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RECIPE: Rick Bayless' Oaxacan Black Mole From Mexico State Dinner

05/19/10 07:02 PM ET   AP

Rick Bayless Oaxacan Black Mole Recipe

CHICAGO — Chef Rick Bayless shared the recipe for the complicated mole sauce he made at the White House for the state dinner on Wednesday – and it's a doozy.

The Oaxacan black mole takes days to make from scratch and includes more than 20 ingredients.

"It's a really laborious thing," Bayless said in an interview earlier this week. "But for an event like this nothing is too difficult."

OAXACAN BLACK MOLE WITH BRAISED CHICKEN

Serves 8 (with about 10 cups of sauce, which will mean leftovers to make enchiladas or more chicken with)

11 medium (about 5 1/2 ounces) dried mulato chiles

6 medium (about 2 ounces) dried chihualces chiles (see note in Variations and Improvisations below)

6 medium (about 2 ounces) dried pasilla chiles

1 dried chipotle chile (preferably the tan-brown chipotle meco)

1 corn tortilla, torn into small pieces

2 1/4-inch-thick slices of white onion

4 garlic cloves, unpeeled

About 2 cups rich-tasting lard or vegetable oil (for frying the chiles)

1/2 cup sesame seeds, plus a few extra for garnish

1/4 cup pecan halves

1/4 cup unskinned or Spanish peanuts

1/4 cup unskinned almonds

About 10 cups chicken broth (canned or homemade)

1 pound (2 medium-large or 6 to 8 plum) green tomatoes, roughly chopped

4 ounces (2 to 3 medium) tomatillos, husked, rinsed and roughly chopped

2 slices stale bread, toasted until very dark

1/4 teaspoon cloves, preferably freshly ground

1/2 teaspoon black pepper, preferably freshly ground

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon, preferably freshly ground Mexican canela

A scant teaspoon oregano, preferably Mexican

1/2 teaspoon dried thyme

1/2 ripe banana

1/2 cup (about 3 ounces) finely chopped Mexican chocolate

2 or 3 avocado leaves (if you have them)

Salt, about 1 tablespoon depending on the saltiness of the broth

Sugar, about 1/4 cup (or a little more)

2 large (3 1/2- to 4-pound) chickens, cut into quarters

1. Getting started. Pull out the stems (and attached seed pods) from the chiles, tear them open and shake or scrape out the seeds, collecting them as you go.

Now, do something that will seem very odd: scoop the seeds into an ungreased medium-size (8- to 9-inch) skillet along with the torn-up tortilla, set over medium heat, turn on an exhaust fan, open a window and toast your seeds and tortilla, shaking the pan regularly, until thoroughly burned to charcoal black, about 15 minutes. (This is very important to the flavor and color of the mole.) Now, scrape them into a fine-mesh strainer and rinse for 30 seconds or so, then transfer to a blender.

Set an ungreased skillet or griddle over medium heat, lay on a piece of aluminum foil, and lay the onion slices and garlic cloves on that. Roast until soft and very dark (about 5 minutes on each side of the onion slices – peel it off the foil to turn it; about 15 minutes for the garlic – turn it frequently as it roasts). Cool the garlic a bit, peel it and combine with the onion in a large bowl.

While the onion and garlic are roasting, turn on the oven to 350 degrees (for toasting nuts), return the skillet to medium heat, measure in a scant 2 cups of the lard or oil (you'll need about 1/2-inch depth), and, when hot, begin frying the chiles a couple at a time: They'll unfurl quickly, then release their aroma and piquancy (keep that exhaust on and window open) and, after about 30 seconds, have lightened in color and be well toasted (they should be crisp when cool, but not burnt smelling). Drain them well, gather them into a large bowl, cover with hot tap water, and let rehydrate for 30 minutes, stirring regularly to ensure even soaking. Drain, reserving the soaking liquid.

While the chiles are soaking, toast the seeds and nuts. Spread the sesame seeds onto a baking sheet or ovenproof skillet, spread the pecans, peanuts and almonds onto another baking sheet or skillet, then set both into the oven. In about 12 minutes the sesame seeds will have toasted to a dark brown; the nuts will take slightly longer. Add all of them to the blender (reserving a few sesame seeds for garnish), along with 1 1/2 cups of the chicken broth and blend to as smooth a puree as you can. Transfer to a small bowl.

Without rinsing the blender, combine the green tomatoes and tomatillos with another 1/2 cup of the broth and puree. Pour into another bowl. Again, without rinsing the blender, combine the roasted onion and garlic with the toasted bread, cloves, black pepper, cinnamon, oregano, thyme, banana and 3/4 cup broth. Blend to a smooth puree and pour into a small bowl.

Finally, without rinsing the blender, scoop in half of the chiles, measure in 1/2 cup of the soaking liquid, blend to a smooth puree, then pour into another bowl. Repeat with the remaining chiles and another 1/2 cup of the soaking liquid.

2. From four purees to mole. In a very large (8- to 9-quart) pot (preferably a Dutch oven or Mexican cazuela), heat 3 tablespoons of the lard or oil (some of what you used for the chiles is fine) and set over medium-high heat. When very hot, add the tomato puree and stir and scrape (a flat-sided wooden spatula works well here) for 15 to 20 minutes until reduced, thick as tomato paste, and very dark (it'll be the color of cinnamon stick and may be sticking to the pot in places). Add the nut puree and continue the stirring and scraping until reduced, thick and dark again (this time it'll be the color of black olive paste), about 8 minutes. Then, as you guessed it, add the banana-spice puree and stir and scrape for another 7 or 8 minutes as the whole thing simmers back down to a thick mass about the same color it was before you added this one.

Add the chile puree, stir well and let reduce over medium-low heat until very thick and almost black, about 30 minutes, stirring regularly (but, thankfully, not constantly). Stir in the remaining 7 cups of broth, the chocolate and avocado leaves (if you have them), partially cover and simmer gently for about an hour, for all the flavors to come together. Season with salt and sugar (remembering that this is quite a sweet mole and that sugar helps balance the dark, toasty flavors). Remove the avocado leaves.

In batches in a loosely covered blender, puree the sauce until as smooth as possible, then pass through a medium-mesh strainer into a large bowl.

3. Finishing the dish. Return the mole to the same pot and heat it to a simmer. Nestle the leg-and-thigh quarters of the chicken into the bubbling black liquid, partially cover and time 15 minutes, then nestle in the breast quarters, partially cover and simmer for 20 to 25 minutes, until all the chicken is done.

With a slotted spoon, fish out the chicken pieces and transfer them to a large warm platter. Spoon a generous amount of the mole over and around them, sprinkle with the reserved sesame seeds and set triumphantly before your lucky guests.

Advance Preparation: The mole can be completed through Step 2 several days ahead (it gets better, in fact); cover and refrigerate. Completele Step 3 shortly before serving.

VARIATIONS AND IMPROVISATIONS: Chilhuacle chiles are very difficult to find unless you're in Oaxaca (even then they're sometimes hard to obtain). Without them you can make a very respectable black mole with 6 ounces (12 total) dried mulato chiles, 2 1/2 ounces (8 total) dried pasilla chiles and 1 ounce (4 total) dried guajillo chiles.

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07:26 PM on 06/03/2010
At the state dinner Bayless served seared wagyu with the mole. the chicken dish was what he prepared on Bravo. The HuffPo seems to have fibbed.

Bayless' photos from the state dinner : http://www.rickbayless.com/news/view?articleID=142

The recipe from Bravo that HuffPo ran as the recipe from the state dinner (and the brovo recipe doesn't seem to corespond to the photograph): http://www.bravotv.com/foodies/recipes/oaxaca-black-mole-with-braised-chicken-plantain-tamal-and-grilled-nopales

I'm sure the black mole is the same, but for anyone preparing the state dinner mole for a dinner party in three days this is frustrating.
02:21 AM on 05/23/2010
One would think that the president of Mexico would hanker for something, well, Americano, even though Bayless' recipe more than likely rocked. One supposes it's the thought that counts but with a little imagination I'm sure the chef could have whipped up some dish that showcased American's unique polyglot culinary inventiveness. Well, maybe next time.
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cyjames1975
10:42 PM on 05/24/2010
I doubt they picked Rick Bayless because they wanted to serve American food. He is a Mexican food expert. If they wanted pot pies or clam chowder, there are other options.
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08:56 PM on 05/31/2010
Hey man, New England Clam Chowder is one of my favorites, as well as MD crab soup. No need to disparage American food. Also, Taco Bell tacos are real tacos, and I like them. Chilango here.
10:35 PM on 05/22/2010
so after a trip to the local latin market and the better part of a day in the kitchen, the mole is complete. I'm looking for some feedback from those of you that have enjoyed this particular style of mole before.
You see, I'm only basing my opinion on a comparison between this recipe and the black mole served at The Red Iguana (an impeccably authentic and stunningly delicious Mexican restaurant here in Utah)
I followed this recipe almost to the letter. Reading too quickly at one point, I added the final puree and then immediately added the remaining stock without letting the mixture reduce and darken, so my coloring isn't as dark as what I'm used to, but that's not my issue. The concern I have is that this mole tastes smoky and burned - not just the expected toasty flavors and all, BURNED.
The burned flavor is overwhelming, and other than the chile seeds, nothing was burned that went into the mole - everything was toasted perfectly.
Is this how it's supposed to taste?
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Niris
Justice for All
04:21 PM on 05/21/2010
I own a few of mr. Bayless books and think he is pretty darn good.
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OkieIntellectual
So tired of all the irrational idiots in the world
10:43 PM on 05/20/2010
He's not kidding about opening a window and turning on an exhaust fan while toasting those pepper seeds. Without plenty of ventellation, you'll swear that someone popped a tear gas canister in your kitchen within a minute or two. I only had to make that mistake once :)
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StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
02:36 AM on 05/21/2010
I kinda liked going through the gas house in the military. HAHAH
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trinity
04:37 PM on 05/24/2010
Ha...you're crazy. Did it 18 years ago and don't really want to do it again. However we had both males and females who actually did pretty well and didn't seem all that affected by it.
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03:46 AM on 05/21/2010
It was said the the Aztecs trained their warriors by putting them in a hut with chiles toasting, not unlike moder military training, believe me.
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OkieIntellectual
So tired of all the irrational idiots in the world
03:51 AM on 05/21/2010
Oh yeah, I know. I have less-than-fond memories of the gas chamber. Funny thing is I was an NBC specialist and learned to tolerate the stuff for a few minutes.
anfractuous
Like you care.
09:31 PM on 05/20/2010
If anyone there brought some good Mexican dope, it really wouldn't have mattered what he cooked - IT WOULD HAVE BEEN DELICIOUS!!!.
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camanokat
Outta this world
06:12 PM on 05/20/2010
It sure is time consuming! The recipe I use came from the Food section of the Seattle Times in the mid-90's and is similar to this, except it doesn't call for burning the seeds or tortilla and includes a few other ingredients...raisins definitely and a few others I forget...and no extra sugar. Delish Plus!
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jemiltd
Writer,author,thinker,creative
05:24 PM on 05/20/2010
I would have to really love you to do this recipe. Still, it does look so yummy...
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03:52 AM on 05/21/2010
Mexican moms have made it for generations to celebrate their daughters and sons weddings. An unofficial profession of love.
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DandaPanda
I am not a republican
03:01 PM on 05/20/2010
what a tool Bayless is...it just seems so oh I don't know condescending and lame to serve complicated mexican food to the President of Mexico...
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goatboyslim
It's a good day to die,but I prefer to wait
10:50 AM on 05/21/2010
Serving Mexican cuisine to the President of Mexico lets us off the hook of what else could we serve? We don't have a national cuisine, just a hodge-podge of regional styles. I. for one. would love a well-cooked Louisiana meal, but then the New England chefs might get upset. We could let the President serve his own region's specialty, but what exactly constitutes Chicago cuisine? How about nouvelle Californian? I can see Fox news going off on that for days.....Much safer to just serve Mexican to the Mexicans, French to the French.....
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DandaPanda
I am not a republican
11:23 AM on 05/21/2010
still lame
07:24 PM on 05/24/2010
You don't hire Bayless to make club sandwiches or meatloaf. You can't blame him for doing what he does best. Blame the person whose idea it was to have Bayless cook.

Or am I missing your point, that this is complicated Mexican food? Maybe you would have preferred if it was less complicated Mexican food?
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cyjames1975
10:47 PM on 05/24/2010
Agreed. The point of picking Bayliss is to pick someone with a tremendous amount of respect for the cuisine and culture of your guest (as well as experience) and hope that the sentiment is passed along through their dinner experience. It's a symbol of how close our countries are and how the exchange of cultures is positive. What are you going to serve -- pizza, sushi, borscht?
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DandaPanda
I am not a republican
09:00 AM on 05/25/2010
serving mexican food to a mexican seems lazy and uninspired. braised chicken? CHICKEN?
02:55 PM on 05/20/2010
Best mole I have ever had was in the state of Oaxaca, so many kinds and was once lucky to watch a friends mother make our mole fresh one day

The mole in Puebla outside of Mexico city is also very nice.

Oh Ya! Once a had green mole in Merida...

Now Its all I want.....
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SusanElizabeth1949
My micro-bio may be empty but my head isn't.
05:10 PM on 05/22/2010
I ate several times, during July 2000, in a restaurant in Nogales, Sonora that on any given day had a selection of at least 18 different moles. The moles were the reason I ate at that restaurant at least once a day for the two weeks we were in the area.
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Sharkcellar
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL LIBRARY.
02:39 PM on 05/20/2010
Mole fit for a king! Glaaaarrrgghhh!!!
01:08 PM on 05/20/2010
Delicious!