The leftovers challenge part 1: Pork Tacos with homemade tortillas
/
Intro: I bought a Boston Butt from a church fundraiser. Let me be clear, I would never pay $25 for a cut of meat unless it was for something like this.
I was happy to hand over my cash in exchange for four pounds of meat, some of which I served to guests at Sunday dinner. But that leaves the problem. I just forked out all this money for a pork shoulder (which is actually what Boston Butt is) and now I have all this left over meat.
Confession time, I struggle with leftovers. I don't enjoy them. My husband is great about leftovers, I am not. I am not sure why, we ate them a lot as a child... hmmm...
So here I am delving into my week with a big butt on my hands. *giggles- considers deleting that last sentence - moves on.*
Monday: Pork Tacos
I love tacos. Seriously. You can put anything on a tortilla and it will taste good. But, this seemed so obvious. So, I wanted to take it a step further with homemade tortillas and salsa.
Let's get started.
What you'll need:
Three ripe Roma tomatoes
Half a red onion
1 tbsp minced Garlic
1 tbsp Lemon juice
Dried cilantro to taste
1/2 pound pork shredded
Avocado, cheese, sour cream - whatever you like on your taco
3 cups flour (I used half white and half whole wheat)
1/3 cup olive oil
1 cup warm water
pinch kosher salt
Three ripe Roma tomatoes
Half a red onion
1 tbsp minced Garlic
1 tbsp Lemon juice
Dried cilantro to taste
Dice your tomatoes and toss them in the blender with garlic, lemon juice and cilantro. Then pour over the onion and chill for about 30 minutes. (I do not care for warm salsa. I know, I know.)
Tortillas:
3 cups flour (I used half white and half whole wheat) (plus another cup for rolling the dough. So that actually makes 4)
1/3 cup olive oil
1 cup warm water
pinch kosher salt
In a bowl combine your 2 cups of your flour, olive oil and salt. Then stir in your water a little at a time. You will then add the third cup of flour in slowly.
Your dough should look like this:
Pinch off about 2 inches of dough
Throw down some flour on a clean surface, such as a counter top, and roll out the dough.
Place the dough in a greased skillet that is set on low heat.
The tortilla will start to brown on the edges and when you flip it there will be darker spots on the cooked side.
This recipe will yield 6 - 8 tortillas depending on the size. They are flakey and delicious, but not as flexible as the tortillas you buy at the store. But, they cost less than $1 to make so there is your trade.