{"id":3917,"date":"2015-05-04T07:38:58","date_gmt":"2015-05-04T11:38:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.spicesbites.com\/?p=3917"},"modified":"2015-05-04T07:38:58","modified_gmt":"2015-05-04T11:38:58","slug":"fideo-con-pollo-mexican-style-chicken-and-noodles","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.spicesbites.com\/fideo-con-pollo-mexican-style-chicken-and-noodles\/","title":{"rendered":"Fideo con Pollo (Mexican-style Chicken and Noodles)"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is one of those recipes that I like more and more every time I make it. \u00a0It’s not a coincidence that I first tried it in the fall when the weather began cooling down and warm comfort food was just what we wanted. Plus it’s all made in one pan, so there’s less to clean up!<\/p>\n As you know, even though I own a ton of cookbooks, I rarely end up cooking out of them. \u00a0However when I was flipping through my copy of Eva’s Kitchen<\/a>, by Eva Longoria, her recipe for Sopa de Fideo kept catching my eye. \u00a0It doesn’t hurt that the picture next to the recipe got my stomach rumbling, but as I read it, it just seemed like such a comforting, every-day type of recipe. Which is probably why it took me months to work up the courage to try it. \u00a0I don’t know, I’m weird like that.<\/p>\n Longoria’s version is a hybrid of the traditionally soupy sopa de fideo and the dry version, fideo seco. \u00a0The first time I made it, I accidentally doubled the amount of noodles called for and it still turned out fine, which tells \u00a0me this is a VERY forgiving recipe, which is important when you get easily distracted like me.<\/p>\n Each time I’ve made it, I’ve tweaked it here and there, adding more spices and changing the technique as I go. \u00a0While she sautes the onion and garlic, then browns the fideo before adding the broth, tomato sauce, spices, and finally adding the chicken before letting it all come to a boil and then simmering, I’ve changed the order so that it’s almost as if I’m making a chicken pullao but with noodles. \u00a0So I saute the onions and garlic (I also add a bay leaf), then add my spices (I’ve added oregano and hot Mexican-style chili powder) and let the flavors bloom, then I add the chicken, making sure it’s coated with spices, then the fideo, and finally add the broth and tomato sauce before boiling and simmering. \u00a0Seems like little changes, but I think it changes the flavor.<\/p>\n I’ve made it with drumsticks, bone-in skinless chicken thighs, boneless skinless chicken breast, and boneless skinless chicken thighs and I prefer the boneless skinless thighs. \u00a0When cooking with bone-in meat I have to cook it for a lot longer to make sure it cooks through, but at the risk of mushy noodles. \u00a0I really don’t like cooking with boneless skinless chicken breast unless I’m making a stir-fry — it’s so bland and flavorless and if you cook it in something like this it gets tough and stringy.<\/p>\n If you can’t find fideo in the Hispanic foods section of your grocery store, use broken pieces of angel hair or vermicelli. \u00a0The original recipe calls for ordinary tomato sauce, but I’ve been using a Mexican-style hot tomato sauce – use whatever you want. \u00a0After doing some online research to see how others make their fideo, I started using Mazola Tomato Bouillon with Chicken<\/a> to get a more authentic flavor. \u00a0However, regular chicken broth works just fine.<\/p>\n Anyway, I’ve made this often enough that I almost don’t need a recipe anymore, I know what goes in and how to cook it. \u00a0It makes a ton of food for Mr. Spice and me, giving us leftovers for a few days even after generous servings the first night. \u00a0Okay maybe even seconds since we’re piggies. \u00a0Here’s a link to Longoria’s version<\/a> of this dish, my version is below.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n