Freezer Chicken Enchiladas
Preparing enchiladas can be a multi-hour, labor-intensive endeavor. There’s the sauce to prep and the filling to cook, and finally, all the rolling. We wanted to find a way to streamline chicken enchiladas and make them freezable so that they could be prepared well ahead of time and stored at the ready. Here’s what we discovered:
Test Kitchen Discoveries
- Freeze the rolled enchiladas and sauce separately; otherwise they will turn into a mushy mess.
- Spray the tortillas with vegetable oil cooking spray and briefly heat them in the oven to make them pliant enough to roll easily.
- Bake the enchiladas while still frozen. We found that defrosting them actually leads to a dried-out texture once baked.
- Partially bake the enchiladas “naked,” or without sauce. A light coat of vegetable oil spray will keep the tortillas from drying out too much.
- For authentic flavor, puree and “fry” the sauce until the flavor and color has intensified. Most Mexican sauces are prepared in this fashion.
- Smoky chipotle chiles add both heat and a rich flavor to the sauce. These chiles, which are smoked jalapeños, come packed in a tomato-based adobo sauce. They are found in the Mexican foods section of most supermarkets.
Use leftover cooked chicken or a store-bought rotisserie chicken in this recipe. Note that you won’t need 1 1/2 cups of the cheese until you bake the enchiladas. Serve with avocado, pickled jalapeños, shredded lettuce, and/or sour cream.
- canned chipotle chile in adobo sauce
- ground cumin
- coriander
- table salt
- low-sodium chicken broth
- shredded cooked chicken
- shredded Monterey Jack cheese
- chopped fresh cilantro leaves
- minced canned pickled jalapeños
- Cooking spray
The test kitchen prefers the hearty strands of egg-enriched fettuccine usually sold in 12-ounce boxes. We found that you need to salt the water used to cook the pasta and vegetables quite heavily to make sure they emerge nicely seasoned.
- Table salt and ground black pepper
- heavy cream
- frozen peas
- thinly sliced fresh basil
Catfish, trout, haddock, thick sole fillets, or tilapia can be substituted for the cod. Stay away from very delicate fillets or thick, meaty fish such as swordfish or tuna. If some of the pieces have thin, tapered ends, tuck them under before breading to prevent them from overcooking and drying out. Generously coat the fish with the Melba crumbs, but do not pile them on or they will not adhere to the fish; there will be crumbs left over. Serve with Tartar Sauce, (see related recipe).
This recipe was published in our cookbook The Best Light Recipe.
- large egg whites
- Dijon mustard
- minced fresh thyme leaves
- garlic powder
- cayenne pepper
- Vegetable cooking spray
- Table salt and ground black pepper
If your chops are on the thinner side, check their internal temperature after the initial sear. If they are already at the 140-degree mark, remove them from the skillet and allow them to rest, tented with foil, for 5 minutes, then add the platter juices and glaze ingredients to the skillet and proceed with step 3. If your chops are closer to 1 inch thick, you may need to increase the simmering time in step 2.
- pork chops
- cayenne pepper
- soy sauce
- Dijon mustard
- apple juice
- brown sugar
- cider vinegar
Yes, the stuff from the can. Have to include it for shopping list purposes.
- ground beef
- hamburger buns
- Manwich
- canned corn
When making this dish, be sure to place the vegetables on top of the chicken after sautéing; that way, they won’t be crushed by the meat and will render their juices to the chicken. If you like, you can substitute two medium leeks for the onion in this recipe. To prepare leeks, trim the dark green leaves and root end, keeping the base intact. Quarter each leek lengthwise and rinse thoroughly. Rice pilaf makes a nice accompaniment. You can make this dish in a smaller sauté pan, but you will then need to brown the chicken in batches.
- chicken
- pepper
- carrots
- mushrooms
- fresh thyme
- white wine
Make full-flavored, fresh-tasting chicken pot pie without spending all afternoon in the kitchen.
You can make the filling ahead of time, but remember to heat it on top of the stove before topping it. Mushrooms can be sautéed along with the celery and carrots, and blanched pearl onions can stand in for the onion. If you don’t want to make a pastry topping, make the related biscuit recipe, stamp out 8 rounds of dough, arrange dough rounds, over warm filling and bake as directed.
- parsley
- carrots
- celery ribs
- thyme
- frozen peas
- heavy cream
- penne
- frozen peas
- shredded Italian 4-cheese blend
- bacon
Always made with refried black beans, which is why I call them burritos. It just doesn’t taste right with just meat and veggies. I also like to serve this dish with spinach instead of crunchy lettuce, because it’s one of those things that you can easily sneak spinach into for the kids (as if they needed to grow any taller).
- cheddar cheese
- refried black beans
- tortillas
- fajita seasoning mix
- bell pepper
- sour cream
- spinach
Serve with BBQ Chicken Pizza
- Parmaigano-Reggiano
- peas
- bag lettuce
- Red wine vinaigrette