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Stack of chorizo black bean quesadillas dripping with cheese

Chorizo and Black Bean Quesadillas

It’s difficult for me, as an American, to separate the concept of the quesadilla from Taco Bell. It was never authentic but it was available and, say what you will about Taco Bell, there’s a reason they’re now here in the UK. I haven’t eaten there in years but I still enjoy a quesadilla. Now I prefer to make them at home.

There were two things we would reliably eat in college after a night out: Taco Bell or pizza from a place called Toppers. In either case it usually also included ranch dressing. Yes. Ranch dressing on pizza and quesadillas. Not because that makes any sense but because ranch dressing went with everything at that time in my life. It’s inexplicable but a very real part of living in the Midwest.

As with most highly processed foods, adding ranch dressing to everything is mostly a way to add an incredible amount of salt to whatever you’re dipping in it. I’m less interested in the highly processed part but will always be a sucker for the salt/fat/cheese combination and was thrilled to find that the addition of chorizo to a black bean quesadilla ticks that box in a big way.

In this household quesadillas are usually a way to use up leftover tortillas from when we’ve made burritos or chicken fajitas. Which generally means we also have an avocado around so can make some guacamole. They are quick, satisfying and also a good way to use up other leftover bits and pieces in the fridge. Cheese should be the star (and could easily carry it alone) but if you add any meat you will want it to be cooked or cured because they won’t be in the pan long enough to cook anything you wouldn’t eat raw. Hence, chorizo. An addition of some sour cream and tobasco, if you have it, will up the flavor ante with no drive through required.

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Stack of chorizo black bean quesadillas dripping with cheese

Ingredients

3 large flour tortillas
1 can black beans, drained
15cm chunk of ring chorizo, cubed
Some salsa or tabasco sauce
3 handfuls of 1:1 mix of shredded cheddar and mozzarella cheese
OPTIONAL TO SERVE: sour cream and guacamole

Instructions

1
There are two things that will make your quesadillas better, in terms of technique – making sure your tortilla is warm first and having a lid for the pan. If you don’t have a lid for your pan, a large plate can work just make sure you use a towel or oven mitt when you pick it up.
2
Start by getting your fillings ready. Put your drained BLACK BEANS into a bowl and add the cubed CHORIZO. If you have some salsa or tobasco or a bit of chili those are all great things to add and they will up the flavor. You just don’t want anything that’s going to make the mix soupy. And, as I mentioned above, don’t put in anything you wouldn’t eat raw.
3
In a separate bowl mix your CHEESES together. To be completely honest, the mozzarella is there to give you that satisfying string action but in the spirit of these being a good way to use things up and you only have one kind of cheese that’s absolutely fine.
4
To the heat. Put your pan on a medium heat and put one tortilla in with no oil. Let it warm up for a minute then flip it and let that side warm up. When it is heated through THEN put your fillings on and scatter a handful of cheese over the top. Put the lid on to help it melt.
5
Give it three minutes but stay nearby. If you’ve got too much heat you’ll smell the tortilla start to scorch. Take it off the heat and turn it down but keep the lid on and you’re fine. When the cheese is melted, take a large spatula, fold it in half and press down. Repeat for the other tortillas.
6
Remove to a plate and cut into quarters. You can either put the toppings on right away or serve them on the side for people to put on as they like.
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