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Cheese And Poblano Quesadillas

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy, Grains Mexican Lnet, Main dish, Mesamexican, Mexican 6 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 1/2 c Grated manchego cheese
1 c Grated panela cheese
1/2 c Grated cotija cheese
6 Flour tortillas
1/2 c Chipotle salsa, optional
4 Poblano chiles, roasted
peeled seeded &
julienned
2 T Unsalted butter, melted

INSTRUCTIONS

In a bowl, mix together the cheeses.  Lay the tortillas on a counter.
Divide the cheese mix into 6 portions  and spread over half of each
tortilla. If desired, sprinkle about a  tablespoon of salsa over each.
Arrange the chile strips evenly over  the cheese. Fold the tortillas
over to enclose the filling and brush  the tops with butter.  Preheat
the oven to 350øF.  Place a dry griddle or cast-iron skillet over
medium-high heat. Place  the tortillas buttered side down in the pan.
Cook until very light  golden,a bout 1 minute. Then brush the uncoated
sides with butter and  flip over. Cook until golden, and transfer to a
baking sheet. When  all the quesa- dillas are cooked, transfer the
baking sheet to the  oven and bake 10 min- utes, until the cheese
begins to ooze.  Serve hot, whole or cut into wedges.  NOTE: Manchego
Cheese: There are two kinds of manchego used in mexican  cooking - and
neither is the high-priced Spanish variety sold in  upscale cheese
shops. There is a hard variety (called viejo) and a  soft, semifirm,
golden one that is an excellent melter. The soft one  is used most
often for cooking. Monterey Jack or muenster can be  substituted.
Anejo Cheese: Also known as Cotija, is a salty, crumbly white cheese,
similar to feta in appearance. Romano or washed and dried feta are
good substitutes.  Panela Cheese: is a mild, milky-tasting, fresh white
cheese often  sold in rounds. A ricotta, farmer's or dry cottage cheese
can be  substituted.  The reason Mary Sue and Susan like to use one
part manchego, one part  panella and one-half part anejo is because
they give a greater  texture and flavor than just one cheese, but is
not a hard-and-fast  rule. They both say to go right ahead and use
whatever you happen to  have in the kitchen, or experiment and come up
with you own cheese  mix.  SOURCE: Mesa Mexican by Mary Sue Milliken
and Susan Feniger with  Helena Siegel.  From Gemini's MASSIVE
MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 162
Calories From Fat: 59
Total Fat: 6.7g
Cholesterol: 10.2mg
Sodium: 293.2mg
Potassium: 66.4mg
Carbohydrates: 21.9g
Fiber: <1g
Sugar: 1.9g
Protein: 3.5g


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