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By epicurious
Pork Chile Verde with Red Chile Salsa
Home turf: New Mexico Local flavor: Southwestern-style chili is all about the chiles (with an "e"), as in this pillar of regional cooking, chile verde. The chiles are green and mild (New Mexico's famous hatch chiles are perfect), and the meat is pork. Tangy tomatillos balance the chiles and coat the slow-cooked pork. To up the regional cred, serve it "Christmas" style—with a combo of green and red chiles. Make it a meal: Serve with warm corn tortillas, avocado and spinach salad with honey-lime vinaigrette, and a dark beer like Negra Modelo (Mexico, $8 per six-pack). If you can find it, use dried Mexican oregano in this recipe. It has a smoky flavor that dried Mediterranean oregano doesn't have. Look for it at Latin markets.
Updated at: Sun, 16 Feb 2025 02:53:59 GMT
Nutrition balance score
Good
Glycemic Index
46
Low
Glycemic Load
9
Low
Nutrition per serving
Calories494.6 kcal (25%)
Total Fat28.4 g (41%)
Carbs20.2 g (8%)
Sugars5.8 g (6%)
Protein39 g (78%)
Sodium486.7 mg (24%)
Fiber3.5 g (13%)
% Daily Values based on a 2,000 calorie diet
Ingredients
8 servings

3 cupschicken broth
or more, divided

1 poundtomatillos
husked, rinsed, cut into 1/2-inch wedges, divided

1 bunchgreen onions
coarsely chopped

1 ½ cupsfresh cilantro
packed, with tender stems

olive oil

6garlic cloves
peeled

1 x 4 poundpork shoulder
boston butt, trimmed, cut into 1 1/2 - inch cubes

1onion
large, chopped

1 tablespooncumin seeds

¾ cupmild green chiles
diced, roasted, peeled, seeded, such as hatch, or anaheim

2 teaspoonsdried oregano
preferably mexican

1 poundyukon gold potatoes
peeled, cut into 3/4 - inch cubes chopped

fresh cilantro

red chile salsa

tomatillos
green, tomato-like fruits with papery husks, at supermarkets and latin markets
Instructions
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