Huevos Rancheros

Huevos Rancheros by Nicole Maxwell
Videography and Production by Colin Castillo

Nicole Maxwell shows us how she spends her spare mornings spoiling herself with this delicious Southern treat. She first discovered huevos rancheros after she moved here from California for school and has fallen in love. She is currently an alumni and working in the field of Media Production. This spicy breakfast helps her get ready for her day.

Ingredients

  • 2-3 eggs
  • 2 oz. diced red bell pepper
  • 1 oz. Sriracha sauce
  • 3 oz. Your Favorite Salsa
  • 1 oz. Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Directions

In a pan over medium heat combine the olive oil and the diced bell pepper.  Sautee the bell peppers until the peppers are soft and a little charred. Crack eggs in a bowl and scramble with a fork. Pour the eggs in the pan working in the bell peppers throughout.  Plate the eggs and pour the salsa over the eggs followed by the Sriracha sauce. If you believe this dish might be too spicy feel free to substitute a lighter bell pepper and exclude the Sriracha sauce.

Chocolate Fudge Brownies



Chocolate Fudge Brownies by Daniel Villarreal
Videography and Production by Emily Scruggs

Daniel Villarreal, a sophomore psychology major, makes his favorite dish: chocolate fudge brownies. An avid baker, Villarreal shares his coveted tip for making the best brownies.

Ingredients

  • 1 pkg. Betty Crocker Classic Chocolate Brownie Mix
  • 1 pkg. Hershey’s syrup
  • 1/4 cup vegetable oil
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 1 egg
  • 9″ x 9″ pan

Directions

Pour Betty Crocker mix into a large mixing bowl. Add vegetable oil and water, stirring frequently. Next, add the egg. When mixture is mostly blended, add the Hershey’s syrup and stir until completely blended and smooth. Pour mixture into ungreased pan and bake at 350 degrees for 40 minutes. When a toothpick can be inserted and pulled out clean, the brownies are done. Let cool before serving. Serves nine.

Flan

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Flan
Story and Photos by Carla Rodriguez

Growing up in a house overflowing with family members, Anastasia Zavala needed a form of escape that eventually led her to a devotion for pastries. As a biology major at St. Mary’s University, Zavala doesn’t have a lot of time to work on her beloved hobby.

“I love the school, it’s so small and quaint. Whenever I’m sitting outside with my coffee, I can’t help but be just as relaxed as I am when I’m baking,” she said.

“It’s a nice trade-in, but I still wish the school had a kitchen students can go to.”

Aside from reading and painting, Zavala taught herself how to keep busy in the kitchen by baking.

“One day, I was craving some cookies. As everyone was off to work, at soccer practice, or running around, I walked into the kitchen and just so happened to find all the ingredients I needed to make some.”

She began small, slowly making her cookies more complex.

After about one month, Zavala had prepared nearly a dozen different forms of cookies and wanted to venture off deeper in the world of baking; today, she now is able to turn any ordinary dessert into a mouth-watering piece of joy.

Awkwardly enough, if you give her a spatula and tell her to cook dinner, you’re more than likely to become good friends with the neighborhood fire department than end up with a delicious plate.

“Food in general is too complicated, or at least I’ve subconsciously tricked my body into thinking so,” she says. “Sweets can help any day turn into an even better one, so I would much rather bake a brownie than, say, meatloaf.”

Zavala considers flan as her favorite treat that requires a little amount of ingredients and effort.

She first taught herself how to make flan for a Christmas dinner with her family.

Since then, she realized how a delicious-caramel-dripping plate could come from such an easy recipe; it has become her go-to dessert for all sorts of dinner events with friends and family.

Although she has only recently begun conquering the world of sweets and chocolatey delights, one of Zavala’s goals for the future is to become the wonderful grandmother everyone sees on television: cookies always in the cookie jar, along with the main reason why her grandchildren have a mouth full of cavities.

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 c of sugar
  • 6 large eggs
  • 1 14 oz can sweetened condensed milk
  • 2 13 oz cans evaporated milk
  • 1 T of vanilla

Directions

Preheat oven to 325°F. Pour 1 cup of sugar in warm pan. Stir sugar until brown and caramelized. Quickly pour 2-3 T of caramel in bowl. Blend eggs together with wisk. Mixing in milk slowly. Mix in 1/2 c of sugar, then vanilla. Pour custard into caramel bowl. Place bowl into a larger bowl with 1 to 2 inches of water. Bake for 45 minutes. Makes 3 medium sized servings.

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies

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Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies
Story and Photos by Brissa Renteria

Warm spices flowing through the kitchen. Conjoining smells of autumn and baking. A great season approaches us, and Tanya Compean shows us how to start the last months of the year off right by sharing a great family recipe.

Never having to worry about cooking in the dorms, Compean finds it easy to relax on an evening after school and work and find a kitchen through her friends who live off campus.

“I chose this recipe because the ingredients used together make a pastry that a lot of people have not heard of,” says Compean. “When one thinks of the ingredient pumpkin, what usually comes to mind is Thanksgiving and pumpkin pies. However, this recipe can be made year round and the pumpkin and chocolate chip mixture is very unique and delicious.”

With baking being one of her passions and hobbies, Tanya says she favors pastries, especially Mexican-styled pastries. Her favorites include sweet bread, flan, and pastel de tres leches.

Compean is a full-time senior at St. Mary’s University and will graduate with a bachelor’s degree in Marketing in December 2011. What she enjoys most about being a Marketing major is the opportunity for creativity. “I am a very creative person and there is a wide range of areas where I can apply myself to express this and much more.”

Originally from California, Compean says she chose St. Mary’s because she likes the professor to student ratio in the classroom. “When applying for colleges four years ago, my main focus was if I was going to get a better education from one university over another. Now that I am a senior, I have grown close to my professors where I can ask for help and guidance with ease and realize that St. Mary’s was one of the best decisions I have ever made.”

Presently, Compean works part-time at a marketing agency in which she will have an entry-level position when she graduates in December. Compean says this will allow her to “learn more about the world of marketing and advertising. I have never been too busy with work or school not to bake, so I know I will continue doing so in my free time!”

When out of the classroom, Compean says she likes to visit new and native restaurants. As a daughter of two Mexican nationals, she grew up eating a lot of Mexican and Spanish-styled foods. “A favorite entree of mine is green chile enchiladas and Spanish rice,” Compean says.

Compean offers this advice: “Stick to your passions! Mine is baking, and since I do live on campus with no kitchen available to me, I can always find a way to bake, that doesn’t stop me!”

Ingredients

  • 1 c canned pumpkin
  • 1 c white sugar
  • 1/2 c vegetable oil
  • 1 egg
  • 2 c all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp milk
  • 1 T vanilla
  • 2 c semisweet chocolate chips

Directions

Combine pumpkin, sugar, vegetable oil, and egg. In a separate bowl, stir together flour, baking powder, ground cinnamon, baking soda,milk, vanilla and salt. Add flour mixture to pumpkin mixture and mix well. Add chocolate chips. Scoop dough onto a greased cookie sheet and bake at 350° F for approximately 10 minutes. Makes 24 cookies.

Cuban Lechon Asado

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Cuban Lechon Asado
Story and Photos by William Mabie

Watching Joaquin “Quino” Toranzo at work in his kitchen is like watching master artists at work in their studio. The soft crooning of Bobby Darin and Frank Sinatra coming from his stereo mixes in the air with the fragrant aromas emanating from the pork shoulder he prepares.

He works in tempo with the music as he sings along in his own smooth baritone voice. Grinding away with the pepper dispenser, he holds it up with his arm outstretched as he sustains a note in the musical standard “Beyond the Sea.” One can tell that here in the kitchen, Quino is truly in his element.

A senior at St. Mary’s studying political science, international relations and English literature, along with holding the prestigious title of student body president, Quino embodies the spirit of this university.

Outgoing but modest, his body language projects his carefree nature, but he takes his responsibilities serious. To him family is paramount, and part of the reason he found himself attending St. Mary’s is just for that reason.

“My cousin told me of the honors program as I was nearing graduation, so I applied and was accepted,” he says as he chops cloves of garlic. “I had visited the campus before when Mike Huckabee and Hilary Clinton were holding their political rallies here, and I thought it was interesting that of all the places in San Antonio that they could have held them, they both chose this school.”

With another graduation on the horizon, Quino has his sights set on earning his MBA, with the possibility of a doctorate in political science, and beyond that maybe even law school. Eventually, He hopes to become an entrepreneur with ties to the service industry, where his eclectic style can blossom into an illustrious career.

As he rubs the seasoning into the pork shoulder, one can really get a sense of Quino’s love of his labor.

When asked about his favorite foods, Quino lets out a laugh and wonders out loud, “Where to begin?” He says his guilty pleasure is macaroni and cheese, but if he had to pick a meal as his favorite, he’d take a rare, juicy filet mignon with a loaded potato on the side, either baked, mashed, or scalloped.

“This recipe is a personal favorite of mine,” he says as he prepares the dish for the oven. “My mother learned it from my paternal grandfather, which in turn was handed down to me. I’ve altered the ingredients over time to suit my own tastes, but only a little.”

The advice he gives about the recipe is simple: patience. “Cooking this can take a long time when done right. You need to let the meat soak up the juices over night for the full flavor to come alive.”

Hours later, as the oven timer goes off and the meal is finally ready, the smell is the first thing that hits you.

The first word that comes to mind is ‘heaven,’ but it’s not until you take that first bite that the true sense of the word sinks in.

Ingredients

  • 15 lbs. pork shoulder
  • 4 T. olive oil
  • 4 T. Comino
  • 4 T. salt
  • 2 T. pepper
  • 2 whole garlic
  • 1/2 liter Mojo Agrio
  • 1/2 liter Naranja Agria
  • 1 stick butter

Directions
Spread the pork shoulder on a 15″x18″ baking tray with at least a 2″ rim. Make “x” shaped incisions in the shoulder in a grid pattern, leaving 1.5″ between each incision. With a baster, inject a cocktail of Mojo Agrio and Naranja Agria into each incision, leaving enough to repeat this process later. Now, peel your garlic cloves and cut them into four wedges. Insert wedges of garlic into the incisions until you exhaust both heads of garlic. After the pork has received the vampire-slayer treatment, repeat the basting with the Mojo and Naranja Agria cocktail, this time allowing the cocktail to be poured on the whole of the shoulder. Now spread the salt, pepper, and comino on the shoulder and rub it into the incisions. Before refrigerating, cover the tray with aluminum foil.

Refrigerate the pork shoulder overnight to allow for proper marinating. When you are ready to cook the pork, preheat your oven to 375* F, and pull back the aluminum foil. Now pour the olive oil over the shoulder and cover the tray with the foil again. Let the shoulder cook for two hours before flipping the shoulder over, pouring the pork’s own juices over it every half hour. Allow the shoulder to cook another two hours at 375* on its other side, still pouring it’s juices over it and into the incisions every half hour or so.

Now that the shoulder is basically fully cooked, remove the foil and raise your oven’s temperature to 475*, making sure the pork skin is exposed to allow it to crisp. When the skin starts to brown, remove the pork from the oven. Allow time to cool, and enjoy!

Cheese Enchiladas

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Cheese Enchiladas
Story and Photos by Preston Jones

San Antonio is a predominantly Hispanic city, where Mexican-styled food is an important part of the city’s culture.

A native from El Paso, Dion Jeraldo Castro pays tribute to that culture by making cheese enchiladas.

After graduating in May 2013, Castro hopes to attend a graduate school in California to pursue opportunites in acting.

Castro has starred in high school plays, made his own music videos, and also was featured in other videos he produced on YouTube.

Already being a talented actor, Castro wants to take his skills to the next level and try to and find professional work.

Recently, Castro switched majors from Exercise and Sports Science to English-Communication Arts and discovered a passion for course such as Film Studies, Media Production and Graphics. Additionally, he plans to earn a minor in drama which will give him some experience in acting.

In addition to acting, Castro also is passionate about basketball.

As a member of the Rattler basketball team at St. Mary’s, he plays shooting guard and has been on the team since his freshman year.

Growing up in El Paso, Castro says that some of his favorite foods to eat are Mexican.

He enjoys enchiladas, tacos and flautas, but also likes other foods.

“I enjoy Italian food as well, such as Chicken Parmesans and Chicken Alfredo. One of my favorite dishes is a Japanese dish called Chicken Teriyaki,” says Castro.

Castro likes to cook simple foods such as bean and cheese tacos, nachos or these cheese enchiladas.

“Living on campus prevents me from cooking as much as I would like and am often stuck with going to the [school] cafeteria, or eating fast food,” he says.

Castro feels that this dish relates well with the St. Mary’s community and is simple to cook.

It is one of the first meals that his mom taught him to make while growing up in El Paso.

“This dish is very simple to make,” says Castro.

Basically, what  is seen in the directions is the way to prepare this dish.

The best advice that Castro offers when making this dish is to use only as much cheese as desired.

“If you’re not a lover of cheese, then do not pour it on. But, if you do love cheese, then go head and go nuts,” says Castro.

 Ingredients

  • 1 24 fl oz bottle Canola Oil (use as needed)
  • 17-20 Red tortillas
  • 32oz bag of Mexican shredded cheese
  • 2 3oz cans of Old El Paso Enchilada sauce
  • Foil

Directions

Cover the bottom of a flat round pan with canola oil, and turn the heat to medium high. Pour the Old El Paso sauce into a medium sized pan, and turn pilot to medium high to heat the sauce. Have a large pan to place into the oven ready on the side and preheat oven to 350. Take the red tortillas one at a time and run through oil just to soften, and then dip in Old El Paso sauce to cover tortilla. Place tortilla in baking pan, put cheese in the middle and roll tortilla. Push tortilla all the way to the side of pan. (Note: Spray pan with nonstick spray before putting tortillas down. Repeat steps four and five lining up rolled tortillas until bottom of pan is filled. Once pan is filled pour left over sauce into pan just to moisten the top of tortillas. Pour as much cheese as wanted over tortillas. Cover pan with foil and place in oven. Bake until cheese melted, take out of oven and let sit for 5 minutes, then serve and enjoy. This recipe will make up to six servings with three enchiladas on each plate.

Arroz Con Gandules

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Arroz Con Gandules
Story and Photos by Felix Arroyo

In a world full of spices and flavors, where meals can make a person feel like it was prepared solely for them, Ari Rivera, a senior majoring in forensic science, chooses to create the most recognized and popular Puerto Rican dish, Arroz con Gandules.

Rivera, originally from Killeen Texas, has been a President’s Ambassador, served as a writer and former news editor for The Rattler and presently works for Residence Life.

After receiving her bachelor of arts degree in English-communications arts, Rivera returned to St. Mary’s to complete a second undergraduate degree in forensic science.

She hopes to find a position in San Antonio as a blood splatter analyst and eventually go on to work for the F.B.I. Rivera appreciates the community atmosphere at St. Mary’s and the many ways to get involved with the university and local community.

For Rivera, Arroz Con Gandules is a special dish since her father is Puerto Rican (her mother from Guam).

“I enjoy making food from both of their backgrounds. Both feature rice cooked in different ways combined with vegetables,” says Rivera.

Although her older sister is the one who first taught her how to prepare this dish, Rivera believes that she can now do it much better.

Known by friends for creating creative and colorful desserts, Rivera enjoys preparing this dish because wants to show that she can create a meal as well.

Rivera, who also enjoys baking, notes that her favorite dish, red velvet cupcakes which go great with this dish, always brighten her day she says as she serves.

Ingredients

  • small handful of roasted ham chunks
  • 1 tsp of Olive oil
  • 1 pack Sazon con achiote
  • Adobo seasoning
  • 1 tsp of Tomato sauce
  • Gandules (one can per 4-6 people)/ pigeon peas
  • white rice (one cup per 4-5 people)
  • water (one cup per every cup of rice)
  • 1 can of Vienna sausage
  • 1 pack of galdo de tamato con sabor de pollo
  • 1 T of cut salad olives
  • 1 tsp of roasted bell peppers
  • 1½ T of Recao/sofrito

Directions

Set a medium sized pot to heat medium and then pour 1 tablespoon of olive oil. Place sliced ham into pot stir and let simmer for 5 minutes. Place cut Vienna Sausages in and let simmer for another minute. Pour 1½ tablespoon of ricao/sofrito into pot. Pour 1 teaspoon of tomato sauce and 1 tablespoon of salad olives. Cut 1 teaspoon or small handful of roasted bell peppers and toss into pot. Pour one can of gandules/pigeon peas into pot fill cant with water and pour into pot. Drop one pack of Sazon con achiote and 1 pack of galdo de tamato con sabor de pollo into pot.  Sprinkle adobo seasoning to slightly coat the top of the sauce in pot. Pick up pot and mix or slightly shake to mix ingredients. Run water over 1 cup of rice to get rice clean and then pour into pot with a separate cup of water as well. Stir contents and let sit till rice turns a gold color and till rice is soft not wet. Serves 4-5 people.

Doritos Casserole

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Doritos Casserole
Story and Photos by Fernando Armendariz 

It’s a cold winter day in London.

Feeling homesick, St. Mary’s International Relations Major Juls Forbus decides to Skype with her mother; however she stops as she smells the cooking of her flat mates.

Curiously, she enters the kitchen expecting to find a gourmet meal.

To her surprise, she discovers only Doritos and other ingredients.

Forbus, originally from Houston, presently lives in a residence hall on campus and will graduate in December 2011 with her bachelor of arts degree.

While at St. Mary’s, she was extremely active in the Tri-Sigma Sorority, Organization for Conflict Diplomacy and participated in the London Study Abroad Program in fall 2010.

After receiving her degree, she hopes to return to London and study for a master’s degree in international relations; ultimately, she hopes to practice family law.

Forbus chose to attend St. Mary’s due to the funding she was awarded, student-teacher ratio and the sense of community she felt.

“What I like most about St. Mary’s are the deep connections I’ve developed with my peers, teachers and the immense opportunities I’ve been given such as studying abroad,” Forbus says.

After learning about the dish while studying abroad in London, Forbus returned to the U.S., tried the recipe and was pleasantly surprised with its taste and ease of preparation; it quickly became one of her favorites.

When preparing this dish, Forbus suggests, “You can never have too much cheese!”

Ingredients

  • 2 large handfuls of Doritos chips
  • 1/2 c of Hormel pre-made, microwaveable chili meat
  • 1 1/2 c shredded cheese of your preference
  • 1 small sized tomato
  • diced onions (optional)
  • dollop of sour cream (optional)
  • sliced jalapeños (optional)

Directions
Warm up Hormel, pre-made, microwaveable chili meat for one minute and let cool. Dice tomato. Lay out the chips so that they completely cover a microwavable plate (may overlap in some areas). Spread chili-meat over the Doritos, creating an even layer. Sprinkle the cheese over the top of the chili meat and Doritos. Add the diced vegetables (and optional onions) on top of the cheese. Warm nachos in microwave for two minutes or until cheese is melted thoroughly. Add a dollop of sour cream (optional) and serve the nachos while warm. Makes one serving.

Queso Flameado

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Queso Flameado
Story and Photos by Larry Machado 

Kevin Alaniz does not cook often-yet he is an awesome chef, due to his ability to make queso flamed.

He is confident that if anyone were to taste it, they would think he were an awesome chef, too.

About the only thing more puzzling than Alaniz’s mastery of queso flameado is how simple he made it look in its preparation.

Originally from southern Texas, Alaniz comes from a home of educators, where both his parents are involved in teaching at his hometown, Brownsville, Texas.

Alaniz, a junior majoring in communications at St. Mary’s University, also plans on becoming involved in teaching–“the family business” as he calls it–after he graduates.

After high school, Alaniz felt that a small family environment was key in choosing a college which is why he chose St. Mary’s.

Aside from cooking and eating queso flameado, Alaniz’s favorite food is the potato.

He says that he eats and enjoys any type of potato regardless of how it is prepared: fried, baked, mashed or smashed.

Yet, the reason why he chose queso flameado to share is because it is simple to prepare and good to eat–and, most importantly it is a cultural dish with Hispanic ties.

Despite his love for potatoes and his respect for queso flameado, Alaniz interestingly would not select either of these if he were stranded on an island and could only choose one food item to eat for an entire year.

The winner of this battle would be macaroni and cheese. Yes! The ol’ mac and cheese combo.

In fact, mac and cheese wasn’t his first reply to the question, rather, Alaniz asked if Dr. Pepper would count as a food item?

Perhaps this satirical confusion stems from how he views food and the cooking process as a whole.

Alaniz claims that, by nature, he is a very structured and organized person and why he enjoys cooking (when he actually does cook) is because it allows him to break away from his mold of organization.

In fact, one of Alaniz’s most memorable moments involving food–hilariously and ironically–stems from a total lack of structure.

One day when attempting to bake a cake, Alaniz accidentally added a wrong ingredient. Instead of using all-purpose flour, he added powdered sugar.

As a result, “The cake never cooked,” he says.

While this was an embarrassing moment, Alaniz also has some fond memories of cooking as well; some of Alaniz’s most cherished memories involve him and his father making tortillas from scratch using grandma’s recipe.

Alaniz rates his queso flameado four out of five stars and offers the reader this bit of advice when preparing the dish: “Plan on making more because it is so good you won’t be able to stop yourselves from getting seconds.”

Ingredients

  • 1 package of Mexican Chorizo
  • 4 oz of Oaxaca melting cheese
  • 1/2 chile habañero
  • 1/2 onion
  • 1 package of tortillas
  • 1 bushel of fresh cilantro (optional)

Directions
Preheat oven to 325°F. Cook 3 links of chorizo (take out of plastic casing) in an cast iron skillet until browned. Make sure to break apart the chorizo using your cooking spoon, until it looks like ground hamburger meat. (Approximately 3-5 minutes). Remove most of the grease from pan; however, leave a small amount in there. The small amount of leftover grease will be used to sauté the onions and chile habañero in the next step. Slice 1/2 of an onion finely, as well as, 1/2 of a chile habanero and add to the pan with the chorizo and leftover grease. Cook all contents together until both the onions and chile are sauteed, and then remove from flame. Cut the Oaxaca cheese into cubes about 1 inch in size and place into the skillet with the contents. Mix well. Place the cast iron skillet into the oven until contents are bubbling (approximately 5-10 minutes). While waiting for contents to bubble, begin warming up tortillas. Remove contents and serve immediately in tacos preferably using two spoons to scoop up your gooey queso. Makes 6 servings.

Quesadillas

Quesadillas by Rebecca Prada
Videography and Production by Diana Garcia

Rebecca Prada is a junior, marketing major at St. Mary’s University. Rebecca learned to cook through her family and continues to do so because she has come to love it. “It is a way to relieve stress and just get away from daily life.”

Ingredients

  • 1 pack of uncooked tortillas
  • 1 pack of mixed Mexican cheese
  • 1 pack of cooked ham

Directions

Heat a large flat sheet pan to medium heat. Make sure the pan is hot before you place the tortillas. Let the tortillas cook for about 3 minuets on each side or until you see them puffing up. If you see the tortillas puffing up let them puff for about 30 seconds and then safely with a knife or fork pop the “pimples.” After heating them at the proper time add the cheese and place it on half of the tortilla. Let the cheese melt for about a minute and then add the ham. After adding the cheese immediately close the tortilla in half and let it melt together. Let it heat up on each side for about 20 seconds and take them of the pan to cool off.