By Jessica Marquez
Pressure Cooker Chipotle Chicken Pozole
A pressure cooker is the perfect tool for making a quick pozole that tastes like it has simmered for a long time. Traditional red pozole usually requires toasting and puréeing dried chiles for a flavorful broth, but this one relies on canned chipotles for smoky complexity. Chipotles can be fiery, so feel free to use fewer peppers if you’re concerned about the heat, but don’t skimp on the adobo sauce: It’s milder than the peppers and is packed with loads of smoky, garlicky flavor. Serve the soup in bowls with plenty of crumbled cheese, diced avocado and crushed chips, for topping. The slow-cooker version of this dish uses bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs, carrots and celery, is available here.
Updated at: Thu, 17 Aug 2023 12:23:48 GMT
Nutrition balance score
Good
Glycemic Index
39
Low
Glycemic Load
22
High
Nutrition per serving
Calories751.1 kcal (38%)
Total Fat27.7 g (40%)
Carbs57.8 g (22%)
Sugars10.7 g (12%)
Protein67.2 g (134%)
Sodium2795.1 mg (140%)
Fiber10.9 g (39%)
% Daily Values based on a 2,000 calorie diet
Ingredients
4 servings
2 tablespoonsvegetable oil
1onion
large, red or yellow, finely chopped
kosher salt
8 clovesgarlic
finely chopped
1 x 7 ouncecan chipotle peppers in adobo sauce
1 teaspoononion powder
1 teaspoongarlic powder
1 teaspoonground cumin
½ teaspoondried oregano
2.5 poundsboneless skinless chicken thighs
5 cupschicken broth
or stock
1 cupfrozen corn
1 x 29 ouncecan hominy
rinsed and well-drained
1lime
juice of, about 2 tablespoons ), plus more as needed
tortilla chips
crushed
cabbage
shredded
avocado
crumbled queso fresco
red onion
cilantro
for topping
Instructions
Step 1
Using the sauté setting, heat oil in a 6- to 8-quart pressure cooker. Add the onion, season it with salt and cook, stirring often, until the onion is softened and translucent, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook, stirring, until slightly softened and fragrant, 2 minutes. Turn the sauté setting off.
Step 2
Open the can of chipotles and remove the chiles, leaving as much of the adobo sauce behind as possible. (Scrape the sauce off the chiles with your fingers as best you can.) Set the chiles aside and add the adobo sauce to the pressure cooker. Chop 1 to 4 of the chiles until they are almost a paste. (Determine the number of chiles according to your desired level of heat: 1 chile for a very mild soup and 4 for a very spicy soup.) Add the chiles to the pressure cooker. (Store remaining chiles in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 5 days and in the freezer indefinitely.)
Step 3
Using the sauté setting, add onion and garlic powders, cumin and oregano to the pressure cooker. Cook, stirring constantly, until fragrant and heated through, about 1 minute. Stir in the chicken until coated, scraping the bottom of the pan. Add the broth and 1/2 teaspoon salt (but hold off on the salt if you are using fully salted broth.) Close the lid and cook on high pressure for 18 minutes.
Step 4
Let the pressure release naturally for 5 minutes, then release remaining pressure manually. (If hot liquid spurts out of the knob along with the steam, carefully close it and wait 5 more minutes before releasing remaining pressure.) Using a ladle, skim excess fat from the surface of the soup, if desired.
Step 5
Using the sauté setting, coarsely shred the chicken in the pot using 2 forks. Add the corn and the pozole and simmer until warmed through, 3 to 5 minutes. Add the lime juice and taste; add more salt or lime juice if necessary. Serve the soup in bowls with the toppings of choice.
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Notes
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Delicious
Easy
Fresh
Special occasion
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