This month's challenge is "chocolate." I don't have access to New Mexican chiles, so I had to come up with a substitute. In savory dishes (think chile rellenos), Anaheims are the usual replacement, but those weren't available either. I settled on a poblano, with a serrano as backup in case it was too mild.
I made half the recipe and it produced about 3 dozen cookies.
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1 cup sugar
1 egg, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla
2½ cups all-purpose flour
1½ teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 cup chopped almonds, toasted
1/4 cup chopped green New Mexican chile
2 ounces sweet chocolate
1 tablespoon rum
Cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy; stir in the egg and vanilla. Sift together the flour, baking powder, salt, and cinnamon; add to the butter mixture and mix well. Add the almonds and chile. Melt the chocolate and allow to cool. Stir the rum into the chocolate and mix into the dough. Roll the dough into a 2-inch diameter roll and wrap in foil. Refrigerate for 12 hours or overnight.
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Slice into ¼-inch rounds and place on a lightly greased cookie sheet. (They can be somewhat close together.) Bake for 8 -- 10 minutes until just browned around the edges.
I roasted the chiles with the idea that it would bring out the sweetness. However, that changed the volume, so I used only a heavily packed tablespoon, instead of the 2 that half the recipe would have required. The poblano was quite hot, so I added only a small amount of the serrano.
I tried two ways of cutting these: "thinly" as instructed by the recipe, and in very thick chunks that I then cut into quarters and placed on the sheet point up. They bake up crisply, so the thin wafers worked better.
Conclusion: These were delicious! Crisp and buttery with a mild cocoa flavor. But no heat. Not at all. Every now and then I got a little piece of chile that I could taste, but even that wasn't hot. I thought the long time in the refrigerator was partially to distribute the heat. I also couldn't taste the rum at all and didn't expect to. Nonetheless, they're worth making again.
Recipe: via Chile Pepper magazine, June 1993 (Fiesta Canning Co., Inc.)
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