Chipotle Salsa Baked Chicken
If you want to add more Mexican recipes to your recipe box, Chipotle Salsa Baked Chicken might be a recipe you should try. This recipe makes 6 servings with 304 calories, 31g of protein, and 12g of fat each. This recipe covers 18% of your daily requirements of vitamins and minerals. It works well as an affordable hor d'oeuvre. This recipe from Simply Recipes requires canned tomatoes, more cilantro, monterey jack cheese, and pasta. From preparation to the plate, this recipe takes approximately 45 minutes.
Instructions
Place tomatoes, onion, garlic, cilantro, chipotle peppers and adobo, lime juice and salt in a blender or food processor. Pulse a few times so there are no more large chunks of anything, but not so much so that the salsa is completely smooth.
Spread salsa over chicken: Preheat the oven to 350°F.
Place the chicken pieces in a casserole dish, just large enough to fit them all in a single layer (about 8x10-inches).
Spread the chipotle salsa over the chicken pieces, turning the chicken pieces to coat them all over with the salsa.
Bake, layer with cheese, bake again: Cover with aluminum foil and bake for 25 minutes (30 minutes for thighs).
Remove the foil, and sprinkle or layer the cheese over the chicken.
Bake uncovered for 10 minutes more.
Serve over rice, pasta, or with tortillas on the side, along with chopped avocado, more cilantro, crema fresca or sour cream.
Variation: This is a bake-in-the-oven recipe. You could easily adapt the recipe to the stovetop this way: sear the chicken pieces first in a little olive oil, remove the chicken, add the onions to the pan, cook them till soft, add the garlic and chiles, cook a little longer, add the tomatoes, lime juice, cilantro, and salt, then add the chicken, coat the chicken with the sauce, bring to a low simmer, cover, cook for 25 minutes, sprinkle with cheese, cover and cook for a few more minutes until the cheese is melted.
Recommended wine: Pinot Noir, Riesling, Sparkling Rose
Salsan on the menu? Try pairing with Pinot Noir, Riesling, and Sparkling rosé. Acidic white wines like riesling or low-tannin reds like pinot noir can work well with Mexican dishes. Sparkling rosé is a safe pairing too. You could try Francis Ford Coppolan Oregon Pinot Noir. Reviewers quite like it with a 4.6 out of 5 star rating and a price of about 21 dollars per bottle.
![Francis Ford Coppola Oregon Pinot Noir]()
Francis Ford Coppola Oregon Pinot Noir
Grown in an appellation that experiences cool summers and mild winters, this Pinot Noir offers an exciting contrast to Coppola's California bottling, expressing a more delicate tannin structure and higher acidity that makes it elegant and well-proportioned. This wine reflects the essence of the appellation and flavors that make Oregon Pinot Noir so desirable.Light and stylish, the palate presents a freshly pickedquality, lively acidity, and well-balanced oak sweetness.This vintage is fruit forward with a satiny supple textureand ripe tannins. Thanks to careful barrel selection, notesof grilled almonds and toasted bread are beautifullyintegrated into the flavor matrix.