Guacomole

Guacomole and chips – ready to dig in!

Super Bowl was a few Sundays ago, and then the Olympics began broadcasting, and now (at least here in Southern Cal), we’re facing rainy weather again – just one more excuse to call a friend (or two), dish up some nibbles, and park in front of your viewing screen and watch someone else exercise.

Guacomole is a perfect game day nibble. Not the kind bought at the store – no, homemade and fresh is the only way to go. It’s a little bit chunky with diced peppers and chopped cilantro and onion, and a little bit smooth because, well, that’s what avocados do. And then there’s the explosion of flavor in your mouth – citrus, heat, and bright tang, coupled with salt and crunch (from the tortilla chips, of course!). And it’s easy to do!

Guacomole ingredients, ready to go/mash

Grab a big bowl, and add all your ingredients: avocados seeded and scooped out of their skin; poblano pepper roasted in a very hot oven for 15 minutes or so, then peeled and seeded and diced; chopped onion and fresh cilantro; lemons and limes (just the juice!); and then your seasonings – kosher salt (easy does it because you’ll be dipping into your guacomole with (usually) salty tortilla chips, peppers (ancho, chipotle, cayenne, and black – any combination thereof), onion and garlic powders (if you like), and my one secret ingredient – ground cumin (not so secret anymore, I guess!). Take a potato masher (or a fork if you don’t have a masher), and mash. And that’s it! Grab a tortilla chip to sample your guacomole, and then correct your seasonings from there. And if you don’t eat it all in one sitting, it will keep for a day or so, covered in your fridge; just stir it up to mix in the lemon and lime juices before serving.

This recipe is so forgiving. While there’s no substitute for the avocados and citrus juice (lemon or lime will do fine in a pinch), there are other liberties you can take if you must. No poblano? Try a jalapeño or hatch pepper, or (if you have powdered peppers), leave out the roasted pepper completely; or use chopped pickled jalapeño. Don’t have all the varieties of ground chile peppers? Use generic chili pepper. No fresh onion? Use the powdered stuff! And vice versa, no powdered onion? Use fresh! And it’s all so healthy.

Who would have thought eating while others exercise could be so guilt-free? ¡Buen provecho!

Guacomole

An avocado mash borrowed from Mexican cuisine, seasoned with peppers and citrus
Prep Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour
Course Appetizer
Cuisine Mexican
Servings 6

Equipment

  • potato masher

Ingredients
  

  • 2 avocados
  • 2 lemons
  • 2 limes
  • ¼ c fresh cilantro, chopped
  • ¼ red onion, chopped into small dice
  • 1 poblano pepper, roasted, peeled, seeded, then chopped
  • ½ t Kosher salt
  • ½ t black pepper, coarse ground
  • ½ t ancho chili pepper, ground
  • ½ t chipotle chili pepper, ground
  • 2 t cumin, ground
  • ½ t garlic powder
  • ½ t onion powder
  • ¼ t cayenne pepper

To serve

  • Tortilla chips

Instructions
 

  • Slice avocados in half, remove pits, and scoop flesh from skin into large bowl.
  • To avocados, add juice of lemons and limes.
  • Add the rest of the ingrdients to avocado mixture in bowl.
  • Using a potato masher, mash avocado ingredients together.
  • Taste mixture using tortilla chip to sample; adjust seasonings according to taste.

Notes

Many liberties have been taken with this recipe – and many more can be taken!  A traditional Mexican guacomole usually has only avocado, lime juice, red onion, tomato, salt, pepper, cilantro, and jalapeño.  But my version has been Americanized so it adds lemon juice, chipotle and ancho chili powders, cayenne pepper, ground cumin, garlic and onion powders, poblano pepper instead of jalapeño, and no tomato(!).  
And I have to be honest, I even take liberties with my own recipe!  If I only have lemons (or limes), then I use what I have.  If I only have green onions or yellow onions, then that’s what I use.  If I don’t have a poblano pepper, then I use a hatch pepper; I’ve even used pickled jalapeño peppers (chopped) right out of the jar.  If I’ve run out of ancho and/or chipotle chili powders, I’ll just use generic chili powder.  I’ve found that the only essential ingredient in my mix is the ground cumin; I really miss that if I don’t have it.  
One more “ingredient” that I’ve found important is the tortilla chip to test your gucomole before serving it.  The saltiness of tortilla chips seems to vary and that effects the overall saltiness of your guacomole, so go ahead and break into your fresh bag of tortilla chips and test your guacomole – just try to leave enough to serve!
Guacomole can be made a day ahead and stored, covered, in the refrigerator.  The lemon-lime juice may separate from the mash, so just give it a stir before serving.  Buen provecho!
Keyword Avocado, chili powder, cilantro, garlic, jalapeno peppers, lemon juice, lime juice, poblano peppers

2 responses to “Guacomole”

  1. Clay Avatar
    Clay

    This one is addicting! It rarely last past a day!

    1. fêtesuzette Avatar

      Aww, thanks! Glad you like it – me, too!

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