Imperial Valley Press

Nachos for breakfast

Just add eggs and veggies

- BY ARI LEVAUX More Content Now Stack it all into a steaming pile, and serve with copious amounts of salsa and co ee.

Migas are a delicacy as old as tortillas. The word is Spanish for “crumbs” — specifical­ly the crumbs of tortillas of a certain age. In the U.S., the tortilla fragments are usually served with salsa, beans and sour cream.

The basic concept of cooking old chip shards has been independen­tly invented countless times by folks who are weary of dipping increasing­ly smaller chips into their bowl of salsa, and wish for some way to use those tasty, unwieldy crumbs at the bottom of the bag. That weary tortilla eater was me when I “invented” migas.

I found myself staring down the dregs of a bag of La Cocina de Josefina tortilla chips, determined to not allow that resource to go to waste. Taking the obvious route, I fried the little crumbs with bacon. The eggs followed the bacon, and the salsa followed everything. After that, and ever since, the bottom of a bag has been a time to rejoice.

These days, I sometimes don’t wait for the crumbs. Instead, I make a migas variation with whole, unbroken chips. Breakfast Nachos, as I call them, are for when migas just aren’t big enough.

I soak the chips in beaten egg, and pan fry them with vegetables. This treatment gives the formerly crunchy chips a moist, pliable texture that’s somewhere between a tamale and a cheesy enchilada.

This eggy tortilla matrix can absorb whatever vegetables and proteins you could think to add, with each addition cooked as needed so as to be ready when the eggs are done. Bright green broccoli florets may not be a typical topping for nachos, but the egg helps it fit in. Fry ground meat ahead of time. Add leftover pulled pork at the last minute.

Ultimately, migas are about improvisat­ion, and that spirit lives on in my Breakfast Nachos. I’ve even swapped the corn chips for potato chips, and would do it again if necessary. But one thing I won’t be doing is waiting for the end of a bag to make my migas.

Breakfast nachos

Breakfast Nachos are pan-fried like migas, rather than baked like nachos. You need a pan with a tight-fitting lid, preferably a heavy pan that can hold heat. Unless it’s a really big pan you should prepare this dish one serving at a time, as you would an omelet.

In today’s rendition I’ve included carrots and spinach, as they are currently in season, but you could prepare it with whatever vegetables you care to eat with breakfast. Jalapenos are good. Mushrooms, too.

Makes 1 large serving

• 2 eggs

• ¼ cup milk

• 2 cups whole corn chips (shake the cup so they settle)

• 1 carrot, sliced into ¼-inch thick rounds

• 2 tablespoon­s oil (or bacon or side pork, chopped)

• 1 clove garlic, minced

• 1 handful spinach or baby bok choy

• ½ cup (loosely packed) grated cheese

• Serve with: salsa, co ee

Beat the eggs and milk in an oversized bowl. Add the chips and gently toss them so they are completely coated, and sitting in a pool of egg wash.

Heat the pan on medium. Add the carrot and oil or chopped bacon, everything scattered so each piece makes contact with the pan. Give it a stir after about 4 minutes. After another 2 minutes, add the garlic, stir everything around, add the spinach on top and cook another minute. Add the soggy chips and quickly give them a gentle stir to mix them with the carrots, garlic and spinach. Spread the chips evenly around the pan, then add the remains of the egg wash, sprinkle the cheese on top, and cover.

Cook for a minute with the lid on, then take a peek. If it looks like it’s setting up, with the egg on top looking close to cooked and the cheese melting, then turn it o and let it finish in place on the hot stove. If it’s not quite there, cook another 30 seconds with the lid on and check again. Repeat until it’s almost there, then turn o the heat and let the pan sit covered for about 10 minutes.

 ?? Migas are about improvisat­ion, and that spirit lives on in this dish. ARI LEVAUX ??
Migas are about improvisat­ion, and that spirit lives on in this dish. ARI LEVAUX

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