Yes, it's chocolate week, and chocolate's not just for cocktails or sweet stuff, oh no. Mole (that's "molay", not the little black furry creature which is way too cute to eat) is a traditional Mexican sauce for meat, with Mole Poblano being the most famous version.
Proper mole is quite a faff and uses tomatillos and special fancy pants chillies. This baby is a dumbed-down version that uses supermarket ingredients and takes half the time. There's still a long list of ingredients, but as most of them just get bunged in the food processor it's not too strenuous.
I used red jalapenos to give heat and sweetness, and chipotle paste to add a smoky undertone, but it's easy to add more or less, or substitute a different chilli according to your taste. And don't be scared by the chocolate - it adds a certain flavour to the sauce but it doesn't overwhelm the dish.
Cheat's Turkey Mole (serves 2-4)
You'll need:
- 1 onion, peeled and roughly chopped
- 2 cloves of garlic, peeled
- 25g pumpkin seeds
- 25g almonds
- 25g sesame seeds, plus more for sprinkling over
- 2 peppercorns
- 2 cloves
- 1/2 a stick of cinnamon
- 2 petals of a star anise
- 1 tortilla
- 200g tomato puree or passatta
- 500ml vegetable or chicken stock
- 50g dark chocolate, grated
- 1 tbsp chopped jalapenos
- 1 tbsp chipotle paste
- 400g turkey thigh chunks
Make it!
- Put the onion, garlic, pumpkin seeds, almonds, 25g of the sesame seeds, peppercorns, cloves, cinnamon and star anise into a food processor and blitz it to a paste. Tear the tortilla up and blitz that into the mixture too.
- Put some oil into a large saucepan and heat. Fry off the onion paste for a couple of minutes.
- Add the tomato puree and continue to cook for a couple of minutes.
- Add the stock, bring to a boil and simmer for 30 minutes.
- Meanwhile, brown the turkey pieces in oil. Cook for around 15 minutes, until they are cooked through.
- Stir in the chocolate, jalapenos, chipotle paste and turkey pieces. Simmer gently for a further 2 minutes.
- Season to taste and serve with rice or more tortillas and a good sprinkle of sesame seeds.
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