#chipotles
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
fieriframes · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
[CHOP THESE CHIPOTLES UP A LITTLE BIT. I'M GONNA PLATE IT. WHEN YOU'RE AT THE END OF THE ROAD, YOU DEGLAZE IT WITH SOME BEER. YES, SIR.]
4 notes · View notes
rob-boss · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
worldmusictravelblog · 1 year ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Chipotle Mac and Cheese Recipe A creamy and addictive baked macaroni and cheese gets a smoky kick from chipotle peppers. 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour, salt and pepper to taste, 3 cups whole milk, 2 cups shredded extra-sharp Cheddar cheese, 1/2 cup minced onion, 1/2 cup butter, 1 cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese, 1 teaspoon paprika, 3 chipotle chiles in adobo sauce finely chopped, 1 package elbow macaroni, 4 cloves garlic minced
0 notes
elizaevans · 1 year ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Recipe for Chipotle Garnet Yams A spicy kick to sweet potatoes. You can add more chipotles for more heat, or more brown sugar for sweetness.
0 notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Chipotle Coleslaw This simple coleslaw gives the traditional BBQ side dish a Southwestern twist by incorporating chipotle peppers, cilantro, and lime juice.
1 note · View note
sundaybreakfast · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Recipe for Chipotle Coleslaw This simple coleslaw gives the traditional BBQ side dish a Southwestern twist by incorporating chipotle peppers, cilantro, and lime juice.
0 notes
aaayyygender · 11 months ago
Text
Running with the burrito I just got (stole) from Chipotle while a HATER cop tries to catch me:
Tumblr media
4K notes · View notes
lovedrruunk · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
goodnight togachako nation
980 notes · View notes
fuckingrecipes · 4 months ago
Note
Do you have any healthy snack suggestions for someone who isn't a huge fan of nuts and dried fruit?
FIRST: A 'Snack' is just a small portion of food. It is a signifier of quantity. 'Snack' does not exclude any type or form of food - it just means a lil' bit of food.
SECOND: "Healthy" is entirely relative to every individual.
'Healthy' is just 'Supportive of a complete nutritional profile, taking into account a person's existing diet, dietary needs, and habits of energy expenditure'
For example:
A small, greasy hamburger is an EXCELLENT snack for a highschool athlete who needs to consume an large amount of calories every day to maintain their body. It has lots of fat and protein for muscle recovery and long-term energy, carbs for immediate energy, and some lettuce/tomato/onion for some extra fiber/vitamins/minerals.
On the flip side, if someone already eats a fair amount of of meat and carbs already but has a lower-energy lifestyle, a healthy snack for them might entail leafy greens, beans/legumes and vegetables, because they need more fiber and nutrients in their diet that plants have in abundance.
--
If you are allergic to or hate eating something, then it's not healthy to force yourself to eat it anyway. Find a different food, or a different way to prepare it that doesn't cause physical or psychological distress!
Don't like peanuts, but peanut butter is good? Eat peanut butter instead! Hate the texture of whole tomatoes, but tomato sauce is good? Eat tomato sauce instead!
Don't be afraid to finely mince or blend your ingredients into a sauce or smoothie if you feel you need or want to eat something for the nutrients but hate chewing it.
--
I'm a big fan of probiotic stuff in general, like fermented foods (kimchi, pickles, sauerkraut, miso, mustard and yogurts), since a strong bacterial colony in the gut has a positive impact on wellbeing for most folks. More importantly, I love the taste.
Buuuuuuuut~ some people are extra sensitive to compounds that are concentrated in fermented foods. Those people should not eat a lot of fermented foods. It's not healthy for them.
--
If you're munching snacks out of boredom when you're not actually hungry, something low-fat but satisfyingly crunchy usually does the trick for me. Something I can keep devouring for the sensory delight, gives some good nutrients, and won't make me feel overly full afterward.
Carrots, bell peppers, mung bean sprouts, apples, pears, jicama, radish, pretzels, sweet onions, green papaya, broccoli, popcorn, cucumber, water chestnut, seaweed crisps, coconut chips, any of those fermented foods I mentioned... hell, coleslaw is mostly cabbage with oil and vinegar - plow through that and have a great time!
--
If you want a snack because you're hungry, but you just want to tide yourself over until the next meal, eat something that is high in fat and fiber. Fat & Fiber makes you feel full.
Cheese, Yogurt, Butter. Olive oil. Guacamole. Tinned fish. Cream. Fry up an egg. Olives, Hard-boiled eggs - These are all relatively high in fat.
Beans, Legumes, Oats, Leafy Greens, and most Berries are pretty high in fiber, and can pair up with any of the fatty things.
Hell, a slice of cheese pizza is also fine! Buttered toast is fine! A small portion of roast beef from last night's dinner!
Eat a little bit, wait 20 minutes, and see if you're still hungry after that. A normal stomach takes 20-30 minutes to register feeling satiated. (Some people's stomachs don't really feel the difference of hunger vs satiation. Those people need to be more mindful of the quantities of food they eat - both eating too much, AND eating too little!)
--
If you want a snack because salty snacks in particular sound fucking amazing, but other fatty and high-protein foods sound kinda gross, Try chugging a glass of water.
If water doesn't resolve the feeling after giving it a few minutes, try something with salt.
Dehydration and not having enough salt in your body both cause salt cravings. Acute thirst is often mistaken as hunger.
Honestly, you can have a handful of chips. Eating a whole family-sized bag of potato chips in one sitting is probably too much salt & fat for most people, but eating a handful here and there is fine. It's just as morally neutral as eating a carrot.
Eat some rice with soy sauce. Eat some pickled okra, or pickled onions. Eat some miso soup. Drink some soup broth. Have some salt-cured meats.
--
So: A Healthy Snack!
Ask yourself: Am I hungry, bored, or thirsty?
Ask yourself: What have I been eating lately, and what has my diet lacked, or had in excess? (Fats, Protein, Carbohydrates, Vitamins/Minerals, Water, Salt)
Ask yourself: Am I trying to provide my body with a complete nutritional profile, including fats and carbs - or am I focusing on an imagined 'purity' of food and assigning moral value to eating what diet culture calls healthy so I can be 'good.' (Aka: Do you think instances of eating candy or fatty food is 'being bad'? Stop that.)
Ask yourself: Am I able to rely on my body's signals for hunger and thirst, or do I need to manually track this?
Sometimes a snack is a small portion of leftovers from yesterday.
Sometimes a snack is carefully sliced, cooked, and arranged on a cute plate.
Sometimes a snack is gnawing through half a head of cabbage doused in vinegar.
Sometimes a snack is a handful of shredded cheese eaten from your own palm so you become both the gentle horse and the stablehand feeding it, and that's all okay
727 notes · View notes
mostly-funnytwittertweets · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
2K notes · View notes
foodcravings · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Rodeo chicken chipotle wrap (via Instagram)
2K notes · View notes
fieriframes · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
[Gonna put our sambal in. Chipotles.]
5 notes · View notes
daily-deliciousness · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Chipotle beer braised beef tacos
797 notes · View notes
mewvore · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Norma, your demon wife
6K notes · View notes
politijohn · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Source
Tumblr media
Source
650 notes · View notes
fattributes · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Potato Croquettes with Cheese and Hatch Chile Sauce
246 notes · View notes