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Ask the Alchemist

Ask the Alchemist #306

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Ask the Alchemist #306

Level: Novice maker, Apprentice cook

Read Time: 10 minutes

I really enjoy the ruby beans last year and want to try some of the mole you mentioned this year.  Can you give me the recipe?

I have a love affair with deeply authentic Mexican mole.  I adore the hours of preparation, sourcing the ingredients, the attention to detail, soaking, frying, chopping, blending this way and that, the long simmering and further smoothing all in services to the symphony of flavors of chili, spice, cocoa, savory umami and tradition that culminates in a dish that fulfills this place in my heart…..and sometimes…..I just don’t have the time or energy to do that. 

 

My compromise is what I’m calling Gringo John’s kind of authentic in spirit but not really authentic at all Oaxacan black mole coloradito rápido.pulled pork.

 

I will readily admit it isn’t quite as good and rich and utterly delectable as a traditional mole but it is significantly more approachable and stands a chance of actually getting made and does satisfy and fulfills that place in my heart on many levels. There are still many ingredients but they are pretty well available and you can have the entire thing made and cooking in only 5-10 minutes.  Most anywhere you see a dried or powdered ingredient, you can kick it up a notch by changing it out for the fresh version.  Oh, and of course, the chocolate I’m using is the unfermented Oaxacan Lavados we are currently offering.  When it runs out, any other 80% or even unsweetened chocolate will do, but I find this one has a particular punch that I really like.  Without further delay:

Gringo John’s kind of authentic in spirit but not really authentic at all Oaxacan black mole coloradito rápido.pulled pork.

 
 

 Mole sauce

Optional add ins

  • 1/2 c raisins

  • 2 Medium tomato or 15 oz can fire roasted, chopped

  • 3 Tomotillos, chopped

  • 3 T seaseme seeds, ground

  • 3 T almonds

  • 4 oz Oaxacan 80% Lavados chocolate chopped or grated

  • 3 T chili powder (Ancho powder If you can, but we are making this gringo style so whatever)

  • 2 T Paprika (smoked if you can)

  • 2 t cayenne pepper (or chipotle) or to taste

  • 1 T dried garlic granules

  • 1 T dried onion flakes

  • 1 T black pepper, freshly ground

  • 1 T cumin ground

  • 1 T coriander ground

  • 1 T cinnamon powder

  • 1/2 t clove powder

  • 1/2 t oregano

  • 2 T masa harina

  • 2 T vinegar of choice, I like balsalmic.

  • 2 cups boiling water

 For the pot

  • 2-4 lb pork butt, salted

  • Oil of choice, bacon grease is my choice

  • 1 large onion




Preparing the mole sauce:

Combine all the primary mole ingredients in a 1 quart mason jar and puree with an immersion blender.  If you don’t have one, many blenders or food processors will work but be very careful that the boiling water does not cause it to spray out (been there, done that, 0/10 would not recommend).

If you want to add any or all of the optional ingredient, add those and blend again until smooth.

You can use this now or put away for another time. 



 
 

Making the pulled pork

 

Pre-heat to 350 F

I like to salt my pork butt liberally on all sides, and let set for 1-3 days in the refrigerator (thank you Acid Salt Fat Heat https://www.saltfatacidheat.com/) but you can use it fresh also.

Heat an pan (I love my iron pans but non-stick are fine too) with about 2 T of oil just to smoking.  I adore rendered bacon fat but use what you have.  Sear the pork on all sides, 1-2 minutes per side, not forgetting the two ends.

Slice the onion, put in the bottom of a Dutch oven or baking dish with lid.  Place the seared pork on top and cover with the mole sauce, and place in the oven.

After 30 minutes, turn down to 200 F and cook for 3 hours.

 
 

Pull the pork apart and mix well. 

 
 

 I love this served on fresh corn tortillas that I’ve made myself but you do you.

 
 

And for those that want to try their hand at some authentic mole, please check these out.  You will see pretty quickly where my inspiration came from.

 

https://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/mole-coloradito

https://www.rickbayless.com/recipe/beginners-mole/

https://www.rickbayless.com/recipe/oaxacan-black-mole/

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Ask the Alchemist #305

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Ask the Alchemist #305

Think of this as the start of a FAQ. I also want to note there are some oddly phrased questions below and I’m leaving them as written, not to make fun of anyone as it is pretty obvious they are from folks who do not speak English as their first language and being monolingual myself, I applaud them for writing in. Their English is worlds better than my Spanish, Portuguese, Mandarin or Italian.

5 Comments

Ask the Alchemist #304

7 Comments

Ask the Alchemist #304

I know you don’t like chocolate roasted in an oven. There are lots of chocolate out there that have won awards and roast that way. I’m having trouble figuring out how to roast in my oven. The chocolate is only ok or bad. What roasting profile should I use? Can you tell me what temperature I set my oven to and for how long?

7 Comments

Ask the Alchemist #302

3 Comments

Ask the Alchemist #302

While ordering my cocoa beans from a supplier, I came across a couple of unfamiliar terms known as 1. Bean count 110/100gm and 2. Fermented bean percentage 85%. Kindly shed some light into this topic and please let me know if these are acceptable values for making good quality chocolate.

3 Comments

Ask the Alchemist #301

2 Comments

Ask the Alchemist #301

After last weeks in depth conversation about roasting cocoa in a coffee roaster, I wanted to, nay, needed to take it a little easy this week. There are a bunch of pretty simple questions that don’t really merit a full long winded response but in that there are no stupid questions (that is NOT a challenge folks) I still want to answer them. It also helps clear a little of the back log.

2 Comments

Ask the Alchemist #297

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Ask the Alchemist #297

Well, now that we have a good and prominent link up showing how to submit questions to me (hangs head in shame) so many are coming in it seems a good time for a pretty simple speed round

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Ask the Alchemist #296

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Ask the Alchemist #296

Do you have a recipe for or experience with making candied whole cocoa beans? I ate some in Costa Rica that were really good and I’d like to make my own. It’s definitely not rocket science, but I botched my first try and my second attempt wasn’t very good, so figured I’d check to see if you had any experience with it.

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Ask the Alchemist #293

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Ask the Alchemist #293

Thanks for all the great blog posts on roasting, and specifically the Behmor. Thanks to Uncle Sam and tax returns, it's time to upgrade from oven roasting to the Behmor.

1 Comment

Ask The Alchemist #292.v2

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Ask The Alchemist #292.v2

I wrote an article yesterday. It was kind of a venting rant session for me. Call it therapy. But I started having doubts that I might be just railing at the world and it wasn’t useful or delivered the message I wanted.

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Ask the Alchemist #291

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Ask the Alchemist #291

I have been making your milk chocolate using your suggested 25% blend of cocoa, sugar, milk power, and cocoa butter. I'm curious what the best way would be to try different percentages without messing up the end product?

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Ask the Alchemist #290

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Ask the Alchemist #290

I am a recent convert (2wks) from my coffee to brewed chocolate, and I don't ever see myself going back. I live in an apartment now, so for the winter this would be strictly oven roasting. Can you be truly successful in a basic oven roasting method?

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Ask the Alchemist #289

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Ask the Alchemist #289

I’ve read, re-read, and re-read again your articles and blog posts (Ask the Alchemist 200-205) on roasting. As much as I’d like to have all the proper equipment, there’s only so much I can do on a budget in a small apartment with limited storage space. For the time being I’m trying to oven roast. The engineer in me understands momentum, ramp (slope), and I’ve been trying to apply your Drum Roasting profiles to at least have similar concepts with Oven Roasting ... trying to go into the various phases appropriately.

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Ask the Alchemist #288

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Ask the Alchemist #288

I am new to chocolate compound coatings and I have been learning a lot from your website. I am making a chocolate compound coating, though it’s mainly geared towards chocolate. The recipe is as follows:

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Ask the Alchemist #287

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Ask the Alchemist #287

“I see you have beans from a couple years ago. Are they still good? I would prefer fresher beans.”

“I spend so much time sorting my beans and lose probably 20% because they are different sizes and some are not fermented well. What really clean beans can you recommend?”

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