Daily Camera (Boulder)

Time out for nachos

Load up your chips and get ready for football

- By Arthi Subramania­m

Request a recipe for nachos and you might get an eye roll.

After all, there is nothing to it. Piling things on chips and warming them in a microwave or oven is as complicate­d as boiling water.

But it requires a little more effort as the ingredient list becomes longer or when each step involves a different technique. Then there’s the question of which toppings can handle a high temperatur­e and which can’t.

Sometimes, all you want are bar-style nachos that are crispy yet gooey and creamy yet spicy. And who doesn’t love nachos loaded with enough meats, beans, vegetables and guacamole to make a meal in itself?

They all start off with tortilla chips sturdy enough to hold up toppings effortless­ly. The chips then are covered with a generous sprinkling of shredded cheese or doused with a velvety cheese sauce and heated. Finally, top those chips with whatever your heart desires and diet dictates.

Nachos can be multilayer­ed with smashed black beans scented with cumin, luxe queso with bits of pickled jalapenos, shredded or pulled pork or chicken,

crumbled tofu, fresh and bright pico de gallo and finished with a squiggle of sour cream.

Or keep them simple, just to one layer. That’s how nachos were first made in the Mexican town of Piedras Negras in the early 1940s. The story goes that four American tourists stopped by Moderno Restaurant and wanted fried tortillas. But there was nobody in the kitchen.

So a waiter named Ignacio “Nacho” Anaya “sliced a tortilla in four pieces, put some cheese and slices of jalapeno on top and stuck it in the oven for a few minutes,” according to the San Antonio Express-news. When the diners wanted to know what they were called, he responded, “Nacho’s Especial.” The name was eventually shortened to nachos.

When the word spread about the cheesy and spicy appetizer, variations started popping up. While tortilla chips and gooey melting cheese are a mainstay, recipes for vegan versions call for pulled jackfruit smothered in barbecue sauce, and there are keto ones built on pork rinds or cheese crisps.

No matter what kind of nachos you like, there are some common-sense tips for doing it right:

• Bring refrigerat­ed toppings to room temperatur­e before piling them onto the warm chips.

• To prevent the chips from getting soggy, sprinkle grated or crumbled cheese on top and bake them in the oven for a few minutes. When melted, the cheese will act as a buffer between the chips and toppings.

• The chips should to be heated evenly and the cheese well melted. It is not about browning or charring them, so use the oven and not the broiler to do the job.

• While nachos are a freeform snack, don’t go nutty. Banana is forbidden.

So load up the nachos to make the appetizer a meal, and you will be all set for football Sunday.

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 ?? Emily Matthews / Pittsburgh Post-gazette ??
Emily Matthews / Pittsburgh Post-gazette

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