Pati Jinich's New York Times Food nacho article inspired me to create my own nacho dish. Her bricklayer nacho dish gave me an idea. Supposed the nachos were layered in individual bowls with the meat and veggies cooked and the rest of the ingredients put on in bright tiers? I gave it a shot.
Bricklayer's nachos have three kinds of meat, I made a vegan version using Morningstar Farms, vegan beef crumbles.
It was just skillet sauteing them with about two to three tablespoons of olive oil. It was then adding the holy trinity of Mexican cooking.
Heady dashes of onion powder, chili powder and cumin were sprinkled in along with garlic powder.It was then adding one chopped yellow pepper.Cook all this for a few minutes then start layering.
It's first taking the nachos. I used Late July's . They don't have an oily aftertaste like some other tortilla chips and they are extra crispy.
Another layer of chips.Then it's the toppings.
I used Acme's brand of salsa, the mild O Organics and Go Veggie Mexican soy cheese mix. You can add what you want here to suit your tastes. Sliced avocados topped this. You can also add jalapenos and sliced black olives too if you want.Another layer of chips.Then it's the toppings.
I loved this version of bricklayer nachos. They're a fun crunchy dinner, stacked with all sorts of flavors and textures. I would definitely make this again. It's that good. Variations abound here. Use real meat whether beef or chicken. Top with bacon crumbles or use salsa verde instead of the tomato salsa.
Nacho bowls are a fun dinner. They 're filling while being healthy and delicious. The flavors and textures are the perfect antidote to livening up the week or weekend.
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