Utter deliciousness. Is that a word? Should be if it’s not.
A post from Carolyn. You will want to make these. They’re actually quite easy. My granddaughter Taylor has moved in with me because she’s in nursing school at Concordia University here in SoCal. When she finishes her 13-month accelerated nursing program she’ll have her second bachelor’s degree, this one a B.S.N. (nursing). Her first B.S. is in hospital administration. She drove down from NorCal with her good friend Quinn, to keep her company, and I wanted to have dinner for them before Quinn got on a plane to fly home.
So, dinner. My other granddaughter, Sabrina, got me onto a new (to me) blog called Half Baked Harvest. Tieghan is a very gifted and prolific food blogger – she puts together the most interesting combinations of food, and the photography definitely intrigues my taste buds. The impetus of my version was her post about these vegetarian enchiladas. I made some changes to her recipe, however. I added a sweet potato and a yellow squash to the roasted veggies. I didn’t add chipotle (I like chipotle, but thought the mixture had enough heat from the pepper jack, which was quite hot). I didn’t add honey, either. I also used more cheese. And I totally forgot to add all the garnishes (avocado, sour cream for instance). Tieghan is a wizard with garnishes.
The vegetables are roasted – I didn’t buy fresh corn – I used frozen, defrosted – so they aren’t showing up in the photo. I forgot to halve the poblanos. Next time I wouldn’t keep the onions intact as they needed to be separated once adding to the enchiladas, but you can do what you prefer. Really, these enchiladas could be called calabacitas enchiladas, but for sure some Southwestern cooking gurus would lambast me since calabacitas is a vegetable dish, not a Mexican enchilada . . . oh well. Do you ever have these kinds of conversations with yourself? Like my head was going . . . if these are made with flour tortillas, then they become a burrito, don’t they? instead of an enchilada. Corn tortillas = enchiladas; flour tortillas = burritos?? Or the one about calabacitas maybe I should call this calabacitas enchiladas. Or, no, calabacitas burritos. Oh dear, never mind. (telling my brain to be quiet!)
Prepping the veggies was easy – a bit of EVOO, salt and pepper and into a hot oven they went for about 30 minutes. I skinned the poblanos, chopped them up, grated the cheeses and I was in biz. I used a brand of thick salsa verde – a bit is poured into a baking pan/dish, then you make the enchiladas. Now, I used flour tortillas (I prefer them to corn) but you can use either. The veggie mixture with the cheese is put in the center of a tortilla and rolled up, seam side down in the pan. More salsa verde is spread on top (not a lot – just enough to moisten all of the top of the enchiladas), and a little more cheese and back into a hot oven they go. I baked them at 400°F for about 20 minutes (because the veggies were cooled to room temp when I constructed them). If the veggies are still hot from the roasting pan, you could probably bake them less time.
This version made 7 enchiladas. My guests ate two per person; I had one. I suppose it depends on what size tortillas you use. More hungry appetites will want two per person, so keep that in mind if you make this. If your family is sensitive to heat, use regular jack, not pepper jack.
As I said, utter deliciousness. Everybody’s plate was slicked clean. I served it with a green side salad. I was a bit alarmed at the calorie count on this, AND the sodium. It appears it comes from the flour tortillas, as I had no choice on size. So I hope these really aren’t this high in both.
What’s GOOD: cheesy and veggie goodness. Quinn thought she might be able to fool her growing boys with eating more veggies. You could add some chicken to these if you wanted protein in them. I loved the flavors from the veggies – and the smoked paprika. And the poblano – I love the depth of flavor from that variety of chile pepper. This recipe is a keeper.
What’s NOT: nothing really – it does take a bit of time to roast the veggies, but it was a relatively simple dinner to prepare once that was done.
printer-friendly PDF and MasterCook file (click link to open recipe)
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Roasted Poblano Corn and Squash Enchiladas with Cheese
Recipe By: adapted from Half Baked Harvest
Serving Size: 6
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
kosher salt and black pepper
1 cup corn — or use fresh corn
2 whole poblano peppers — halved
1 small zucchini — chopped
1 small yellow squash — chopped
1 yellow onion — cut in wedges
4 whole garlic cloves — peeled
1 small sweet potato — peeled, 1/2″ cubed
3 cups salsa verde — store bought, chunky
1 chipotle chilies in adobo — optional – chopped (or 1/2 tablespoon chipotle chili powder)
2 teaspoons smoked paprika
1/2 cup fresh cilantro — chopped
1/3 cup fresh basil — chopped
7 flour tortillas — or corn tortillas, 8″ size
1 1/2 cups sharp cheddar cheese — grated
1/2 cup pepper jack cheese — or regular jack, grated
Garnishes: avocado, yogurt or sour cream, cilantro, lime wedges
1. Preheat the oven to 425°F.
2. Arrange the corn, poblano, sweet potato, zucchini, yellow squash, onions, and garlic on a baking sheet. Drizzle with olive oil and season with salt and pepper, then toss with your hands. Bake for 20-30 minutes, until the vegetables have a light char.
3. Remove the corn kernels from the cob, de-seed the poblano peppers and chop, along with the onions and garlic. Add everything back to the baking sheet and toss with 1 cup salsa verde, the chipotle, paprika, half the cheese, the cilantro, and basil.
4. Reduce oven temp to 400°F.
4. Pour a cup of the salsa verde into the bottom of a 9×13 inch baking dish. Tip the dish to cover. On a plastic cutting board or plate, place tortilla, then spoon the vegetable-cheese filling down the center; roll and place the tortillas, seam side down, into the baking dish. Pour the remaining salsa verde over top of the enchiladas. Top with the remaining cheese. Bake for 10-15 minutes, OR until the cheese has melted and just beginning to get golden brown. If vegetable mixture is at room temp, baking may take longer. Top with various garnishes and serve.
Yield: “7 enchiladas”
Per Serving (sodium and calorie levels seem exceedingly high – probably from the tortillas – even though I specified the size, it doesn’t recognize that part): 647 Calories; 37g Fat (52.1% calories from fat); 23g Protein; 53g Carbohydrate; 7g Dietary Fiber; 77mg Cholesterol; 2047mg Sodium; 10g Total Sugars; 1mcg Vitamin D; 553mg Calcium; 4mg Iron; 859mg Potassium; 511mg Phosphorus.

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