It is this shared love of music that motivated us to initially attend the ACL Music Fest during its second year (El Syd will want you to know that the only reason we didn't go the the first one is because we didn't yet live here.)
The Austin City Limits (ACL) Music Festival is an annual three-day American music festival that takes place in Austin, Texas, Zilker Park. Each year, the ACL Festival brings together more than 150 acts from all over the world to play rock, indie, country, folk, electronic and more on eight stages. Approximately 75,000 fans attend the festival each day; 225,000 over the entire weekend.Although I do threaten that each and every year will be my last, we haven't missed a year since our first visit. We were there for the dust bowl year. We were there for the year of the rainstorms on day one, followed by mud pits on day two. We were there in 108F heat with me being five months pregnant (that was the year I was thiiiiiiiis close to saying never again and really meaning it). We were there for a fire. We were there for a herding, scary crowd of too many people to count trying to get to see The Lumineers last year. Every year there is something a little different to make the hallmark of that particular year, but one thing that has remained constant over the years is
What is a Mighty Cone, you ask? Well, I'll tell you one thing, it ain't your usual festival fare. No turkey leg in site. No giant sausage on a stick (although, I do like those every once in a while.) A Mighty Cone, my friends, is a study in all things delicious. Brought to you by Jeff Blank, chef at Hudson's on the Bend, start with a usual, everyday flour tortilla and use it to line a paper raspa or snow cone cup. Then, add a little dollop of the tastiest Mango-Jalapeno coleslaw right in the bottom. Next, add a crispy fried chicken tender or shrimp or avocado that has been dredged in a delectable, sweet and spicy corn flake crust. Top all of that with a drizzle of Ancho "paint" and you have a taste sensation the likes that the typical fest has never seen. They are so popular that a food truck devoted to them was spawned and is located at 2512 Rio Grande St. in Austin.
So, when Memorial Day was on the horizon, I was looking for something different than the usual cookout suspects and with the ACL fest lineup for 2013 having just been recently released, I wanted to make these at home. I'd been calling it the Great Mighty Cone Recreation Caper, but after eating them, El Syd has deemed this endeavor "The Mighty Clone"
This is another of those dishes that requires a bit of component preparation and then once everything is ready, you build your wrap. I'll describe what I did and as we go along give some ideas for how you might shave off some of the work if you're not up to following along with fidelity.
Mango- Jalapeno Sauce (yields close to 1 quart)
- 1 lb mangoes - peeled, pitted and diced (1/4in dice) (frozen will work too)
- 11/2 C white sugar
- 3 oz. white wine vinegar
- 2 Tbsp garlic
- 3 Tbsp purple onion - diced
- 2 jalapenos (lg.); seeded and sliced
- 1/2 Tsp salt
- Combine the mangoes sugar, vinegar, garlic and onions over moderate heat until you get a good simmer going. Lower heat to keep a low simmer and cook for about 15 minutes.
- Add jalapenos and salt and stir well; simmer an additional 3-5 minutes.
- Remove from heat and cool to room temp. Using an immersion blender (or pouring into your regular blender), blend until you have a chunky sauce.
- Chill well in fridge before making the aioli.
Notes:
This sauce is absolutely divine on its own and would make a fabulous accompaniment to pork tenderloin grilled or pork medallions sauteed. It is also spectacular poured over cream cheese and served with crackers. Sauce will stay in fridge for 7-10 days or can be processed/canned for longer storage. I've not frozen it, but I think that would work as well.
If you're not up to the task of making it homemade, Hudson's on the Bend sells the original sauce and Fisher & Wieser sells a mango habanero ginger sauce that would be a good substitute.
Mango Jalapeno Aioli (yield approx. 2 Cups of sauce)
- 2 limes juiced
- 1 bunch cilantro rough chopped
- 1/2 C Mango Jalapeno sauce (made as above or use purchased)
- 2 cloves of garlic - minced
- 11/2 Cup Mayo
- Combine all ingredients and chill at least 4 hours or over night.
Ancho "Paint"
- 1/4 C of Ancho pepper puree (2-3 large ancho peppers soaked for at least 30 minutes in about 2 cups of hot, hot water. Puree the softened peppers in the blender with a bit of the soaking water.)
- 1 lemon - juiced
- 3 cloves garlic
- 1 shallot, sliced
- 1 C mayonnaise
- 1 Tbsp dark brown sugar
- 1 Tbsp rice wine vinegar
- Combine all of the ingredients in a blender and puree until smooth. (I attempted to use my immersion blender for this with fair results; the real blender is probably the better way to go here.)
- Refrigerate until ready to use.
Note: I suppose as a sub, you could mix a Mexican style hot sauce (like Cholula) mixed with some mayo.
Mango Jalapeno Slaw
- 1 1/2 quarts of cabbage - shredded (about 1/2 of a large cabbage)(or packaged slaw mix)
- 1 C carrot (coarsely grated or julienned)
- 2 C Mango Jalapeno Aioli
- Mix all ingredients in a large bowl; the slaw will be (and should be) very moist.
- Refrigerate until ready to use.
Hot and Crunchy Breading
- 1/4 C almonds (slivered, blanched)
- 1/4 C toasted sesame seeds
- 2 C corn flakes
- 1/4 C white sugar
- red chili flakes (to your taste; I used about 1/2 Tbsp and it was a bit too spicy for the tender palates in our family)
You can dredge chicken tenders, peeled and deveined shrimp or peeled, pitted avocados (cut into 8ths) or any combo of those. (Start with avocados and then follow with protein(s) to avoid contamination)
- Put all of the ingredients into a food processor and pulse until combined into a coarse meal (do not over process; you want a bit of chunk to the breading)
- Set up a dredging station in 3 similarly sized pans:
- Pan one: 2 C flour
- Pan two: 2 eggs whisked with 3/4 C milk
- Pan three: crunchy breading mix
- Breading steps:
- Dredge the item in flour first, until well dusted, then shake off excess flour.
- Dunk the dusted item into the egg wash, wetting it entirely.
- Place in the breading mixture and cover, pressing lightly. Remove and shake off excess. Set aside on a dry sheet pan until all of the items are breaded.
- Cooking:
- In a large, heavy saute pan, heat 5 Tbsp peanut oil (or canola oil -anything with a fairly high smoke point) Heat to about 325 F over medium heat.
- Lay item in the hot oil and saute for about 3-4 minutes per side (less for shrimp) It should be a golden, crunchy brown if the pan is the right temp. Turn item only once.
- Place on a warm sheet pan in a warm oven until all of the items are fried.
Final Assembly
Use a paper drink cone (if you have it; if not, these make great standard tacos); insert a warm flour tortilla into the cone followed by your hot and crunchy item ( we did one tender and one avocado wedge per cone) Add cold slaw and then a good sized dollop of ancho sauce.
These things were delicious. Everyone loved them (except my son whose tender palate thought the breading was too spicy). My dear daughter commented "you know, I usually get tired of leftovers but I could eat these everyday." And, it makes such a big batch that we did just that for the better part of a week.
Happy Cooking!
sld
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