Oct 7, 2010
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Turkey in Mole Poblano

This recipe comes from SAVEUR contributing editor Rick Bayless.
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Turkey in Mole Poblano Enlarge Image Credit: Todd Coleman

12 dried ancho chiles
12  dried guajillo chiles
6 dried pasilla chiles
5 tbsp. sesame seeds
1 tsp. whole aniseed
1 tsp. black peppercorns
1⁄2 tsp. whole cloves
1 tsp. dried thyme
1⁄2 tsp. dried marjoram or oregano
3 dried bay leaves, crumbled
1 1 1⁄2" stick cinnamon, broken into
   pieces

2 cups canola oil
7 1⁄4 cups chicken or turkey stock
1⁄2 cup skin-on almonds
1⁄2 cup raw shelled peanuts
1⁄3 cup hulled pumpkin seeds
1⁄3 cup raisins
2 slices white bread
2 stale corn tortillas
10 cloves garlic
1 medium onion, thinly sliced
2 large tomatillos, husked, rinsed,
   and quartered

1 large tomato, quartered
1 4–5-lb. whole skin-on boneless
   turkey breast, split into halves

Kosher salt, to taste
1 cup finely chopped Mexican chocolate
4 tbsp. sugar, plus more to taste
Tortillas and cilantro sprigs, for serving

1. Stem chiles; shake seeds into a bowl. Tear chiles into pieces; set aside. Measure 4 tbsp. chile seeds (discard the rest) and 4 tbsp. sesame seeds into a small skillet set over medium heat. Toast seeds, swirling pan, for 2 minutes. Transfer to a spice grinder. Toast aniseed, peppercorns, and cloves; transfer to grinder along with thyme, marjoram, bay leaves, and cinnamon. Grind into a powder and transfer to a large bowl; set spice mixture aside.

2. Heat oil in an 8" skillet over medium heat. Working in small batches, add chiles and cook, turning, until toasted, about 20 seconds. Using a slotted spoon and reserving oil in skillet, transfer chiles to paper towels to drain. Transfer fried chiles to a large bowl; add boiling water to cover. Let chiles steep for 30 minutes. Strain chiles, reserving soaking liquid.

3. Working in 3 batches, put 1⁄3 of the chiles, 1⁄4 cup soaking liquid, and 1⁄4 cup stock into a blender; purée. Set a sieve over a bowl and strain chile mixture, pushing it through sieve with a rubber spatula; discard solids. Reserve blender; set chile purée aside.

4. Return skillet with oil to medium heat. Working with one ingredient at a time, fry the almonds, peanuts, pumpkin seeds, and raisins until toasted, about 1 minute for almonds, 45 seconds for peanuts, 20 seconds for pumpkin seeds, and 15 seconds for raisins. Transfer each fried batch to paper towels to drain. Return skillet to
medium heat and fry the bread, turning once, until golden brown, about 3 minutes; transfer to paper towels. Repeat with tortillas. Break bread and tortillas into small pieces and transfer to bowl, along with the almonds, peanuts, pumpkin seeds, raisins, and ground spice mixture; set aside.
     
5. Set a fine strainer over an 8-qt. Dutch oven. Strain all but 2 tbsp. oil from skillet into Dutch oven; set aside.
Return skillet to medium-high heat. Add garlic and onions; cook, stirring, until brown, 10–12 minutes. Using slotted spoon, transfer onion mixture to bowl with spice mixture. Return skillet to medium-high heat; add tomatillos and tomatoes; cook, stirring, until soft, 10–12 minutes. Transfer to bowl with spice mixture along with  2 1⁄2 cups stock. Purée spice mixture in reserved blender. Press through the strainer into a bowl; set purée aside. 

6. Heat reserved Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Season turkey breasts with salt. Brown each breast,  turning once, for 12 minutes. Transfer turkey to a plate. Pour off all but 3 tbsp. of oil in Dutch oven set over
medium-high heat. Add chile purée; cook, stirring, until thick, 10–12 minutes. Add spice purée, reduce heat, and cook, stirring, for 30 minutes. Stir in 4 cups stock and chocolate; simmer, partially covered and stirring often, for 1 hour. Season mole sauce with salt and sugar; remove from heat.

7. Heat oven to 325°. Nestle turkey in mole sauce. Bake, covered, until an instant-read thermometer inserted
into turkey reads 150°, about 1 hour. Transfer pot to a rack; let rest 20 minutes. Slice turkey, serve with sauce, and garnish with remaining sesame seeds and cilantro; serve with tortillas.

SERVES 12–14

Pairing note: California's bright and funky Peay Scallop Shelf 2007 ($60) complements the mole's richness.

CORRECTION: (November 17, 2010) This recipe was missing instructions on how to use the toasted almonds, peanuts, pumpkin seeds, and raisins. They should be added to the bowl with the pieces of bread, tortillas, and ground spice mixture in step four. The recipe has now been corrected.


Turkey in Mole Poblano

This article was first published in Saveur in Issue #133

Ratings & Reviews (10)

noAvatar
Also little hard to judge, since the recipe calls for trying almonds, peanuts, pepitas, and raisins, but leaves out incorporating into the dish.
noAvatar
@SBP Thank you for catching that error. We have corrected the recipe.

Best,
Ganda Suthivarakom
Saveur.com editor
noAvatar
I'd like to know how spicy this comes out...Too Spicy?
noAvatar
Thank you thank you for clarifying the where to put the nuts and raisins. It's Thanksgiving eve, I've done all the toasting and frying and soaking and pureeing, and I've put together most of the steps, but was left with a bowl of nuts and raisins. Now I know. Thank you for correcting the recipe.

I'd also like to know how much of this can be done ahead.

I'll rate it once we eat it, but it doesn't seem too spicy. All the chiles are mild.
noAvatar
This was a two-day prep, plus several nights of shopping for the various chilies, and it was worth every minute. Yes, the omission of a key step made us pause for a sec, but presumably you wouldn't try a recipe like this if you weren't able to make an educated guess as to what to do. The result, at the Thanksgiving table, was memorable. Fragrant, spicy sauce, with a hint of sweetness--a most succulent and moist turkey. Last year's brined turkey was great, but this was more moist. After the clean up I am left with several quarts of incredible mole sauce. Will it freeze well? Going to try :) Thanks for a very special recipe.
noAvatar
Made it for Thanksgiving and thought it was great. I would definitely suggest making the mole on a separate day... the only thing you miss out on is flavoring from the rendered turkey fat from the skin. However, being that the skin ends up being flabby and soggy after the braise I would just get a skinless breast anyway, were I to make it again. One tip I would have for the "frying nuts and raisins" section would be to have a 2 qt saucepan with a fine mesh strainer sitting in it beside you... when an ingredient is done frying, just pour the whole thing through the strainer. Much easier than fishing every single pepita out with a slotted spoon.
noAvatar
I made this for Thanksgiving, and it was truly delicious. It does take quite a bit of time---it's a two day recipe. I'm not rating this highly, however, because the recipe is poorly written. The "corrected" version still is not corrected. I've been a reader and subscriber to Saveur for over five years---shame on the writers and editors for writing so terribly; the recipe is hard to follow and inelegant. Someone needs to go back to recipe writing school.
noAvatar
Thank you for including this recipe. It brought wonderful memories of my youth in the kitchen of my stemother. I grew up eating her mole and had forgoten how to make it, so I took the challenge, shopped, cooked and this dish won the approval my 2 daughters sons in law and grandaughter.
In Mexico (old wives tale)according to the old guard if you can make mole, you are ready to marry.
noAvatar
A huge amount of work, for such a little payoff. I'm guessing there are nuances in this molé that I just didn't get. It was fine, but for all the work...one star.
noAvatar
I made a chili-rubbed roast turkey for Thanksgiving and wanted to re-use the leftovers in a more elegant and appealing way than endless turkey sandwiches. I made the mole from this recipe and poured it over enchiladas - shredded roast turkey, goat cheese, and corn kernels rolled in corn tortillas and baked. It was fantastic. I split the sauce itself into a two-day recipe: I prepared through the 5th step and set everything aside for a day or two, and then finished the sauce the day we were to have the enchiladas.
Turkey in Mole Poblano 3 5 5 10

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