Serves a Crowd

Janet's Mexican Pork Tamales

March  1, 2017
5
1 Ratings
Photo by James Ransom
  • Prep time 20 minutes
  • Cook time 4 hours 30 minutes
  • Makes 40 to 50 tamales
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Ingredients
  • Pork Filling:
  • 3 pounds pork butt, cut into 2-inch pieces
  • 1/2 white onion
  • 6 cups water
  • 1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons kosher salt, divided
  • 1 tablespoon freshly ground pepper
  • 1 1/2 ounces ancho chiles
  • 40 to 50 corn husks
  • Masa:
  • 1 1/3 cups refined pork lard
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 4 cups instant masa
  • 4 cups reserved pork broth, from above
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
Directions
  1. Pork Filling:
  2. Place the pork pieces in a large pot with the onion half. Add water to cover the pork along with 1 tablespoon of the kosher salt and the pepper.
  3. Bring the water a boil and then reduce to a simmer for 3 hours. Remove pork from water and shred. Reserve 4 cups of the pork broth for making the masa.
  4. While pork is simmering, put the ancho chile in small pot with 1 cup of water. Bring to a boil, then simmer for 30 minutes. Remove from water, deseed, and remove stem. Blend it in a blender with 1/4 cup of new water until it is completely puréed.
  5. In a large pot, add puréed ancho chile, remaining 2 teaspoons salt, 1/4 cup of pork broth, and shredded pork. Mix until combined. Heat for a few minutes to combine the flavors. Remove from heat and set aside.
  6. Soak corn husks in hot water for 15 to 20 minutes while you make the masa.
  1. Masa:
  2. In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the lard with baking powder until fluffy, at least 10 minutes.
  3. Transfer to a large bowl and add masa, 3 1/2 cups of the reserved broth, and salt. Mix by hand until a sticky dough forms. (Add the remaining 1/2 cup, little by little, if the dough is too dry.)
  4. Turn the stand mixer back on low speed (with nothing in the bowl) and slowly add small amounts of the hand-mixed dough back in. You'll mix for two to three minutes total, until a paste-like consistency is formed.
  5. Remove the corn husks from the water and wring them dry. Lay them on a hand towel and sort the husks: Pick out those of similar size husks for consistent tamales (you'll use the others to tie the tamales and to line the steamer basket).
  6. Place the husk in the palm of your hand and using a spoon, spread the masa paste on the half of the husk that is laying in your hand in a very thin layer. Add three to four tablespoons of pork filling and fold up the husk. Using small pieces of husk, make a tie around to hold the husk closed.
  7. Add 4 cups of water to the bottom of a large steamer. Line the bottom of the steamer with small and broken pieces of the husks, then begin layering the tamales in.
  8. Once all the tamales are in, use a plastic grocery shopping bag to cover all the tamales. Cover with a dish towel, then cover the pot with the lid.
  9. Steam for 1 hour and then turn off the heat. Allow the tamales to sit in the steamer for an additional hour after the heat is turned off.
  10. Serve with refried beans and Janet's Salsa Verde. https://food52.com/recipes/69594-janet-s-salsa-verde

See what other Food52ers are saying.

Cookbook Author. Heirloom Kitchen.Food52 contributing editor & Recipe Tester.

9 Reviews

Daniel D. December 27, 2017
I live in Chicago, and we have some tortillerias where you can buy freshly made tortillas, these tortillerias also sell prepared corn Masa for tamales, which is better to use and more flavorful than Masa Harina. I just add more lard. Salt and chicken/pork stock. Also, most large supermarkets carry it especially during the holidays.
Anna F. December 28, 2017
That's an awesome tip! Janet told me she misses the mills in Mexico where she could go and get the freshly ground corn masa. Thanks Daniel!
scruz October 25, 2017
in looking at two of my favorite tamale recipes (jauja cocina mexicana and armando en tu cocina) on youtube, you can use banana leaves or more properly corn husks since you already are using them. i don't think it would hurt (i wouldn't put plastic on the food) to put plastic over to hold in the steam.
creamtea October 23, 2017
As noted on the Hotline by others, seems strange that a professional would advise steaming food with a plastic bag that may not be food-safe and not intended for that purpose.
Smaug April 14, 2017
Odd way to handle the chile(s)-I wonder if there's any particular purpose behind it.
Anna F. April 16, 2017
The ancho chile is dried so Janet boils it to make is super soft so she can puree it into a sauce for the pork.
Smaug April 17, 2017
Yes. The ordinary method is to seed the chile and remove ribs (if you want to limit heat), tear it into pieces and soak in warm water (takes about `15 min.) then puree in the soaking water. Throwing away the water it was boiled in is simply throwing away taste- a lot of cooks won't even rinse seeds off of fresh chiles because of the loss of flavor.
Christina B. July 22, 2021
perhaps when one puts the chile in the pot whole, without the initial deseeding and rib removal, one is also boiling out any impurities that would've otherwise been tended to during the preparation of said chile. Also, perhaps using new water helps limit the heat, which could be preferable to the creator.
Smaug July 22, 2021
Huh? I suppose you might want to wash them if you somehow got them dirty, but boiling them in dirty water doesn't seem like the way to go. Throwing away the soaking water is simply throwing away the flavor of the chili- if you want less flavor you could use less chili to begin with, though this isn't a generous amount to begin with and ancho chilis have practically no heat.