The previous time I cooked quesadillas, I made a mistake of making few of them and hubby wanted more O-o . On the second take, I purposed to make more than enough. The process is more or less the same other than the addition of bell peppers, spring onions and of course tripling of the recipe đŸ™‚
Ingredients:
10 flour tortillas
1 yellow bell pepper, cubed
1 orange bell pepper, cubed
A handful of spring onions, sliced
Dried oregano leaves
Cheddar cheese shreds/ shavings
For the chicken
3 boneless chicken breasts
3 cloves garlic, sliced
1 inch ginger roughly chopped
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1 tablespoon dried thyme
1/8 teaspoon salt
Start by poaching the chicken.
In a pan heat the vegetable oil. Fry the spring onions.
Let the onions cook for about three minutes then add the bell peppers.
The chicken should be done in under twenty minutes. Drain and save the stock for later.
Shred the chicken and assemble the quesadillas.
This time I tried a different method, instead of folding the tortilla in half, I used a whole tortilla then covered it with another tortilla. It’s safe to say, I prefer the folding of the tortilla since I’m yet to make tortillas of the same diameter.
On a heated skillet, add a teaspoon of vegetable oil then place the tortilla and layer the cheese, spring onion and bell pepper mixture, the chicken shreds, sprinkle over the dried oregano and finalise with some more cheese shreds.
Cover with another tortilla.
Repeat the above procedure for all the tortillas.
Using a pizza cutter or knife, slice the quesadillas.
Serve hot.
This time they were in plenty and hubby ate to his fill đŸ™‚
I apologise, I don’t have a decent end result photo.
[…] chicken stock I used was from the water I had poached the chicken for these quesadillas and since it had seasoning I didn’t need to season my soup. Cover and let the soup simmer […]
Tortilla ni chapo tu ya kawaida?
Hey Kask?
Tortillas can either be made of corn flour or wheat flour. When made using wheat flour I can equate them to chapatis. However ideally they slightly thinner and smaller in size than a regular chapati.
You can read more here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla