As the familial holiday season winds down... Skrimom was able to get one more act of forced labor out of me.
Tamales.
Hundreds of tamales.

This is not hundreds. This is approximately 50. We had many of these batches. Yes, each one is individually wrapped, yes, they are individually formed, and YES, they are kick-your-pants-off-and-make-love delicious. Only something this delicious could drive Skrimir to have the patience and diligence to devote two days to making these things.
Also, my mother pressganging me into the assembly had something to do with it. There is no such thing as making only 'some' tamales. You have to make ALL of the tamales!
WARNING. This does take at least two days of work! WARNING! This does have enough hand labor for three to four people involved! WARNING! This makes approximately 150-250 tamales, depending on how big you like tamales. The tamales I made were a little smaller than a cigar, and a serving was about two tamales. Although some people like them larger, I recommend small tamales. Why?
BECAUSE THESE ARE INCREDIBLY BAD FOR YOU. THEY WOULD NOT BE DELICIOUS OTHERWISE. Eating one or two small ones is OK, but nobody, and I MEAN NOBODY should be noshing on giant tamales in large numbers.
Small tamales are surprisingly light and delicious. Large tamales are heavy and satisfying... but as you can see below the ingredients are NOT something you want to overdose on! Tamale moderation, folks!
So, this is how you make tamales. But not all at once. The first day, we prepare the tamale meat filling. The rest is tomorrow.
INGREDIENTS:
-6 pounds of a fatty, stringy pork cut such as shoulder. This is not for lean meat. You need the fat. And the bones. Or even the skin if you've got it.
-A dozen or so fresh, hot chili peppers. They can be of any variety you want, but if you ask me, ERR ON THE SIDE OF SPICY. Add WAY too many. This dish actually gets less spicy when it is complete, so if you think your mix is OK, chances are it will lose that bite once assembled and steamed. My family uses fresnos, serranos, tepins, yellows, mirabels, jalapenos, mirasols, cayennes... anything we can find that's not as hot as a habenero, which is a bit too overwhelming for tamales.
-About 10 dried New Mexico dried chile pepper pods. Other dried peppers are OK but New Mexico peppers work the best for some reason...
- About 15-25 other hotter dried peppers, such as tiny pequins, cascabels, or arbols... whatever you can find.
-One onion
-Some Garlic
-Some salt
-One can or bottle of beer. Or water, I guess?
- More water
-1.5-2 tsp dried cumin (comino)
- 2 tsp dried oregano
Equipment as mentioned.
PROCEDURE, DAY ONE:
So take your dried peppers.

De-seed them. A lot of the heat is in the seeds, but we want the pepper flavor, and the incindiary seeds can overpower it if you aren't careful.
BONUS STAGE: Save some of the incindiary seeds for later.
Toss those peppers into a container that has your beer (or water) in it.

Either way works. This is so we can reconstitute them. Put them aside. Now take your fresh peppers and some FIRE and ROAST those unlucky sons.

You want their skins to get all blackened and blistery. Even burned. You want them roasted. Not carbonized. But very done. This is not gentle. When they look like this:

put them carefully in a paper bag to sweat. While your peppers are cooling off a bit, take a look at this MEAT!

THE MEAT

THE MEAT

Hack this up into chunks about an inch thick. If there is skin, shred that into very fine bits. Bones go in whole. Put it all in a pot like this.

Then chop up an onion and add it in.

Garlic can come too.

I swear, there is no major recipie I will ever make that does not involve chopping some freaking onions and garlic.
OK, so your hot peppers should be done cooling by now. Open up the bag and pull them out. Now, to get rid of those weird fibrous skins, run them under a faucet and rub them.

Also, pull off the tops and split them down the middle with your thumb to wash out the seeds. NOTE: depending on the pepper variety, the more delicate may want to wear gloves/mask/hazmat gear, because doing this with moderately hot serrano peppers feels like .5 of GETTING MACED IN THE EYES. Uncontrollable coughing fits, etc. Also, don't touch any unmentionables, babies, or other sensitive things after handling hot peppers. Seriously, don't mess with hot peppers. Don't do it.
evil Here is a naked pepper for the curious.

Now you don't have to worry about those weird little cigar-rolls of pepper skin in your meat! OK, so remember those peppers? Toss 'em in. Remember those spices up there in the ingredients? Toss 'em in. Cover it all with water.

Ugly? Great.
Now but this bad boy on to simmer for at least 6 hours. Preferably on the back burner for a whole day. Before you eat dinner, turn it off and let it cool down a bit. Before you go to sleep, put it in the fridge or the cooler once it's room temperature.
Relax. Now you don't have to do anything for a whole day...
A whole day until you will NEED slaves for
HARD
MANUAL
LABOR!
Tune in next time!