Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

Ya gotta know I love me some me some Mexican, Southwestern or Tex Mex food (see my collection of Recipes for Cinco de Mayo or Anytime), and these old school Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas are one of our longtime family faves. I’ve been making them since I was just a kid – and that’s been over 40 years now (dang, I’m getting old!) and they’re just as good today as they were then. I guess you could say they’re a classic!

Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce


 

 

In these Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce, the tortilla is wrapped around a creamy, chicken (or turkey) filling, then napped in an easy Ranchero Sauce. Finished with a sprinkle of cheese, these are truly delicious. The sauce, flavorful (but not hot) gives a sharp contrast to the enchilada, itself. Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce are just a beautiful thing.

About Turkey or Chicken Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce:

I think probably most people know Ranchero Sauce, like this Simple, Classic Ranchero Sauce, whether they know it or not. It’s a fast, fresh “garden” sauce and usually has a veggie base of onions and bell peppers along with some kind of tomato sauce. The hallmark flavor is just the faintest sweet/sour taste from just a touch of vinegar. It’s like the Spanish sauce that’s often on omelets and it’s the same type of sauce I use for my Eggs Poached in Rancheros Sauce, for Huevos Rancheros and these other classic Enchiladas, Three Cheese Enchiladas with Braised Pork & Ranchero Sauce. Well, I guess you can tell I like Ranchero a lot!

That Rancheros Sauce really sets off the rich creamy, cheesy filling in these enchiladas. And that filling just couldn’t be easier! Especially if you start with leftover chicken or turkey as a base. And no worries; if you don’t have any leftover, you can just poach your chicken and then that poaching liquid can be used in the sauce instead of chicken broth. Then that chicken or turkey gets mixed up with two kinds of cheese, a creamy Mexican type cheese or plain old cream cheese along with some Cheddar, Monterrey Jack, or Colby.

If you’d like to see some of my other favorite Enchilada recipes, there’s these OG Tex Mex enchiladas, Enchiladas con CarneRick Bayless’ Brick Red Mole over Barbacoa Beef Enchiladas, another recipe using Rancheros Sauce, my Three Cheese Enchiladas with Braised Pork, Enchiladas con Pollo, and then there’s this Easy Pantry Enchilada Sauce.

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Making Turkey or Chicken Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce:

There’s not much to making Turkey or Chicken Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce. I like to use a flat, wide skillet for the sauce since the enchiladas have to be “dragged through” it before being rolled up. Then I just snug everything together to make the enchiladas in kind of an assembly line. First, there’s the skillet for the oil to condition the tortillas (more on that, below), the skillet with the sauce, a plate to land them on with the filling nearby, and finally the casserole dish. If everything is close together and in reach, you’ll avoid a potential mess.

The most important thing for this or any enchilada recipe is to “condition” your tortillas. (Although admittedly, I sometimes make these enchiladas with flour tortillas, too, then you can skip all the conditioning process.) There are various ways to do this and I think I’ve seen them all, but there is only one way that’s going to give you the absolute best texture on your tortilla so it won’t get soggy or fall apart after it’s filled and baked. And it’s a bit of a pain but just takes minutes.

You’re going to heat each tortilla in a small bit of oil, just until the edges crisp up a bit but the tortilla is still flexible. Now you can try shortcutting by spritzing your tortillas with oil and baking them, just watch carefully, or just spritz with oil and use them as is. Results of the final enchiladas always vary with the last two methods. See photo at the bottom of the page of how the tortilla should look.

Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

Saving Money on Turkey or Chicken Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce:

This is a very cost-effective meal, especially if you pick up your ingredients on sale, use leftover chicken or turkey and serve your Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce with a budget sides like Mexican Rice or Refried Beans.

Grocery store cheese is the cheapest option but think about the fact that more flavorful Mexican cheeses will allow you more “bang for your buck,” a bit more flavor for a smidge more cost if budget allows.

Recipe originally priced November 2011 for $5.46, repriced March 2014 for $4.16 – the difference? I’ve gotten much better at recognizing and shopping good sales on cheese!

Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

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Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

  • Author: mollie
  • Total Time: 1 hour
  • Yield: 6 servings 1x
  • Category: Casseroles
  • Cuisine: Mexican or Southwestern

Ingredients

Scale

Sauce:

  • 1/2 cup finely chopped onion (the other half goes inside the enchilada)
  • 1 bell pepper, finely chopped, or use poblano, charred, skinned and chopped, or a small can of green chile peppers
  • 2 tablespoons oil
  • 15 ounces tomato sauce
  • 1 cup chicken broth
  • 2 teaspoons chili powder
  • 2 teaspoons cumin
  • 1 teaspoon sugar (optional)
  • 1/2 to 1 tablespoon vinegar (optional)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt or to taste
  • 1/8 teaspoon pepper

Filling:

  • 1/4 cup to 1/3 cup of milk, half and half or cream
  • 4 ounces cream cheese, softened or a soft Mexican cheese such as a Queso Fresca
  • 4 to 6 ounces jack or cheddar cheese, or a mix (Colby Jack is fine, just not as flavorful)
  • 2 1/2 cups shredded turkey or chicken (about 15 ounces)
  • 1/2 cup finely chopped onion
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt (optional depending on the saltiness of the poultry and cheese)

Assembly:

  • 12 corn tortillas
  • 2 tablespoons (or so) of oil
  • 1/2 cup (or more) shredded cheddar cheese, or cheese of your choice. Preferred would be a crumbled Queso Fresca, Cojita or a mild Feta.

Instructions

Sauce:

In a large skillet, saute onion and bell peppers if using (no need to saute Poblanos or the canned chiles, just add them when the onions are done) in oil until softened. Slowly stir in the tomato sauce and stock along with chili & cumin.

Bring to a boil and simmer, uncovered, about 15 minutes until slightly thickened, stirring now and then. This sauce should still be quite loose because the tortillas will be dipped in them.

Add the sugar, vinegar if using and salt & pepper to taste. Simmer a minute or two longer to blend the flavors.

Note on Sauce: Many Ranchero sauces contain just a touch of vinegar which lends a slightly sweet/sour vibe. If you’d like, add about 1/2 teaspoon white or apple cider vinegar to the sauce. Increase sugar to 2 teaspoons.

Filling:

Place all cheeses (room temperature if using cream cheese) in a bowl. Gradually add milk of your choice, blending. Add onion and stir in. Add shredded poultry and mix together well, breaking up the poultry as it is mixed. (If the poultry is warm, this may be easier.) Taste, add the salt if desired.

Note: The onions inside the enchilada are not cooked, so don’t go overboard on them; if there are too many, they will overwhelm the filling. Other than that, all these ingredients can be played around with a bit – add more cheese or not as you desire. Changing the volume may change the amount of filling in each enchilada.

Assembly:

Prepare a 9 x 13″ casserole by coating with cooking spray and cover the bottom with about 1/2 cup of sauce.

Heat about a quarter inch of oil over medium-high heat in a skillet just large enough to hold tortilla. Test for readiness by dipping an edge of the tortilla in the oil. If small bubbles form around the tortilla, the oil is hot enough. Lay out a large plate to place the tortillas on after their dipping and prior to being rolled. (hint: make this an “assembly line” of the oil, the sauce, the large plate and then the casserole.

(see photo, above in text of post, on color and texture of tortilla when it should be removed from oil)

Working with six tortillas at a time, and using tongs if possible, lightly fry each tortilla in a skillet with oil (about 1/4 inch deep) until it just begins to crisp and takes on a bit of a golden color, but doesn’t become totally crisp: place tortilla in oil, immediately turn it over and fry for a few seconds. When the edge begins to firm up and the tortilla shows a few bubbles, turn again and fry for a few seconds more. The tortilla, when finished, should only have a slight crispness and still be quite flexible.

Immediately lay the tortilla in the skillet with the sauce and turn over, making certain both sides are coated in sauce, without a lot of excess. Remove and lay the tortilla on a plate. Repeat with the next five tortillas, stacking each on top of the previous one. With tongs, gently turn the tortilla stack over. (You will repeat, shortly with the next six, after these are rolled.)

Place a scant 1/3 cup of filling on the top tortilla in the stack, roll, and place in the casserole, seam side down. Repeat with the next five tortillas. If tortilla begins to crack, try rolling from a different edge, keeping the crack to the inside of the roll. Repeat process with the next six tortillas.

There should be enough room in the casserole dish for a row of 10 and two tortillas in the space on the side. When pan is filled, cover with what sauce remains, making sure that the edges have a bit of sauce on them. (While a spoon works, it is often easier to resort to clean hands.)

Cover pan with foil and bake at 350 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes until hot and warmed through. Uncover, sprinkle with cheese and bake three to five minutes longer. If not using cheese, uncover and let tortillas crisp up a bit, about the same amount of time. Placing cheese in a strip down the middle always makes it seem like “more.”

Garnish as desired.

Nutrition:

Per Serving: 271 Calories; 16g Fat (52.5% calories from fat); 15g Protein; 18g Carbohydrate; 2g Dietary Fiber; 61mg Cholesterol; 950mg Sodium.  Exchanges: 1 Grain (Starch); 1 1/2 Lean Meat; 1/2 Vegetable; 0 Non-Fat Milk; 2 1/2 Fat; 0 Other Carbohydrates.

Keywords: Bargain Meal of the Week, Bell Peppers, Chicken, Cream Cheese, leftover Chicken, leftover turkey, Leftovers, Mexican or Southwestern, Ranchero Sauce, Tomato sauce, tortillas, Turkey

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This tortilla is just right – a bit of golden color, the edges are firm and it has a few bubbles, but it is still flexible.

Kitchen & Cooking Hacks:

When using cheese to top a casserole, use a better, stronger cheese. Then rather than sprinkling it over the top, try adding it judiciously. Here in this casserole, I left the edges “nude” and sprinkled all the cheese down the middle. That means a lot less cheese is used but there still is that melty, stringing cheese goodness we all love – only a lot less of it. The same amount would have been “lost” had it been evenly sprinkled over the top of the whole casserole.

This makes 12 enchiladas – if your family is smaller, you could certainly freeze and then reheat 1/2 of them – since they keep so well in the fridge, we generally have part at the beginning of the week, and the rest for a second meal later.

Helpful Links:

If you came to this recipe looking for a way to use leftover turkey or chicken, be sure to check out the link below for 12 Days of Turkey. You might want to see the sister post for 12 Days of Ham, too.

6 thoughts on “Chicken or Turkey Enchiladas with Ranchero Sauce

  1. I’m saving the ranchero sauce for the weekend (hopefully) to make a Mexican casserole dish. I’m still confused between the details of ranchero and enchilada sauces. And even salsas/tomato sauce or salsa roja as there seem to be so many variation.

    • FrugalHausfrau

      If it helps, I am too! I think breaking them down into a couple different classifications helps.

      Usually I see enchiladas with “enchilada sauce” which is usually a play off of a mole sauce. So they can be very simple from a pantry type sauce made with ground spices cooked for a few minutes to toasted and ground chilis and can have a few or a lot of additions and can be cooked for an hour or more. But those are almost all smooth and all all seem to have a dried chili base of some sort.

      OR they’re made with a fresher salsa or garden type of sauce, but salsa just means sauce. Those are usually chunkier and could be a ranchero like this, or a salsa roja, which is a lot like Rancheros, or a chili verde with green chilis (poblanos usually) or even a spinach sauce. I’m sure there’s many more of these chunkier sauces I’ve never heard of made with all kinds of vegetables.

      But in Mexican food, I see the same or similar fillings and sauces used for all kinds of things from enchiladas to burritos, to tamales, etc. so that complicates (or simplifies depending on how you look at it) even more!

      Don’t you think part of the confusion it comes from the fact that Mexico has so many distinct regions with all their different ways and styles & even though some share the same dishes they all have their own local touches. But we tend to think Mexico as being one country as if Mexican food from Baja might be the same as food from Yucatán…That’s why I tend to scoff when I hear someone say the lived in Mexico for six months and blah blah blah…isn’t “authentic” and so on…

      I know I tend to think of Canadian food as being one region, too, when different areas are vastly different in their food cultures! Sadly I just tend to think of fish stews, meat pies and poutine, lol!!

      • We tend to learn about the food of a particular country from the immigrants who have opened restaurants in our area. A very limited exposure to a country’s cuisine. I don’t know much about the various regional cuisines of Mexico but I HAVE been exposed to a few Italian regional cuisines. There are dishes we’ve never heard of and would be amazed by.

        Early in my attempt at Mexican cooking I bought a can of enchilada sauce … pricey and I realized that it was a puree of dried chilis that had been soaked and then thickened with a roux. I haven’t bought enchilada sauce since.

        We’ve lived in Canada for over 50 years and I only tasted poutine about 5 yrs ago. I still haven’t had tourtiere, or fish stew. I HAVE had Nanaimo bars (tooth-rottingly sweet) and butter tarts. Oh, and real maple syrup which isn’t a dish but a nice condiment which my nephew insisted on. Before that, I used to buy Aunt Jemima’s pancake syrup. 🙂

        • FrugalHausfrau

          So true! Btw, I have always wanted to make Nanaimo bars and we do have butter tarts, here, too. I had to laugh about Aunt Jemima…I love good maple syrup but it’s pricey and the folks used a whole jug (and it was pretty good sized) in one sitting. I was horrified!! Those were 20 dollar pancakes!! I have always wanted to tap my maples. Actually, I should be doing it right now! I might have to check into it…

          • I use a LOT of that $8 jug of real maple syrup too but I switched over the first time my nephew came over and was HORRIFIED … HORRIFIED to be served Aunt Jemima syrup with his French toast. (I was so embarrassed.)

            It’s not an easy process to tap and make your own maple syrup, I hear.

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