Tuesday, August 12, 2014

This is one of our favorite meals.  I'm reposting the entire recipe, word for word, because I'm terrified to lose it.  Heidikins did a phenominal job.  Here's the link to the recipe.  I repeat, THE FOLLOWING IS NOT MY WORK.  I JUST WANT TO MAKE SURE I ALWAYS HAVE ACCESS TO IT.

http://heidikinscooks.com/2008/09/23/cafe-rio-pork-barbacoa-salad-with-tomatillo-dressing/

  • Total Prep-Time: 18 hours, technically. But most of that is just waiting for the pork to cook. I’d say active cook time for the entire meal was perhaps an hour, maybe 1 hour 15 mins. Lots of this meal (dressing, pico) can be made before-hand and kept in the fridge until it’s time to eat.
  • Was the recipe easy to follow: Extremely easy. It’s mostly chop, dump and marinate. Easy-peasy.
  • Are the ingredients easy to find: It took me a bit of searching in the Mexican Food section to find Chipotle Chilies in Adobo Sauce, and also a bit of googling to figure out what, exactly, a tomatillo looked like. But I found everything at my grocery store.
  • Do you need special equipment: Large-ish crock pot and a blender. A food processor would make quick work of the pico, although I chopped mine by hand.
  • Does the end result taste delicious: Oh. My. Freaking. Laws. YES! Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. This was the best meal I have ever made, hands down, no questions. And there were enough leftovers for my neighbors, and my room-mate, and a couple of meals for me. This makes a ton of food, but it will be eaten quickly. Try it, taste it, and you’ll understand why. Fan-tabulous!
  • Cafe Rio Pork Barbacoa
    5-6 lb. pork roast
    21 oz. Dr. Pepper (or Coke, do NOT use diet soda)
    1 cup brown sugar
    3/4 cup white sugar
    1 clove garlic, minced
    7 oz. can chipotle chilies in adobo sauce
    6-ish oz. red taco sauce (I used hot)
    1 tsp dry mustard
    1 tsp cumin
    1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
    Place roast in crock-pot, cover half-way with water and cook on low for 12 hours. (I started my Pork Adventure at midnight and everything worked out perfectly for Sunday dinner at 6:00 pm.) After 12 hours, drain pork (retain liquid if you want sauce for burritos, simply mix with a can of verde enchilada sauce and away you go).
    Mix remaining ingredients until sugar dissolves. I didn’t keep the actual chilies, I dumped the can into a bowl and added enough Dr. Pepper to get all the sauce off of the chilies, then I tossed them. I also rinsed out the can with Dr. Pepper for more adobo goodness. My version had a fairly good kick to it, but if you LOVE hotness, then blend everything + 2 or 3 chilies in the blender. (Also, the adobo sauce tends to stain plastic, using a glass or metal mixing bowl will make your clean-up of adobo sauce considerably less frustrating).
    Add Dr. Pepper mixture to the roast and cook on low an additional 4 hours.
    Take out roast and shred, add back into sauce and cook for 2 more hours. At this point the meat was so tender it practically shredded itself.
    ***** ***** ***** ***** *****
    Cafe Rio Tomatillo Dressing
    Do not skip this part, the dressing is my favorite part of the salad! Creamy and spicy and zesty, it is absolute heaven. I actually use leftover dressing for a tomatillo-cilantro salsa, this stuff makes regular, everyday corn-chips taste like exotic, savory treats. (Because we all know, corn is not exotic on it’s own.) If it can transform corn chips, just IMAGINE what it will do for your salad! Besides, it takes 3 minutes to put together.
    1 pkg. Ranch dressing mix
    3 tomatillos (remove papery skin), rough chop
    1 cup mayo
    1 cup buttermilk
    1 cup (or more) cilantro, rough chop
    3 cloves garlic
    1/8 tsp cayenne pepper
    2 tsp green Tabasco sauce
    juice from 1 lime
    Dump everything in a blender and blend until smooth. Refrigerate in air-tight container (or your entire fridge will smell like garlic and cilantro).
    ***** ***** ***** ***** *****
    Easy Pico-de-Gallo
    3 tomatoes, diced
    1/2 bunch of cilantro, minced
    1/2 sweet onion, minced
    1 section of green pepper, minced
    3-4 cloves garlic, minced
    about 1/3-1/2 cup vinegar (use your best judgement)
    salt and pepper
    Mix it up really well and refrigerate. I put my pico in a Tupperware and shook it up really well right before serving to re-mix.
    ***** ***** ***** ***** *****
    Now, invite some people over and get cooking! Do you remember how to put together the salad?
    • Tortilla – you can make your own, mine came from a package.
    • Cheese -it is a good idea to warm these two up so the cheese is a little melty.
    • Beans – black or pinto (mine came straight out of the can, warmed in the microwave with a little garlic powder and green Tabasco sauce).
    • Rice – don’t be stingy now!
    • Pork - I am actually salivating while writing this post…
    • Lettuce – Shredded Romaine, you want small enough pieces to get a little of everything on your fork
    • Pico de Gallo – I like extra pico, so I give myself an extra scoop.
    • Tortilla Strips – slice a corn tortilla into strips, brush with olive oil and salt and pepper and bake on a foil-covered sheet for 15-20 minutes at 350-ish.
    • Creamy Tomatillo Dressing – I like to keep mine on the side so my lettuce doesn’t get too slobbery.
    • This is really best served with a cold Dr. Pepper with a few slices of lime squeezed into it, but if that seems like Dr. Pepper overload, your beverage of choice will probably be fine.
    Enjoy a little ginormous taste of the Utah original, Cafe Rio Pork Barbacoa Salad.