Saturday, June 4, 2011

Chilaquiles: The Best Thing I Ever Ate (Breakfast Edition)


You know that show The Best Thing I Ever Ate on the Food Network?  The one where famous chefs talk about their favorite meals?  Well whenever I watch this show, it always spurs a conversation in my house about what the best thing I ever ate was.  For someone who loves food and traveling as much as I do, trying to narrow down my favorite meals is usually no small task.

But I have to say that when it comes to breakfast, there is one meal that stands out above all others in my mind: the chilaquiles I had on my 29th birthday at Hell's Backbone Grill in Boulder, Utah.  Even though I had lived in Utah for 4 years at the time, I had never heard of Boulder, Utah or Hell's Backbone Grill until I picked up Bon Appetit's May 2009 issue and read the article The United Plates of America: A Guide to the Best Things to Eat, Drink, and Buy in All 50 States (if you haven't read this article before, I recommend that you click on it - you just might discover something that you didn't know about in your own state too).  After I read the article, I googled Hell's Backbone and saw that it had also won acclaim from Fodor's, the New York Times, and Zagat and I decided that I absolutely had to eat there before I moved away.

So for my birthday we went on a road trip and camped in various parts of Southern Utah.  We ended up at Hell's Backbone on the morning of my birthday for brunch:

 
I ordered the chilaquiles and I was blown away.  Of course I had had chilaquiles before, but none this good.  Maybe it was just because everything tastes better when you've been camping.  Maybe I was on a birthday celebration high.  Whatever the reason, these chilaquiles were the BEST. THING. I. EVER. ATE!

Watching that show on the Food Network gave me a fierce craving for this delicious dish.  Since I'm 650 miles away from Hell's Backbone this morning, I decided that I had better just make some for myself.

Chilaquiles (pronounced chee-lah-kee-less)

vegetable oil (for frying the tortillas)
8-12 small corn or flour tortillas (if you don't have tortillas on hand, you can use tortilla chips instead)
salt (to season the tortillas with)
1 14 oz can of red chile sauce (if you can't find red chile sauce, substitute salsa or enchilada sauce)
6 eggs, scrambled
1 Tbsp heavy whipping cream
grated cheddar cheese (as a garnish)

Pour enough vegetable oil into a large skillet to cover the bottom and heat over medium heat.  Cut tortillas into quarters:


Once oil is heated, fry tortilla pieces in three separate batches for about 2-3 minutes per side (until starting to lightly brown and crisp slightly).

When you first put the tortilla pieces in the oil, they'll look like this:


After 2 -3 minutes, flip them over (they should be light brown and slightly crisp, like so):


Remove tortilla pieces from skillet and season with salt.  Drain tortilla pieces on a paper towel lined plate (to remove excess oil):


Remove excess oil from skillet and add red chile sauce:


Heat until just boiling, then reduce heat and simmer for about 5 minutes to heat sauce through:


As the sauce heats, whisk 6 eggs and 1 Tbsp cream together in a medium sized bowl:


And scramble over medium heat in a separate skillet:


Once sauce has heated, add tortilla pieces, turning to coat:


Cook until tortillas start to soften slightly (about 3 - 5 minutes).  Remove tortillas and place at the bottom of a shallow bowl:


Top with scrambled eggs:


Drizzle with more red chile sauce:


Top with cheese and enjoy!

1 comment:

Lisa said...

There's a place in Tucson that serves these and we LOVE them! Never tried them at home, but this looks lovely. Thanks for the recipe - I'm sharing it with my Tucson friends for sure.