Well, I’ve sure been adventurous gastronomically yesterday and today! I tried out two unfamiliar cuisines: Mexican and Indian. One from across the border, the other from way across the ocean. But one of them were done my way (aka totally unauthentic) and the other was quite authentic.
Yesterday I met up with my church friends for our weekly prayer group together. This week I offered to host the gathering and the dinner afterwards.
After my horrible first Mexican cuisine experience at Chili’s, I decided to give Mexican cuisine another try…but manipulating it into “Sophia cuisine.” I didn’t want to make something all fancy and fussy, so I stuck to just three simple courses: soup, salad, and enchiladas as the main dish.
I wanted to make enchiladas from scratch, and not use enchilada sauce from a can. So after browsing through several recipes online, my mind began to twist and churn to devise my own style of enchiladas. Here’s what I came up with:
Avocado-Chicken Enchiladas with Spicy Pumpkin Sauce
For the sauce:
- ½ onion, finely chopped
- 1 big tomato, chopped
- 2 chipotle pepper in adobado sauce and 1 tsp of the sauce
- 1 cup pumpkin puree
- 2 cups chicken broth
- cumin, chili powder, and salt to taste
- 1/2 cup Greek yogurt
For the enchiladas:
- 12 corn tortillas
- vegetable oil
- 2 avocadoes, pitted and mashed
- 1 cup whipped cottage cheese
- 1 tsp lemon juice
- cumin, salt, and pepper to taste
- 1/4 cup chopped green onions
- 2 cups grilled chicken breast, chopped
- 1 cup sharp Cheddar Cheese
- 1 cup Four-blend Mexican Cheese
- 1/2 cup Parmesan Cheese
For the sauce, cook the onion, tomatoes, and chipotle pepper with the sauce in a pot with some oil until tender. Then pour in the pumpkin and broth, season and taste as you go. Boil and simmer until thick. Turn off the heat, stir in the yogurt then set the pot aside.
For the filling: mash together the avocado, cottage cheese and lemon juice, season to taste. Mix in the green onions.
Meanwhile, heat in another pan about ½ inch of vegetable oil.
Dip one tortilla a time until heated through and soft.
Place the tortillas on a plate and let them cool just enough to handle them.
Then place some chicken in the middle of the tortilla with the avocado mixture and fold. Do this with the rest of the tortillas placing them on a baking dish.
Soak them with the pumpkin sauce, top with cheese and pop it into a 350 degree oven for 20 minutes until cheese is melted and everyone comes running after the heavenly aroma.
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I’m sorry, but the pictures don’t do them justice. Enchiladas are just plain ugly. But oh they were soooo good!
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It was rich, creamy, spicy, sweet, chewy and crunchy all at the same time. Talk about a fiesta in the mouth!
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You all know anything with pumpkin in it and smothered in cheese and I’m sold, but I was worried my friends wouldn’t like this new variation of enchiladas…but thankfully, it was gone in a few seconds!
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On the side I also made some kabocha-roasted red bell pepper soup:
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And a salad:
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Romaine lettuce, baby carrots, orange and yellow bell peppers, celery, strawberries, and grape tomatoes.
And blue corn chips and salsa:
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Today I met my old high school friend, Ashley for lunch. Her brother, Martin, is friends with my brother, so all four of us met up. We decided to be adventurous and try out a popular Indian restaurant in my neighborhood, Amma’s Vegetarian Kitchen. I had checked up on it online, and it had gotten pretty good reviews, and apparently frequented mainly by Indians. And I knew if the majority of the customers were Indians, it had to be authentic!
Ashley had the special of the day, the pongal aviyal:
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The owner was really ambiguous with his explanations. He just said it’s some kind of mixed lentil and vegetables with banana and coconut. It was really interesting, sort of like an Indian-style risotto. A bit sweet, with spots of spice from whole peppercorns and mustard seeds.
Martin had the onion rava masala dosa:
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Spiced potatoes and onions wrapped in a crepe made from
semolina, sprinkled cumin seeds, ginger and green chilis,
topped with onions.
My brother ordered the amma’s feast:
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Traditional South Indian meal consisting of rice, chappathi,
vegetable curry, sambar, rasam, pappadum, pickle, raita and
samiya payasam.
The whadda-what? I have no idea what which was which, but here’s a wild guess:
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The rasam (super-sour and spicy tomato soup) and chana masala(nice).
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Another kind of vegetable curry and sambar.
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The rice, chappathi, and pappadum.
Phew. There is more, but you all know what raita (spiced yogurt with cucumbers) is, and the samiya payasam was white and milky and looked just like the raita. Sweet and bleh.
I ordered the mysore sada dosa:
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Crepe spread with spicy chutney
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Holy crackers! This was HUGE! And really spicy! In a sour, shooting kind of way that wasn’t too pleasant. I usually don’t believe restaurants when they claim a dish to be spicy, but this just turned my stomach into a cauldron…a cauldron of spitting fire!
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I had to borrow my brother’s raita to cool it down, but it was still pretty horrible:
This came with sambar (vegetable curry stew):
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And some kind of coconut chutney that turned me off:
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After our little Indian gastronomy adventure we trooped off for something cooling to quell the fire in our tummies. And what is more cooling than ice-cream? And what is even better and richer than frozen custard!!
Despite having lived in this area for 7-8 years, I had never paid the acclaimed Nielson’s Frozen Custard a visit. Nielson’s is said to make the richest and creamiest frozen custard with best quality ingredients, and they change their flavors regularly. Most days they only have 5 flavors available. Today’s flavors were: Peach, cool mint, caramel, pistachio, strawberry, and cream-sicle.
Ashely and Martin shared the strawberry:
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My brother got a cream-sicle cone:
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And I dived into the pistachio in a cup:
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This was another challenge for me. Ice-cream used to be one of my trigger foods…it provokes a lot of horrible memories of me binging on it by the gallons then purging the whole night long. I’ve been avoiding it like the plague, but it was time to face it. A summer without ice-cream is a sad summer after all…and now I know it’s gonna be a great summer because I enjoyed each and every lick and bite!
Yum! Frozen custard saves the day! Although the Indian restaurant was interesting, I really don’t think I’ll be visiting again. Or if I do, I’m definitely ordering something else. And I will believe them when they say a dish is spicy…Or better yet, I’ll just make Indian food the “Sophia cuisine” way
Oh and two reminders:
- Have you signed up for our Warm Fuzzies game yet? Some of you left rather ambiguous comments, so I wasn’t sure whether or not I should add you to our list of participants. Please check the list on our Warm Fuzzie page for your name! If your name is not there and you’d like to join, please shoot me a comment or an email.
- I’m still open for all BSI: Corn recipes! Check out the BSI page for the list of recipes that have been submitted, and for more details.
Question of the day: Look above!
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Awesome Mexican creation! I usually get Chipotle when I do Mexican. I don’t know if I’ve ever tried to make anything other than an eggy burrito.
That Indian food looks *amazing*. I usually get sick when I eat Indian food but I would seriously try all of those things.
Congrats on the ice cream
Yay for overcoming triggers!
Wow, you’re certainly being the international gastronomic!
Congratulations on facing the ice cream! Now it can really be summer.
<3 <3
Wow, you’re certainly being the international gastronomic!
Congratulations on facing the ice cream! Now it can really be summer.
<3 <3
Wow, you’re certainly being the international gastronomic!
Congratulations on facing the ice cream! Now it can really be summer.
<3 <3
Wow, you’re certainly being the international gastronomic!
Congratulations on facing the ice cream! Now it can really be summer.
<3 <3
Wow, you’re certainly being the international gastronomic!
Congratulations on facing the ice cream! Now it can really be summer.
<3 <3
I think that you and I live in the same town! Nielson’s is a family favorite of ours and although Amma’s is also nearby us I never have ventured there myself. It sounds like a place to go without the kids!
I always LOVE reading about all your delicious looking creations. Ice cream is a difficult food for me too but I am definitely looking forward to trying some this summer!
Pumpkin sauce on an enchilada? That’s new to me!! That looks really good though. yummy!
I love Indian food, though. especially masalas and curries. Plus the dosa, simosas and naan breads. you did pick a great place to cool down after that meal though. Custard’s are awesome!!!
I’ve actually never had much Indian cuisine, but it looks very interesting! I love spicy things, so it could be my cuppa tea =) And that custard looks drool-worthy! So glad you overcame your ice cream trigger–it’s the best food ever made. Dreamy+creamy=love!
Way to go with the enchilada!! You’ll have to try taco soup one of these days – nice and spicy but delicious! I’ve never had Indian food but I think I’m seriously missing out!
You rocked that enchilada! The kombucha sauce sounds so interestingly FABuLOUS!
I always think I like Indian food..then I get it and I realize it just ain’t my thang! I would way rather eat Japanese or Chinese or Mexicano or Greek or Italian!
Way to be creative and open to trying new cuisine! That’s another HUGE step forward in your recovery!
Yikes, that Indian meal doesn’t look like it would be for me either. I’m just not a mega-spicy person.
But that frozen custard sure looks more like me. Haha, I love your flavor choice… YUM!
Wow, that’s some neon-green pistachio. I love frozen custard. I still remember when my friends in Milwaukee took me for some. So thick and rich. Just incredible!
Today the cuisines don’t belong to a country or region practically everywhere there’re fusion cuisines.
Those enchiladas are big fiesta for me they’ve all the “y” possible so yumm-y!
You know you make crazy with ice-creams …unbelievably good! and I’m far to dinner…
Cheers!
Gera
Yum!!! What a great combo of flavors!!
You are amazing. Looks delish!
Sophie-you’ve named all the Indian dishes correctly!!Full marks on that. I’m surprised that it was really spicy-it’s mostly mildly spicy in all the restaurants we visited here in the U.S. Also,I’m quite surprised that the pongal had bananas and was slightly sweet-I have the recipe on my blog.You could give it a try-you need split mung dal and rice.
WOW!! you guys must have had so much fun.
Even Im hearing about a Pongal-Avial for the first time. Pongal is generally a risotto type indian dish made with yellow split lentils or green mung lentils and rice with ofcourse, the specks of peppercorn in it. Avial is basically another dish from South India which is made with a mix of veggies like raw plantains ( which might be the banana in it), carrot, potatoes, cucumber, gourd etc in a coconut-yoghurt gravy with some ground thai green chillies and cumin to spice it up a little. Maybe they served a mix of these two which is why you found the veggies in the Pongal.
Also in the Amma’s fest, in the third picture, where you didnt know the name of the ‘some vegetable curry”..now, that looks like avial to me!
Hope this was not too long and you understood
I had things to say but seriously you posted too many good looking eats and now i’m overwhelmed with the sound of my belly going “FEED ME, FEED ME!” I can’t think!
OMG please tell me you deliver! you mex food looks muy bueno! BUEN PROVECHO
Your enchiladas look good! But wait, do I see avocados again??? I think you soon won’t be able to live without them anymore….
I’m glad that you were able to enjoy the frozen custard; it sounds delicious!
Your enchiladas rock! Especially the sauce! Sorry you didn’t have a good experience with the Indian food, but the pistachio custard more than makes up for it. Do you ever have words that just stick in your head, pappadum is one of them for me, I like the way it sounds. I think that’s sweet that you and your brother are spending time together. Yay for the warm fuzzies! I see a lot more fuzzy people have signed up.
Mmmm your enchiladas look amazing!!
Good job facing the ice cream fears, Sophia! I love how you took the challenge head on. Sorry the Indian food experience wasn’t totally pleasant though!! I hope you’ll give it another chance sometime. Or at least Sophia-ize it.
I’m loving the Avocado-Chicken Enchiladas – and your constant experimentation with avocados! Great stuff!
Indian sounds good – though I’m not sure if I would have been sold on a mixed lentil/banana/coconut explanation! I like the sound of spicy crepe best – and looovee your ice cream flavour choice! I’ mglad you could enjoy the pistachio goodness as well. Way to overcome a trigger food!
What a day full of taste treats! Your enchiladas sound amazing.
I’m so impressed with your food, it always looks SO good!
oh gosh I love your eats! I wish I can cook as good as you.
Hey I finally had the eggplant again and put the cooked picture up on the blog for you to see
Your Avocado-Chicken Enchiladas look yummy and addicting!
Yay for Indian food, I love it! Can’t wait to see Indian food your way!
All that food looks delicious. I especially love the pumpkin sauce on the enchiladas! They sound amazing
Funny…there’s a Nielson’s Frozen Custard near my husband’s childhood home. I wonder if it’s the same. That place is more like a fifties diner. I think it’s the same place Lara is thinking of in the comment above.
Love the enchiladas! When I was in middle school, my dad and I would go for Mexican food once a week when my mother worked late. I always got chicken enchiladas. I ordered them one too many times though, because I really can’t stand them anymore. The only good enchilada I’ve had in recent years was at Frontera Grill in Chicago – it was light and fresh without cheese.
I LOVE Indian food! And ice cream of course <3 So proud of ya for going for it!
LOVE the idea of the pumpkin sauce, all the food looks incredible as always and the photography amazing! You are terrific!
Yum! I agree enchiladas are hard to photograph and style-best course of action-dive in!
I am loving your enchiladas – the sauce sounds great! I haven’t eaten much Indian food – I don’t know if I could handle that much spice. The frozen custard sounds great…I am glad you faced a trigger food. I am SO proud of you!
You are such a domestic goddess! Those enchiladas look superb–I especially like the idea of a pumpkin sauce to go with them!
Sophia,
I hope you are having a great night sweetie! Hooray for Friday tomorrow, mais oui?
Your whole meal looks great. Your friends must simply adore you!
Have a glorious night, my darlin!
With Love,
Emily
OO indian food! That enchiladas look awesome!
ahhh u know I have some interesting avocado thing for you to see..cause i know you had tried to be creative with it…check this out..
http://www.gourmet.com/food/testkitchen/the-test-kitchen-challenge-avocado
and that dosa must’ve been SUPER SPICY cause i know you can take really spicy…so if that was spicy for you…wow…i can’t imagine your sniffling going on..
and yay for ice cream!!!!! me loves it and u should enjoy it too! yay to speaking against the ED…
The pumpkin sauce sounds wonderful with enchiladas! I’m bookmarking this! Love enchiladas.
You know, I have never had enchiladas. Seems to be a pretty popular food though. I really like the pumpkin sauce idea.
Ohman, I have a pretty good tolerance for spicy food, but Indian food makes me sweat like nothing else. And it’s not the same kind of spicy I’m used to, and can sometimes be downright upleasant. Ice cream sounds like a great way to cool off though!
those enchiladas look AMAZING Sophia- you’ve got some lucky friends!
YAY for ice cream- a summer withot it is just…not cool (it’s ‘hot’, lol) Never tried frozen custard- sounds delicious!
You have made me feel homsick after seeing the indian dishes you have had.
I do love dosa, plain and filled ones.
It is always better to go to a place were the original folks go then you know food is authentic.
Your enchiladas sound great – they have everything in them! Pumpkin, yoghurt, avocado and cheese. It sounds like a real treat.
Ooo, so many delicious things in one post! I love the enchiladas and the pumpkin sauce – excellent recipe!
I want those enchiladas. They look fantastic!!! Love avocado…I had enchiladas with avocado last week that were grilled and out of this world!
Pistachio ice cream or custard is my favorite!! YUM!
Hahaha I’m sorry you had a dissapointing experience at Chili’s, but that’s not Mexican! Give a tiny hole-in-the-wall Mexican restaurant a chance and hopefully the cuisine will be redeemed in your eyes! I shy away from spicy foods, so Mexican and Indian are not my top choice, but their non-spicy dishes are delicious and I do appreciate the spices and aromas. I have to say, though, I prefer home-made Indian/Mexican rather than restaurants, every single time! Thankfully, I’ve conviniently made friends with lots of people from those countries. Aren’t I sneaky?!
I wanted to send you an email, but I can’t find your address. What is it?
there should be a song about these enchiladas because they are singing to me!
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