Please note that any pre-cooking of food for public food service (or preparing for 125+ people in a camp kitchen) MUST be done in a commercial kitchen, and you've got to bring the paperwork (your receipts, plus copy of their valid health department permit).
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I developed this recipe, which I gift you. Its made to a gringo palate - tastey but not too spicey. If you need/prefer spicey - you can add something to the ingredients while cooking - or add salsa after its done and while you are serving.
I was going to make 2,000 tamales for TTITD. But then I discovered that the 7.1 cu ft freezer only holds 724 tamales. So this is hopefully for those who think its a good idea, and want to do their own - so that no place on the Playa is without a bunch.
I'm going to take photos over the weekend (ok, its only Thursday) and post a step-by-step. Those who don't know the difference between a pinch, a three finger pinch, a dash and a smidgen, might have trouble following this. So photos should help.
Lets start with ingredients.
6 pounds of bacon. Plus a smidgen. I usually add a half pound after the meat paste is completed so that there are recognizable bits. Its a visual thing.
3 pounds of pepper jack cheese.
Three softball size onions. I use Texas Sweet 1015, which were developed by selection at Texas A&M, not mutant genes.
2 large cans of RoTel Original (tomatoe and green chili)
One large sack of tamale, corn tortilla flour. The better brands have labels where Spanish is the first language.
Three large boxes of chicken broth.
Pepper, salt, garlic salt, cominos (ground cumin). Large quantities.
Corn husks (not in photo)
Water - duh! (also not in photo)
If I was going to make it spicey, I would add three small cans of Red Chipotle... not saying that I would... just if I had a taste tester that really liked HOT food.
Pretty simple list, huh? The most expensive ingredient is the bacon.
From this we make a meat paste, a masa dough, and then we roll 'em.
The primary heating element will be steam.
NEVER TRUST A SKINNY COOK!!! Taste before, during and after a cookery.