Tag: cauliflower rice

  • Green Chile Lime Chicken with Cilantro-Lime Cauliflower Rice

    Green Chile Lime Chicken with Cilantro-Lime Cauliflower Rice

    Some meals know where they come from.

    Not in a loud way.

    Not in a flag-waving way.

    Not in the way food sometimes gets dressed up, becoming more performance than nourishment.

    This one knows quietly.

    It knows through green chile.

    Through lime.

    Through garlic warming in oil.

    Through chicken taking on smoke, salt, acid, and heat until it becomes something more than the plain thing it started as.

    This is a meal built for a warm New Mexico week, the kind where the sun does not ask for permission before entering the room. The kind of week where the body wants flavor, but not weight. Something satisfying, but not heavy. Something with a little fire in it, but also enough brightness to keep the plate from closing in on itself.

    That is where the lime comes in.

    And that is where the cauliflower rice earns its place.

    I will not pretend cauliflower is rice. It is not. It does not need to be. There is a quiet dignity in letting a thing be what it is. Cauliflower rice works here because it carries flavor. It takes the lime, cilantro, garlic, and the chicken juices and gives the plate a lighter foundation.

    This is practical food.

    Keto-friendly food.

    Home food.

    Food that understands that care does not always arrive as something rich and heavy. Sometimes care is knowing when to lighten the plate. Sometimes care is heat, citrus, herbs, and enough restraint to let the meal breathe.

    Green Chile Lime Chicken with Cilantro-Lime Cauliflower Rice

    Serves

    2 to 4 people

    Ingredients

    For the Green Chile Lime Chicken

    • 600 g boneless, skinless chicken thighs or chicken breasts
    • 120 g roasted green chile, chopped
    • 30 ml olive oil
    • 30 ml fresh lime juice
    • 2 cloves garlic, minced
    • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
    • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
    • ½ teaspoon dried oregano
    • 1 teaspoon salt
    • ½ teaspoon black pepper
    • ½ teaspoon onion powder
    • Zest of 1 lime
    • Optional: ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper or chili powder for more heat

    For the Cilantro-Lime Cauliflower Rice

    • 600 g cauliflower rice, fresh or frozen
    • 15 ml olive oil or 15 g butter
    • 1 clove garlic, minced
    • 30 ml fresh lime juice
    • Zest of 1 lime
    • 10 g fresh cilantro, chopped
    • ½ teaspoon salt, plus more to taste
    • ¼ teaspoon black pepper
    • Optional: 1 tablespoon chopped green chile

    Optional Garnishes

    • Extra chopped cilantro
    • Lime wedges
    • Sliced avocado
    • Crumbled cotija cheese or queso fresco
    • Sour cream
    • Thinly sliced jalapeño

    Method

    1. Marinate the Chicken

    In a bowl, combine the chopped green chile, olive oil, lime juice, garlic, cumin, smoked paprika, oregano, salt, black pepper, onion powder, and lime zest.

    Add the chicken and coat it well.

    Cover and let it marinate for at least 30 minutes. If you have more time, let it sit in the refrigerator for 2 to 4 hours.

    Do not worry if you only have 30 minutes.

    A meal made with limited time is still a meal made with care.

    2. Cook the Chicken

    Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat.

    Add a small drizzle of olive oil if needed.

    Place the chicken in the hot pan and cook for about 5 to 7 minutes per side, depending on thickness, until browned on the outside and cooked through.

    The chicken should reach an internal temperature of 74°C.

    If the green chile marinade begins to darken too quickly, lower the heat slightly. You want color. You do not want bitterness.

    Once cooked, move the chicken to a plate and let it rest for 5 minutes before slicing.

    Resting matters.

    It lets the juices return to the meat. It lets the meal collect itself before being asked to serve you.

    3. Make the Cilantro-Lime Cauliflower Rice

    While the chicken rests, heat olive oil or butter in a large skillet over medium heat.

    Add the garlic and cook for about 30 seconds, just until fragrant.

    Add the cauliflower rice.

    Cook for 5 to 8 minutes, stirring often, until the cauliflower is tender and some of the moisture has cooked off.

    If using frozen cauliflower rice, give it a little more time. Let the water leave the pan. That is what keeps it from becoming soggy.

    Stir in the lime juice, lime zest, cilantro, salt, black pepper, and, if desired, chopped green chile.

    Taste and adjust.

    A little more salt may wake it up.

    A little more lime may brighten it.

    Trust the pan.

    4. Serve

    Spoon the cilantro-lime cauliflower rice onto a plate or into a shallow bowl.

    Slice the green chile-lime chicken and lay it on top.

    Add any garnishes you like: avocado, cotija, cilantro, sour cream, lime wedges, or jalapeño.

    Serve warm.

    Notes From My Kitchen

    Chicken thighs will give you the most flavor and stay juicier, but chicken breasts work if you prefer them.

    Fresh cauliflower rice usually gives a better texture, but frozen works well if you cook off the extra moisture.

    For a creamier plate, add a spoonful of sour cream or avocado on the side.

    For more heat, use hot roasted green chile or add a little cayenne to the marinade.

    For meal prep, store the chicken and cauliflower rice separately so the cauliflower does not absorb too much moisture.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times

  • The Quiet Work of Making Enough

    The Quiet Work of Making Enough

    There’s a kind of cooking that doesn’t announce itself.

    It doesn’t arrive plated with intention or styled for admiration. It doesn’t ask to be photographed before it’s eaten. It lives somewhere else—closer to memory than performance.

    It’s the kind of cooking that understands what it means to stretch.

    Not out of lack.

    But out of knowing.

    Knowing that a meal doesn’t have to be extravagant to be meaningful.

    That feeding yourself—feeding others—isn’t about excess. It’s about attention.

    It’s about taking what you have and refusing to let it fall short.

    Ground beef. Green chile. A little cream.

    And something else—something that doesn’t try to replace what’s there, only to help carry it further.

    Cauliflower.

    Not as a substitute.

    But as support.

    This is that kind of meal.

    Green Chile Beef & Cauliflower Casserole

    Ingredients (Serves 4–6)

    • 900 g ground beef (80/20 preferred)
    • 300–400 g cauliflower rice (fresh or frozen)
    • 1 small onion, diced
    • 3 cloves garlic, minced
    • 200 g roasted green chiles, chopped (Hatch if you can find them)
    • 120 ml heavy cream
    • 120 g cream cheese, softened
    • 150 g shredded cheddar cheese
    • 100 g shredded Monterey Jack (or mozzarella)
    • 1 tbsp olive oil (if needed)

    Seasoning

    • 1 tsp ground cumin
    • 1 tsp smoked paprika
    • Salt and black pepper, to taste

    Method

    1. Start with the part most people skip

    Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat.

    Add the cauliflower rice with no oil. Let it cook for 5–7 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the moisture cooks off and it begins to feel dry.

    This step matters more than it seems.

    It’s the difference between something that holds together… and something that falls apart.

    Set aside.

    2. Brown the beef

    In the same skillet, cook the ground beef over medium heat until browned, breaking it apart as it cooks.

    Drain excess grease if needed, but don’t take all of it.

    Flavor lives in what you leave behind.

    3. Build the base

    Add the diced onion and cook until softened.

    Stir in garlic, cumin, and smoked paprika. Let it sit in the heat for a moment—just long enough for the aroma to rise.

    4. Bring in the chile

    Add the chopped green chiles and stir.

    Let everything sit together for a minute or two.

    There’s a point where the smell changes—where it stops being a collection of separate ingredients and becomes something whole.

    That’s when you move on.

    5. Make it one thing

    Lower the heat.

    Add the cream cheese and heavy cream. Stir slowly until everything melts together into a single mixture.

    Not layered. Not divided.

    Just one.

    6. Fold in the cauliflower

    Return the cooked cauliflower rice to the skillet.

    Stir until it’s fully combined and coated.

    This is where the dish changes.

    It becomes something that can stretch. Something that can last.

    7. Assemble

    Transfer the mixture to a greased baking dish.

    Top with the shredded cheddar and Monterey Jack. Spread it evenly—enough to cover, not enough to hide what’s underneath.

    8. Bake

    Place in a preheated oven at 375°F (190°C).

    Bake for 20–25 minutes, until bubbling at the edges and lightly golden on top.

    9. Let it rest

    Give it 5–10 minutes before serving.

    It settles here.

    Finds its structure.

    Becomes what it was meant to be.

    Notes From My Kitchen

    • Cooking the cauliflower first isn’t optional—it’s what keeps the dish from becoming watery
    • Pepper Jack can be used if you want more heat
    • This reheats well, and like many things made with care, it often tastes better the next day

    Closing Thought

    There’s a quiet dignity in meals like this.

    Meals that don’t try to be more than they are.

    Meals that understand that feeding someone—yourself included—isn’t about spectacle.

    It’s about presence.

    About taking what’s in front of you and making sure it’s enough.

    Not just for now.

    But for whoever comes back to the table later.

    There’s more to a meal than what sits in the center of it.

    Something fresh to cut through the richness.

    Something light to close it out.

    I’ll share those soon.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    If this found you at the right time,

    Feel free to like, comment, or share it with someone who might need it too.

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times