Pressure Cooker Chipotle Chicken Pozole

- Total Time
- 50 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2tablespoons vegetable oil
- 1large red or yellow onion, finely chopped
- Kosher salt
- 8cloves garlic, finely chopped
- 1(7-ounce) can chipotle peppers in adobo sauce
- 1teaspoon onion powder
- 1teaspoon garlic powder
- 1teaspoon ground cumin
- ½teaspoon dried oregano
- 2½pounds boneless, skinless chicken thighs
- 5cups chicken broth or stock
- 1cup frozen corn
- 1(29-ounce) can pozole (hominy), rinsed and well drained
- Juice of 1 lime (about 2 tablespoons), plus more as needed
- Crushed tortilla chips, shredded cabbage, diced avocado, crumbled queso fresco, minced red onion and cilantro, for topping
Preparation
- Step 1
Using the sauté setting, heat oil in a 6- to 8-quart pressure cooker. Add the onion, season it with salt and cook, stirring often, until the onion is softened and translucent, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook, stirring, until slightly softened and fragrant, 2 minutes. Turn the sauté setting off.
- Step 2
Open the can of chipotles and remove the chiles, leaving as much of the adobo sauce behind as possible. (Scrape the sauce off the chiles with your fingers as best you can.) Set the chiles aside and add the adobo sauce to the pressure cooker. Chop 1 to 4 of the chiles until they are almost a paste. (Determine the number of chiles according to your desired level of heat: 1 chile for a very mild soup and 4 for a very spicy soup.) Add the chiles to the pressure cooker. (Store remaining chiles in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 5 days and in the freezer indefinitely.)
- Step 3
Using the sauté setting, add onion and garlic powders, cumin and oregano to the pressure cooker. Cook, stirring constantly, until fragrant and heated through, about 1 minute. Stir in the chicken until coated, scraping the bottom of the pan. Add the broth and ½ teaspoon salt (but hold off on the salt if you are using fully salted broth.) Close the lid and cook on high pressure for 18 minutes.
- Step 4
Let the pressure release naturally for 5 minutes, then release remaining pressure manually. (If hot liquid spurts out of the knob along with the steam, carefully close it and wait 5 more minutes before releasing remaining pressure.) Using a ladle, skim excess fat from the surface of the soup, if desired.
- Step 5
Using the sauté setting, coarsely shred the chicken in the pot using 2 forks. Add the corn and the pozole and simmer until warmed through, 3 to 5 minutes. Add the lime juice and taste; add more salt or lime juice if necessary. Serve the soup in bowls with the toppings of choice.
Private Notes
Comments
Just a hint on step two. Since I use Chipotles in Adobo quite often, I puree a whole can at a time, with my immersion blender and freeze in one tablespoon aliquots. A tablespoon is close to one chile. They give a nice smoky heat to many recipes. In step two, just throw in one to four cubes during the sautee.
I'm sure it's just me, but I've never seen frozen kernel corn in a posole. I personally prefer cooked dried hominy to canned; maybe the pressure cooker would be good for that. For the chile component, my favorite is New Mexico chile powder added after you cook the onions. Cook that through, then you add pre-cooked chicken and the cooked hominy, etc. and simmer for 30 minutes. Vegetarians could substitute pinto beans for the chicken, canned (rinsed) or cooked from dried beans.
Can this be made in a slow cooker?
I used two 25oz cans of hominy and felt like it was a better ratio. Maybe I just like hominy
I made this exactly as written and the whole family loved it.
There's simply no way a recipe so straightforward can be so excellent, but IT IS!! Made it exactly as described in my stove top pressure cooker and it turned out amazing. My wife and I agree that it's the best pozole we've ever eaten. I also love that it's a very "efficient" recipe that doesn't include a bunch of wasted steps and dirty dishes; it's the real essence of a good pressure cooker recipe.
