Hot Doggy Quesadillas

Hot Doggy Quesadillas
You can never have too many Mexican recipes, so give Hot Doggy Quesadillas a try. This recipe covers 22% of your daily requirements of vitamins and minerals. One portion of this dish contains around 27g of protein, 34g of fat, and a total of 675 calories. This recipe serves 3. It works best as a hor d'oeuvre, and is done in roughly 25 minutes. If you have ground cumin, mexican blend cheese, cream, and a few other ingredients on hand, you can make it. To use up the salsa you could follow this main course with the Dessert Strawberry Salsa as a dessert.

Instructions

1
Place 3 tortillas on a work surface. Divide cheese and hot dog slices evenly among tortillas.
Ingredients you will need
TortillaTortilla
Hot DogsHot Dogs
CheeseCheese
2
Sprinkle each portion with 1 tsp. chives, a large pinch chili powder and a pinch ground cumin. Top each with remaining tortillas.
Ingredients you will need
Chili PowderChili Powder
Ground CuminGround Cumin
TortillaTortilla
ChivesChives
3
In a medium skillet, heat 1 tsp. oil over medium heat. Put 1 quesadilla in pan, then rest a small plate on quesadilla to weigh it down; cook for about 2 minutes, until golden underneath.
Ingredients you will need
Cooking OilCooking Oil
Equipment you will use
Frying PanFrying Pan
4
Remove plate, flip quesadilla with a spatula, weigh down with plate and cook until cheese is melted and tortilla is crisp on other side, about 2 minutes. Keep warm. Repeat with remaining oil and quesadillas.
Ingredients you will need
TortillaTortilla
CheeseCheese
Cooking OilCooking Oil
Equipment you will use
SpatulaSpatula
5
Cut each quesadilla with a pizza wheel or a large, sharp knife into 4 equal wedges.
Equipment you will use
KnifeKnife
6
Serve wedges with salsa and sour cream.
Ingredients you will need
Sour CreamSour Cream
SalsaSalsa

Recommended wine: Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Rose Wine

Hot Dogs works really well with Riesling, Gewurztraminer, and rosé Wine. A Gewürztraminer will be great with your basic New York style hot dog with mustard and sauerkraut. For a Chicago-style dog with sour pickles and hot peppers, you might opt for a crisp Riesling. No matter your toppings, a dry rosé almost always works. You could try Steppe Cellars Dry Riesling. Reviewers quite like it with a 4 out of 5 star rating and a price of about 18 dollars per bottle.
Steppe Cellars Dry Riesling
Steppe Cellars Dry Riesling
Aromas of green apple, lime, pear and vanilla custard lead to a delicate mouthfeel with mineral notes, apple, lemon zest and crisp acidity.
DifficultyNormal
Ready In25 m.
Servings3
Health Score17
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