Yeh, I know, I should be encouraging a little more decorum
when it comes to eating lunch, but when you’ve had no breakfast, spent the
morning running around catching up on housework and you get to 1pm and you
realise that you haven’t eaten yet and that actually you could eat a scabby
horse round about now, that there is something quite appealing about rustling
up something and then diving in, no laying of the table, just get on with it.
And that is what happened right here and in the spirit of my ‘doing things
better’ this year, I decided to sit down and blog about it instead of doing the
ironing.
I bought some tortillas ages ago because I had the notion I
was going to make fajitas for Lola and Finn but for reasons that I cannot
remember it didn’t happen. I probably thought to myself, “Sod it, we’ll get a takeaway…”
Anyway, the tortillas have been lodged behind the toaster for longer than I
care to remember and as I had some sad looking peppers, beef mince that was
about to go past its sell by date and a basket full of spices so I set to work.
You could juzz this up by making it far spicier than I have;
I always have to factor in the delicate palates of my bubs. I had some salsa in
the fridge which spiced the mixture up as required and a spritz of lime made it
all taste tingletastic. We all ate stood up, next to the cooker, just a couple
of spoons and a handful of tortilla. Lunch is served.
Chilli Beef Wraps
Serves 3 to 4 people
Ingredients:
Olive oil
Two onions, finely chopped
1 big clove of garlic
1 red and 1 yellow pepper, diced
2 tsp cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp chilli flakes
400g beef mince
Salt and pepper
Handful of chopped coriander
To serve –
Lime wedges
Tortillas
Salsa
Guacamole, etc.
Method:
Heat a drizzle of olive oil in a frying pan.
Over a medium heat, fry the onions until translucent.
Add the garlic and cook for about a minute or so, take care
not to burn the garlic.
Add the diced peppers and the cumin, the coriander and the
chilli flakes. Fry for a couple of minutes.
Add the mince and saute until brown. Season.
Increase the heat and cook the mince until it becomes quite
dry. You will need to keep the mince moving so it does not burn.
Once the mince is of a dryish consistency, taste again for
seasoning. Stir some of the chopped coriander through the mince and then
scatter some over the top. Serve decorated with lime wedges from the pan if you
like, with tortillas and salsa and guacamole…
I'm so glad that I'm not the only one who buys tortillas with the best of intentions and doesn't quite to fulfil those intentions. There's nothing wrong with this solution to tortillagate though. I think this is ideal next-to-the-cooker food. Just one thing I'm not sure about - what's ironing?
ReplyDeleteIroning is the bane of my life, Phil. The bane of my life.
ReplyDelete