Obviously needing to space out the number of days we indulged in this recipe, I stored my second batch of sauce in a sealed container and put it in the fridge until later in the week. I made the enchiladas on Friday and on Tuesday after work I started filling a pasta pot with water in order to boil some penne to serve with my much anticipated crawfish cream sauce. Right around the time my water started to boil Forrest sauntered into the kitchen and asked what was for dinner. I told him that we would be having the cream sauce that I made over the weekend on top of pasta. With an amazingly calm expression, he commented that we didn't have any of that left over. I explained that I wasn't talking about the few enchiladas that remained after our dinner party on Friday night, but about the very large container of sauce I placed all the way in the back of the fridge separated from everything else. Once again, Forrest mentioned that we didn't have that any longer. Certain that he was still confused, I (not so calmly) asked what had happened to it. He told me that he ate it. For some reason I couldn't believe what he was telling me. When did he heat up the sauce, cook pasta and have 6 people over to help him consume the 3 cups of creamy deliciousness laced with cheese and a full $16/lb of crawfish? This is when he revealed the true shocker. He ate it throughout the week - for a snack! with potato chips! I was livid. I couldn't believe it! I ranted and raved about how he turned a roughly $30 dish into a snack, we now had nothing for dinner, and I was looking forward to eating it again and wouldn't have the chance. Instead of apologizing, offering to go out and get us dinner to make up for it, or claiming ignorance, he looked at me and remarked, "It was so good too!"
Crawfish Enchiladas
Adapted from Paul Prudhomme
2 3/4 teaspoons of white pepper
1 1/2 teaspoons ground red pepper (cayenne)
3/4 teaspoon dried oregano leaves
Directions
In a large skillet melt ½ stick of the butter. Add the onions, green chiles, bell peppers, 1 1/4 teaspoon of salt, 3/4 teaspoon of white pepper, 1/2 teaspoon of red pepper, 1/4 teaspoon of oregano and the minced garlic. Sauté over medium heat for 10 minutes, stirring often.
Stir in the cream and bring mixture to a rapid boil;
then reduce the heat and simmer uncovered 10 minutes, stirring constantly. Add the sour cream;
with a metal whisk, beat continuously until the sour cream is dissolved, about 3 minutes. Add 3 cups of the cheese
and stir until melted. Set the sauce aside.
In a 4-quart saucepan melt the remaining ½ stick butter. Add the crawfish, green onions and the remaining 1 1/2 teaspoon of salt, 2 teaspoons of white pepper, 1 teaspoon of red pepper, and 1/2 teaspoon of oregano.
Sauté over medium heat for about 6 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the cheese sauce to the crawfish mixture
and stir well. Simmer until the flavors are well blended, about 6 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Set aside.
Spoon about ⅓ cup sauce on each tortilla
and roll up tortilla; place seam side down in a baking dish.
Cover the tortilla from end to end with a generous amount of additional sauce. Then sprinkle it with the remaining cheese.
For the prettiest presentation, place the enchiladas under a broiler near the flame until the cheese melts and begins to brown, about 2 minutes. Or, bake the enchiladas in a 350º oven until cheese melts, about 5 to 8 minutes. Serve immediately.
Click Here for My Adapted Printable Recipe
oh wow, sinful is right. this look absolutely amazing
ReplyDeleteMmm I love fun, indulgent meals like this! In moderation of course :)
ReplyDeleteOh you had me at crawfish! How's the little man...may we have an updated photo?
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving~
That was the best dip I have ever had on chips in my whole life! This recipe should be a entree and an appetizer.
ReplyDeleteoh my that is over the top, but every once in a while that is OK :)
ReplyDeleteThis is my kind of sauce! How I love sinful.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds truly delicious. This is my first visit to your blog, so I took some time to browse through your earlier posts. I'm so glad I did that. I really like the food and recipes you share with your readers and I'll definitely be back. I hope you have a great day. Blessings...Mary
ReplyDeleteYour recipe makes my mouth water. I am going to print your recipe and give it a try for Christmas .
ReplyDeleteI hate to side with Forrest but I totally would have dipped this straight out of the bowl with some fritos :-) Makes me crave crawfish right at this moment.
ReplyDeleteLooks wonderful. I'm trying it tonight, but with shrimp instead of crawfish because crawfish were $17.99 a pound (ouch).
ReplyDeleteOne question, in the recipe, you say corn tortillas and show a picture of how to heat them, but the finished product is clearly flour tortillas. I'm trying flour tonight. Have you tried both? Do you find one works better than the other?
Karen,
ReplyDeleteI have used both corn and flour. Flour tortillas are much easier to work with in this recipe because they break less easily and are a little larger. But corn tortillas have a more authentic Mexican flavor, but personally I prefer the texture of flour in most recipes. Hope you enjoyed them!
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ReplyDeleteFound this on pinterest. I have made it twice now with flour tortillas and it is absolutely delicious! I subbed chicken for my daughter who doesn't eat crawfish. I love these!!
ReplyDeleteOhhh my goodness... This recipe is incredible! I halved the recipe and afterwards wished I hadn't. Way rich but you have to splurge once in a while right. I used corn and flour tortillas and both were great. I really love the corn the best. Thanks so much for sharing!
ReplyDelete