Let’s Make Enchiladas – Cast Iron Recipe
This is a quick and Enchilada Recipe made with Beer and Iron’s Enchilada Sauce and a Low-and-Slow Coffee-Crusted Pork Roast.
This is a quick and Enchilada Recipe made with Beer and Iron’s Enchilada Sauce and a Low-and-Slow Coffee-Crusted Pork Roast.
Tenderized and Brined Chicken Breasts rolled and centered with Pepper Jack Cheese, buttered, and corn flake-battered on a bed of vegetables all cooked in a Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven. This is a crowd-pleaser for sure.
Tenderized and Brined Chicken Breasts rolled and centered with Pepper Jack Cheese, buttered, and corn flake-battered on a bed of vegetables all cooked in a Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven. This is a crowd-pleaser for sure.
Grab your 12-Inch Deep Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven and ¡vamos a empezar esta fiesta! (let’s get this party started!).
Let me get this out up front. This is really a super easy recipe. Create this recipe once and then you’ll forever and ever create this recipe from memory. It’s just that easy.
This recipe article contains affiliate links.
For this recipe, I am using the deep 12-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven. We use a second 10-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven as a “warming pot” and to roll the chicken in the cornflakes. I am using a third 8-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven for melting my butter.
You will need your 12-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven for the recipe but the other two Dutch ovens are optional. Use what you have. No worries.
12-Inch Deep Cast Iron Dutch Oven with the Notch (Camp Chef’s Version: https://amzn.to/3F2ej15
Lodge’s Version: https://amzn.to/3ZJODzH
10-Inch Cast Iron Dutch Oven: https://amzn.to/3PJHQS1
8-Inch Cast Iron Dutch Oven: https://amzn.to/3rAxjkb
Or a Skillet like this: https://amzn.to/3rDKjp7
NOTE: You don’t have to use a Dutch Oven with a Temperature Probe Notch, any Deep 12-Inch Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven will Work. If you are using a regular Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven, cut the vegetable ingredient amounts in half. If you are using a 10-Inch Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven, cut both the vegetable ingredients and the number of chicken breasts in half.
Tenderizing and Pre-Preparing the Chicken
Prepare the Vegetables
Cut the Cheese
For the Cornflakes
Cooking the Chicken
Shredding the Cheese
Pepper Rings / Rounds
Also
To better understand the ingredients, let’s take a quick look at the way this recipe is “stacked.” First, we are going to tenderize and brine our chicken at home and pack it up for easy-does-it in camp.
In camp, we’re going to prepare everything and get it all set up.
Third, we’re going to pre cook our chicken a bit.
Fourth, we’ll add the vegetables (remember the reference to “base ingredients”) and the cheese.
Fifth, well…there ain’t no fifth. Fifth is: We gonna EAT!
6-8 Boneless and Skinless Chicken Breasts (Tenderized and Brined): https://beerandiron.com/how-to-tenderize-chicken-breasts/
1-2 oz Beer and Iron’s Taco Seasoning (Store-Bought Packets are about 1 oz): https://beerandiron.com/homemade-taco-seasoning/
16 oz. Pepper Jack Cheese (or Monterey Jack Cheese for a Mild Version)
½ Gallon Zipper Bag of Cornflakes (Crushed)
8 Tablespoons of Melted Butter
32-34 oz Fire Roasted Diced Tomatoes (Regular if you can not find Fire Roasted)
4-6 oz Sliced Black Olives (Drained)
14-15 oz Diced Green Chilies (Somewhat Drained)
22 oz. Mexican Style Corn (Drained)
30 oz Black Beans (Drained)
1/2 cup green onions; sliced or maybe even some rounds cut from a nice spicy pepper like a jalapeno. I used Jalapeno and Red Fresno Chili Peppers in the video.
You can 100% create this recipe at camp. There’s nothing that says you can’t. Me? I am going to do some pre-prepping at home and then have everything ready for cooking at camp. The recipe will be presented in two parts:
Step 1: Tenderize and Brine 6-8 Chicken Breast Halves. You’ll tenderize these a bit more than normal. They really need to be thinner than you’d normally prepare a chicken breast. Get it down to about ¼ inch. A bit thicker is okay.
How to Tenderize Chicken Breast: https://beerandiron.com/2022/12/how-to-tenderize-chicken-breasts
How to Brine Meat: https://beerandiron.com/2023/01/how-to-beer-brine-whole-chicken
NOTE: Only brine tenderized chicken breast meat for about one hour. Then, remove from the brine and pat dry.
Step 2: After pouring out the used brine from the zipper bag, place a few paper towels in the zipper bag and place the chicken back into the zipper bag with the paper towels. Refrigerate until you are ready to use.
Step 3: Gather together the cans of:
You’ll need to make sure you have your can opener and the strainer. A bowl to drain everything in is suggested.
Step 4: Add your cornflakes to a zipper bag and crunch up to a coarse “meal” like consistency. Don’t crush back to a cornmeal and don’t leave them in big flakes. Somewhere in between is perfect. You will store these in the same zipper bag.
Step 5: Gather your cheese, knife to cut the cheese, and the cheese shredder. You can use a bit of parchment or a paper plate to shred the cheese over.
My suggestion is to use the block cheese and prepare the cheese at camp. When we roll the cheese in the chicken, the packaged cheese sticks may make sense but you’ll be doing the V-8 Head Bonk if you do. And, use the block for shredding too. The anti-caking stuff they put on shredded cheese…well…you’ll see what I am talking about when you try the packaged shredded stuff (everyone I teach this recipe to tries the pre-shredded and swears off the stuff after that…at least for this recipe).
Step 6: Bring your butter. We’re going to use this to “moisten” the chicken before we roll the chicken breast in the crushed cornflakes.
I will often bring my 8-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven and put the butter in the pot with about 2-4 briquettes under the little Dutch until the butter is just perfect.
Step 7: Slice the green onions and or your peppers. We’ll use these to garnish our meal when it’s time to eat.
Okay. Check everything.
In an ice chest, we will have our chicken tenderized and brined and stored with the paper towels in the zipper bag and in the ice chest. We have our cheese and our butter in the ice chest too. A small container or zipper bag holds our green onions that have been “doubled bagged.”
In another container, we’ll have our canned Diced Green Chilies, Sliced Black Olives, Mexican Style Corn, Black Beans, and Fire Roasted Diced Tomatoes. Your homemade taco seasoning or a packet or two of store-bought taco seasoning is there as well.
We’re presenting this recipe in a deep 12-inch cast iron Dutch oven. It’ll be baked in two parts. First, we’ll cook the chicken until it’s almost done. Then, we’ll add the base ingredients and finish the recipe to bring the chicken to 165°F / 75°C.
Here’s the article/video on how to Heat the Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven: https://beerandiron.com/2023/04/how-to-heat-camp-cast-iron-dutch-oven
Step 1: Set 26-30 charcoal briquettes to fire.
Step 2: Slowly melt 8 tablespoons of butter. We use the 8-inch cast iron camp Dutch oven for this. You can set the butter in a metal container and keep it near the charcoal that is being prepped. Don’t heat the butter to a cooking temperature; you just want it melted to a liquid.
Step 3: On a cutting board or a piece of parchment paper, Lay out one of the tenderized and flattened chicken breasts. Dust one side with some of the taco seasoning almost like a dry rub. Dust with discretion; a little goes a long way.
Step 4: Set the crushed cornflakes out and have them ready to roll the chicken breast in.
Step 5: Baton cut the cheese (in long, stick-like cuts). Add the cut cheese sticks to the chicken and roll the thinned chicken breast over the cheese where the cheese is wrapped in the rolled chicken.
Step 6: Keep your hand on the rolled chicken and then coat the chicken in the butter. Now, roll the chicken in the crushed cornflakes. Secure the chicken with two or three toothpicks (if you forget your toothpicks, consider using some fresh and thin twig pieces from a branch of a tree or bush [make sure that tree or bush ain’t poisonous…seems like a no-brainer but…]).
Chef Tip: Roll one chicken breast up at a time.
Chef Tip: Use the same number of toothpicks for each chicken breast. This way you will remember how many toothpicks to remove later. DON’T FORGET one of those toothpicks in the chicken breast when you serve (in a few steps we will remove them).
Chef Tip: There’ll be some cornflakes left. We save these for the time being to add a few more to the recipe a few steps from now.
Step 7: Place each prepared chicken breast roll in the bottom of the cast iron camp Dutch oven one-at-a-time and until all the pieces are prepared and set with the toothpicks pointing up.
Step 8: Cover the camp Dutch oven. Place 8 hot charcoal briquettes under the Dutch oven (as the Heating the Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven video shows) and place 16 hot charcoal briquettes on the top. If you have a windshield (see this article and video), then secure the windshield around the Dutch oven.
Heating the Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven: https://beerandiron.com/how-to-heat-camp-cast-iron-dutch-oven/
Turn the pot and lid 1/3rd turn every 10 minutes.
If you are using a temperature probe, move the briquettes about every 10 minutes or so.
Let the chicken cook until the temperature of the chicken is about 125°F / 50°C to about 145°F / 63°C. Remember, we are going to add more ingredients and let the chicken continue cooking. We will eventually get it to the 165°F / 75°C point.
Chef Tip: How are your charcoal briquettes doing? Do you need to set more to fire to finish baking this dish? We still need to heat the base ingredients, melt the cheese, and finish cooking the chicken.
Step 9: While the chicken is cooking, prepare your base ingredients: Set a colander over a bowl or other receptacle to receive the liquids as we open each can and drain by pouring the contents into the colander:
Just pour them all in the colander and, using the rubber / silicone spatula, move things about and mix well. Most of the liquid should drain away to the bowl below the colander. Set aside for later.
Step 10: Shred the rest of the cheese and keep the cheese in a separate container separate from the base ingredients. Set aside for later.
NOTE: These next steps go rather quickly.
Step 11: Once the chicken has reached about 125°F / 50°C to about 145°F / 63°C, remove the lid and place it on a lid stand (the briquettes can remain where they are). Using tongs, remove the chicken from the pot and set aside (take care that we don’t lose our cornflake crust).
REMOVE THE TOOTHPICKS – the chicken is now firm and will hold its form. Remove each toothpick and make sure you have them all out.
Chef Tip: Sometimes there’ll be an excessive amount of oil (cheese and butter) left in the pot after you remove the chicken. This can be (per your preference) completely or partially wiped out and discarded.
Step 12: Dump all of the base ingredients from the colander into the bottom of the Dutch oven. Then, using the tongs, replace the chicken to the top of the base ingredients (not submerged but resting on top).
Step 13: Here, you can add a few more cornflakes from earlier. Go easy…more is not better.
Step 14: Sprinkle the shredded cheese over the top of the chicken. Return the lid and cover the pot. Do you need a fresh set of hot charcoal briquettes? This is a good time to add a fresh set. You could even add a few extra on the top to toast the cheese.
Step 15: When the chicken has reached 165°F / 75°C, it’s time to eat! Garnish with the green onions. No resting time needed. Just serve and enjoy.
This recipe goes very well with some cornbread or even some Mexican rice (both cooked in separate Dutch ovens). I love to take the rolled-up chicken and use a white bread roll to make a sandwich. There’s some prep and some steps to accomplish this meal and the end result will be well worth it!
We usually cut these chicken rolls in half and use each chicken roll as 2 servings.
Y’all enjoy this one!
My name is Sulae and I love to share the magic that comes out of my black pots and pans. You all keep on cooking in those cast iron beauties and enjoying those frosted glasses of fermented barley pop. We’ll see you all next time on BeerAndIron.com.
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From Fire-to-Plate, I’ll show you how to create this recipe using either Chicken Breast, Bone-in / Skin-on Chicken Thighs, or Skinless / Boneless Chicken Thighs…in a Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven!
This is a quick and easy Enchilada Sauce Recipe that will give your enchiladas a bit of a zip and a zing.
You are about to learn fresh-from-the-Dutch-oven, crisped-by-iron, flaky-by-butter, pillows of the cast iron camp Dutch oven. These biscuits are soft and yet crispy at the same time.
There are a few things that I really love in my life. I am sure we share a few of those loves with life and liberty being mutually loved and desired. Friends, I am going to make a preemptive assumption that we’ll be sharing a third love once you’ve tried these biscuits.
We’ll use Half & Half in our example. This recipe will work with Buttermilk, Kefir, Old Milk, and even Beer and Milk.
This recipe is as easy as they come, and most of the preparation can be done at home before leaving for camp.
Here’s an older version of this recipe that I posted some time back: https://beerandiron.com/beer-buttermilk-biscuits-cast-iron-recipe/
For this recipe, I am using the 10-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven. When I make this recipe at home, I use my 10.25-inch cast iron skillet.
For low-calorie biscuits, use your 12-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven. No, not really…but here’s what I mean:
When rolling out your dough, create a round that is the same size as the bottom of your cast iron Dutch oven. The 12-inch has a wider base and your biscuits will be a bit thinner (and have fewer calories per biscuit) than those created in the 10-inch oven.
For a fatter biscuit in a 12-inch camp cast iron Dutch oven, increase the recipe to one-and-a-half times the listed ingredients. You could double the recipe if you’d like. Start with 1.5x the recipe and if your biscuits are not “pillow-ey” enough, then next time 2x the recipe.
Note on the Biscuit Cutter: You could just roll balls of dough and bake the biscuits that way. You could even use a knife cut the biscuits into squares. Even a paper cup that has the rim torn off (to create the sharper edge) will work.
Note on the Pastry Cutter: I have forgotten my pastry cutter before and have just whittled up the butter with my pocket knife and worked it into the flour with my fingers. It will “warm up” the butter, but will be okay.
I have even forgotten the bowl I need to mix the dough in and used a zipper bag (the one I stored something else in) to mix the dough. They were MESSY, but we had biscuits that morning.
You will forget something. NO WORRIES! Use what you have. You can make this work (unless you forget the flour…yeah…that’s not going to work).
2 Cups Flour
1 teaspoon Baking Soda
1 Tablespoon Baking Powder
1 teaspoon Salt
8 Tablespoons Butter (a Stick)
1 Cup (PLUS) Half and Half Cream (more or less)
1 Scrambled Egg for Glazing (Optional)
½ to 1 Cups of Flour (for Dusting)
Step 1) Mix the dry stuff together: 2 cups of flour, 1 teaspoon of baking soda, 1 tablespoon of baking powder, and 1 teaspoon of salt.
Step 2) Cut the 8 tablespoons of butter into the dry mixture. You’ll end up with a dry, oatmeal consistency.
Step 3) Pour in your cup of half and half. But you could use buttermilk, kefir, spoiled milk, vinegar-ed milk, or even just plain old milk. You’ll need a cup or more depending on the liquid’s consistency and how packed your cups of flour ended up being. You could even use plain yogurt but you’ll usually need much more than a cup of yogurt due to the thickness of the yogurt.
Step 4) Mix around with a rubber or silicone spatula big enough to handle the load. A big bamboo wooden spoon would work too.
Step 5) “Flour” or dust the top of your table or working surface and plop out the dough onto the floured surface. Then, dust the top of the sticky dough with a bit more flour.
Step 6) Flattened and fold over the dough a few times; don’t knead the dough like bread. Make a single, large, round circle from the all of the dough about as big around as the diameter of the bottom of the pot or pan you’ll be baking these biscuits in.
Step 7) Cut the individual biscuits out from the dough. A biscuit cutter works best but a coffee cup, paper cup, or even a knife to cut square biscuits. But don’t worry about being perfectly round or even on each and every one. It’s okay to have weird shapes and odd sizes.
Step 8) Place the cut biscuits in a 10-inch cast iron camp Dutch oven that has been buttered up real nice. Trust me when I say “buttered up.” Butter is the key to keep these biscuits both flavorful as well as keeping them from sticking. Butter is the key here.
Step 9) Scramble an egg up real good and using one of those kitchen paint brushes (basing brush), paint the top of those dudes with a thin layer of scrambled egg.
Step 10) Put the lid back on your camp cast iron Dutch oven and place the oven over 6 or 7 briquettes. Place 13 or 14 briquettes on top of the lid.
Step 11) Let the biscuits bake for about 10 minutes. Then, give the Dutch oven and the lid a ⅓ turn. Lift the lid just a bit and take a peek. Note not only the tops but also the bottoms of the biscuits (as well as you can visualize). Are the bottoms toasting well? If not, close in those bottom briquettes a bit closer to the center of the circle toward the middle of the Dutch oven.
Step 12) Wait another 10 minutes and take another look-see. They are likely done at this point. Cook longer if you plan to eat right away. But, if you have other things to cook or that are still cooking, remember this: that hot pot will continue baking those biscuits even after you remove the heat from the pot.
Once they’re done, get the jelly out, and start munching.
Enjoy
Chef Tip: Note the time you will keep those biscuits in that pot as you cook the other ingredients. As they cool, they will steam and condensation will form. If they sit in the pot too long, they will get soggy from their collected steam moisture.
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Chicken Breast, Lemon, Beer, Capers, and Butter. This is a super-easy recipe for most any night of the week. Easy at home and easy in camp.
Chicken Breast, Lemon, Beer, Capers, and Butter. This is a super-easy recipe for most any night of the week. Easy at home and easy in camp.
Pork, rosemary, potatoes, bell pepper, and thickened a bit with seasoned bread crumbs. It’s an easy recipe with very few ingredients and plenty of cooking time for enjoying the great big outside!
This is an easy, easy, easy camp cast iron camp Dutch oven recipe. Trust me on this. My recipe articles tend to get wordy…but these recipes are not just dump-and-heat Dutch oven recipes, they are meals-to-remember. The best part of these recipes are in the tiny details. Plus, there’s a lot of those tricks-to-the-trade that I include as well. Take a moment and read to the end before you cook this recipe from the printed copy (a much more simplistic version of this web version).
Here’s the nitty-gritty: We’re going to start with either a pork loin rib chop thick or thin cut (think pork chop) or a boneless pork loin chop (as the video shows). 24-48 hours before you head off to camp (or cook), you’ll brine those chops in a beer brine (two 12-ounce mild lagers and 2 tablespoons of salt). We’ll pack our bell peppers, potatoes, brined meat, butter, cans of cream of mushroom soup, and breadcrumbs to camp and create a meal and some memories.
A note on potatoes: This recipe calls for 3 medium russet potatoes. It doesn’t matter what kind of potatoes you use. And also… “medium” to me may not be “medium” to you. When we get to the “add the potatoes” part, just make sure you don’t over fill the pot.
This recipe can be modified by using beef (steak-like and well marbled) and also prepared in the home on the stove top and then the oven.
For our example, get your 12-inch cast iron Dutch oven and let’s go find some nature!
This recipe can be modified for any sized cast iron camp Dutch oven. And, it can also be modified for stove top searing and in-the-home oven baking.
We’ll present this recipe in a shallow, 12-inch cast iron camp Dutch oven. And, at the end of this article, I’ll share with you a video of a solo camping trip where I hauled an 8-inch Dutch and all the ingredients for an end-of-the-trail serving-for-one feast!
If you are going to prepare this in camp, there is a point where you have to remove the seared pork and add other ingredients before returning the pork to the pot. Having a second cast iron Dutch oven that is pre-warmed would be perfect as a “holding” and “warming” pot as you do this transfer.
The 12-inch Dutch I present this recipe in the video was one I found for free a few years back. If you’re in the market for a 12-inch cast iron camp Dutch oven, here are a few (affiliate) links:
This link is to Lodge’s version of the cast iron pot I used in the video: https://amzn.to/3qdMPBn
Here’s the link to Camp Chef’s version: https://amzn.to/3oEfvTD
The 8-inch cast iron camp Dutch oven I used in the bicycle camping video: https://amzn.to/3IK16Mw
For your heat:
For The Dutch Oven
For Cooking
Step 1: This step is optional: 1-2 days before you are planning to cook this recipe, Brine and prep 4 thick-cut pork loin, bone-in rib chops or 4-6 thick, boneless pork loin chops.
Step 2: Remove the pork chops / loin chops from the brine and pat dry. Pour the remaining brine out. Add a few paper towels to the bag. Return the meat to the bag. This is how we’re going to pack it to camp.
Step 3: Gather your 3-4 medium russet potatoes, 2 cans of cream of mushroom soup, can of beer, butter, breadcrumbs, and the salt and pepper.
Step 4: Prepare two Green Bell Peppers. We chop them and store them in a zipper bag with a couple of paper towels. You could also just pack them whole and prepare them in camp (this is how the video presents this recipe).
We need a very hot cast iron Dutch oven to sear our pork. Before we go any farther, let me stop and give you a bit of a chef tip. We need to take in consideration that the meat itself will cool that pot down considerably as soon as the meat hits that pot’s surface. If the pot cools too fast, the meat will not sear. We really can only tell if the meat is properly seared by look; how does the meat look? If we flip the pork and it’s still that cream-white color and not that golden or deep red, toasted color, we’ll let it sit there on the heat longer. The longer it sits there the more time for the meat’s “juices” to “flow” from the meat and pool up. If the juices do not evaporate quickly enough, the meat will start to simmer in its own juices and essentially boil. We will need to sear the meat in a pot at about 450°F / 235°C (later, we’ll bake at about 350°F / 175°C).
I’m going to present this recipe in a 12-inch cast iron Dutch oven and prepare it with four boneless pork loin chops. The pork can be seared in any number of ways.
One more tip: When you are ready to sear the pork, just make sure it’s pat-dry.
The following steps will reference searing right in the cast iron Dutch oven.
Step 5: Set 30-35 (or more) charcoal briquettes to fire in a pile or in the charcoal chimney. Set your cast iron Dutch oven near that burning pile of briquettes and start to warm it up.
Step 6: Heat the Dutch oven for frying. Place the 12-inch cast iron Dutch oven over those 30-35 (or more) briquettes and really heat it up well. Don’t add your butter yet. Once the pot starts to show wisps of smoke, add the 2 tablespoons of butter, and let it heat up and “toast.” You’ll see the butter melt with some of the butter solids starting to separate and brown. Don’t burn the butter. If you do, wipe it out (a paper towel works well) and start over.
Note: You can use whatever oil you’d like.
Step 7: When the butter and the pot are wicked hot (don’t burn that butter), add your pork and a sprig or three of rosemary. Leave the rosemary to the side and not under the pork. The pork should be in direct contact with that hot pot. Sear the first side very well. Then, turn the pieces of meat and sear the other side. Keep the cast iron Dutch oven’s lid nearby and inside up (upside down) to receive the meat after both sides are seared to that golden color. You can use a warming pot as mentioned above.
While you are searing the meat, take the time to prepare the rest of the ingredients. Keep an eye on that meat though.
OPTIONAL: We are first searing (frying) and later we will bake this recipe. If you feel you need a fresh set of briquettes, then set 25-30 briquettes to fire (a 12-inch camp Dutch oven needs about 24 briquettes to bake at the goal of 350°F / 175°C).
Things are going to speed up from here and then we’ll have the baking time to enjoy visiting, drinking beer, and just enjoying the day or the evening. You can leave the pot over the hot coals for the next steps or, remove the pot from the heat. It’s up to you. Use your good judgment and don’t burn anything.
Me? I remove the pot from the fire and that way I can go quick but not too quick. No stress; no worries.
Step 8: After you have seared your pork, place the hot meat nearby on the upside-down lid or in another Dutch oven to keep warm. Remove the stem of rosemary but just leave the bits of rosemary that broke free from the stem. And no, I don’t break off or add anymore. Whatever rosemary is in the pot is all I use.
Step 9: Pour in about 1 cup of seasoned breadcrumbs over whatever bits and pieces are left from searing the pork and butter is left in that pot. You can measure this out or eyeball-it. Pour in about ½ cup of beer at a time (there are three half cups in a 12-ounce bottle or can of beer). Mix the beer in with the breadcrumbs and create a batter-like mixture about the consistency of thick pancake batter. If you need to add more beer, then do so (Expect to use about 12-16 ounces…to be safe).
Step 10: Return the seared pork to the pot. You can turn the pork in the batter or just lay the pork right on top of the breadcrumb batter and call it good.
Step 11: Top the pork with the potatoes. WATCH THE HEAD ROOM. Leave enough room to add the bell peppers and later some more breadcrumbs.
Step 12: Pour over the cans of cream of mushroom soup and roughly spread about the top of the potatoes. KEEP THE CANS…
Step 13: Add about ½ cup of beer to one of the empty cans of cream of mushroom soup. Mix it about and try to get the rest of the soup out. Now, pour the can over and into the other can. Mix it about. We are trying to wash out some of the remaining cream of mushroom soup.
Pour all that into the pot.
Step 13: Add the chopped green bell peppers to the top of the entire recipe/mixture.
Step 14: Cover the pot and set the Dutch oven to bake. Place 8 hot briquettes around the circumference of the bottom and place 16 hot briquettes on the top. Set your windshield and let the dish bake for about 45 minutes. Turn the pot and lid about every 10-15 minutes.
Pork is considered done at 145°F / 65°C. And your pork may well be done to 145°F / 65°C before the potatoes are done. After about 30-45 minutes, check the potatoes first by “sneaking in” under the lid and getting a bit of potato. If it’s not done, keep cooking. If the potatoes are done, then check the pork for temperature. This is where that meat thermometer comes in handy!!
CONSIDERATION: This recipe may take an hour or more to fully cook. I ask that you check on the meal after 30-45 minutes to see the progress with the idea that you can continue cooking underdone food, but you can’t unburn food. Be prepared for about an hour or more (give or take) for this recipe to fully cook. Think “baked potato.”
Step 15: Once the dish is done, remove the lid and pour a thin layer of breadcrumbs over the mixture. Remove all of the heat from the bottom of the Dutch oven and place any remaining briquettes over the top of the Dutch oven (including any that you did not use. Just get the top hot!
Once the breadcrumbs on the top are toasted, remove the pot from the heat and ENJOY!!
I just stick a fork in there and pull out a chop. Then, I spoon over some potatoes. Sour Cream goes a long way with this one (and an optional ingredient when cooking this meal).
Despite the detail above, this is really an easy recipe. I cooked it the other day after a solo bicycle trip. No, the cast iron camp Dutch oven was not “waiting on me” when I got “back” to camp. I pulled that cast iron pot with me on my bicycle TO camp along with all the ingredients, charcoal briquettes, and my three beers (two for drinking and one for cooking).
Driving the mother-in-law back home to southern Idaho, I took the opportunity that evening (after 11 hours of driving) to bicycle the Weiser River Trail from Council, Idaho to a campground south of the northern trailhead. It was well after dark when I arrived at camp and cooked this meal in the dark with the aid of a bicycle light.
Yes. It’s that easy. But, it’s not going to taste “easy.” It’s going to taste delicious!!
Hey. My name is Sulae. And I love to share the magic that comes out of my black pots and pans. Y’all keep hanging out here at BeerAndIron.com and take a moment to sign up for the newsletter. Trust me, I ain’t gonna bug you.
We’ll see you all next time. And keep on cooking in those black cast iron beauties and enjoying those frosted glasses of that fermented barley pop! Que the pop, hiss, and gurgle-gurgle of beer pouring into your frosted Shaker Pint!
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I am always sharing fresh, flavorful, recipes cooked up in well-seasoned cast iron awesomeness with a bit of my liquid, hop-based, happy-maker as an ingredient.
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