1 cup honey
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
(comino)
dash liquid smoke flavoring (optional)
1 stick cinnamon
6 Cornish
hens, rinsed and dried
1 tablespoon cornbread crumbs or finely ground corn tortillas
(optional)
smoky guajillo and bacon salsa (recipe below)
Note: The glaze must be prepared a day
ahead. The hens should be cooked and served the same day.
To make glaze, warm honey over low to
medium-low heat and stir in cumin, liquid smoke, and cinnamon stick. Remove
from heat and let sit at room temperature, covered, for 24 hours. Reserve 1 to
2 tablespoons for guajillo salsa.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Remove neck
and giblets, if any, from hens. Place hens on a rack and roast for about 35
minutes, basting with comino-honey glaze about every 10 minutes. Sprinkle with
cornbread crumbs (this creates a nice crust) and continue baking until juices
run clear when bird is pierced, about 10 more minutes. Remove from oven,
reserving juices for guajillo salsa.
Let rest for about 5 minutes before
serving.
Salsa
4 garlic cloves, unpeeled
12 guajillo
chiles
1 teaspoon dried oregano
3 cups chicken
broth, homemade or canned (may include cooking juices from Cornish hens)
4
ounces smoked slab bacon (or 6 thick slices), diced
dash liquid smoke
(optional)
salt to taste
1 to 2 tablespoons comino honey
Note: The salsa may be prepared a day or
more ahead.
Roast garlic cloves on a comal or in a
heavy-bottomed pan over medium-high heat until soft, about 10 minutes. Let cool
and peel.
Toast chiles for a minute or two on a comal
over medium-high heat. Transfer to a bowl and cover with hot water to rehydrate
for 20 minutes. Pour off water, destem chiles, and transfer to a blender with
roasted garlic, oregano, and 1 cup broth. Blend until smooth and put through a
medium strainer.
In a heavy-bottomed pan, cook bacon over
medium-high heat until all fat has been rendered. Remove bacon pieces, then
pour strained chile mixture into bacon fat and cook over medium heat, stirring,
for about 5 minutes. Add 1 more cup broth and the liquid smoke and continue
cooking until salsa is reduced by half, about 40 minutes; if mixture becomes
too thick, thin with up to 1 more cup broth. Finish by stirring in salt and
comino honey. Serve as an accompaniment to Cornish hens.
bacon recipe source: "Season's Eatings," Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly), December 2000
No comments:
Post a Comment