickled onions, sour cream, and cilantro

The basic dish consists of fried eggs served on lightly fried or charred corn or flour tortillas topped with a spicy salsa made of tomatoes, chili peppers, and onion. Common accompaniments include refried beans, Mexican-style rice, and guacamole or slices of avocado, with cilantro as a garnish.

Variants

As the dish spread beyond Mexico, variations using pureed chile or enchilada sauce instead of tomato-chili pico de gallo have appeared. Non-Mexican additions such as cheese, sour cream, and lettuce also have become common additions beyond the dish's native range.

In New Mexico, huevos rancheros use red or green New Mexico chile instead of ranchero sauce, rarely include rice, and typically include hash browns, refried beans, and melted cheese on top. In some cases, meat is also included.

thumb|Huevos divorciados Huevos divorciados (divorced eggs) are simply two eggs served in the same style as huevos rancheros but with a different sauce for each egg – usually a salsa roja and a salsa verde.

Similar dishes are huevos motuleños of Yucatan and New Mexican enchiladas montadas.

Another variation, huevos ahogados or drowned eggs, is a traditional Mexican breakfast of eggs poached in a tomato-chile salsa.

Notes

References

  • Leonard, Jonathan Norton, (1968) Latin-American Cooking, Time-Life Books
  • Ortiz, Elizabeth Lambert, (1967) The Complete Book of Mexican Cooking, M. Evans and Co.
  • Paddleford, Clementine, (1960) How America Eats, Charles Scribner's Sons

References

  1. Kuhn, Shannon. (April 4, 2013). "Another day at the ranch". [[Anchorage Press]].
  2. Lin, Andrea. (February 17, 2012). "Good Morning, Sunshine". [[Albuquerque Journal]].
  3. (1929). "Red Tiger: Adventures in Yucatan and Mexico". Robert M. McBride & Company.
  4. (1845). "Diccionario de cocina o el nuevo cocinero mexicano en forma de diccionario". Imprenta de I. Cumplido.
  5. (1898). "Agenda para familia, conteniendo tabla para sueldo de criados, recetas escojidos de cocinas, recetas utiles diversas, listas para lavado de ropa, listas para gastos diarios". Tipografia de Las Escuelas Salesianas.
  6. (1901). "Mexico as I Saw It". The Macmillan Company.
  7. John Tissot. (1998). "Around the World on a Breakfast Tray". Nova Publishers.
  8. (1990). "The Well-filled Tortilla Cookbook". Workman Publishing.
  9. "Barelas Coffee House menu".
  10. "Frontier Restaurant menu".
  11. "Los Cuates Restaurant menu".
  12. "Weck's Restaurant menu".
  13. Dona Savitsky & Thomas Schnetz. (2006). "Dona Tomas: Discovering Authentic Mexican Cooking". Random House Digital, Inc..
  14. Rick Bayless, JeanMarie Brownson & Deann Groen Bayless. (1996). "Rick Bayless's Mexican Kitchen". [[Charles Scribner's Sons.
  15. DeWitt, Dave. (). "How to order enchiladas in Santa Fe".
  16. Ingrid Hoffmann. (2013). "Latin D'Lite: Deliciously Healthy Recipes With a Latin Twist". Penguin.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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