My pico is something I am so proud of. Can I brag a little here? I watched a few cooking shows where they showed different ways to make it and then I tried it and changed it and changed it and came
up with this recipe. I love the look of this as well as the taste and texture. I love to serve this as a side with of course any Mexican dish but specifically with taco's or really just dig in with a big bag of tortilla chips. So here's what you gotta do to make your own.
10 Roma tomatoes
1 Red Onion
1 Bunch of Cilantro
2 Jalapenos
2 Limes
Salt to taste
Dice the tomatoes and onions into same small size pieces. Wash the cilantro well and dry fairly well by wrapping it in a paper towel. Cut off an inch of the stems from the bottom up and then fold the cilantro into a ball (stems included - tons of flavor) and chop semi fine. De-vain and de-seed jalapeno's so that the pepper cleaned out, then julienne them and then chop supper fine (mince). In other words you want the jalapeno's to be an after thought and not seen. If you want to add some heat to the pico you can keep some seeds in. Jalapeno adds tons of flavor and if done the way I'm saying there won't be hardly any heat at all from the pepper. Once tomatoes, onions, cilantro and jalapeno's are chopped, juice the limes over the chopped veggies. To get a lot of juice out of your limes, rub them on the counter under your palm before you cut them and if they've been in the fridge for awhile you can microwave them for 10 seconds to help them be softer and yield more juice. Now it's time for the salt. Go easy on the salt at first, you can always add but you can't take any out. Mix, taste, add salt if needed. It is best chilled for one to two hours. While it chills the salt will make the tomatoes bleed their juice. The acid from the limes will soften the taste of the onions and the jalapeno's and all the flavors will marry. Before serving, mix the juice that has settled back through the dish. Enjoy! For an extra kick try adding avocados to the mix.
10 Roma tomatoes
1 Red Onion
1 Bunch of Cilantro
2 Jalapenos
2 Limes
Salt to taste
Dice the tomatoes and onions into same small size pieces. Wash the cilantro well and dry fairly well by wrapping it in a paper towel. Cut off an inch of the stems from the bottom up and then fold the cilantro into a ball (stems included - tons of flavor) and chop semi fine. De-vain and de-seed jalapeno's so that the pepper cleaned out, then julienne them and then chop supper fine (mince). In other words you want the jalapeno's to be an after thought and not seen. If you want to add some heat to the pico you can keep some seeds in. Jalapeno adds tons of flavor and if done the way I'm saying there won't be hardly any heat at all from the pepper. Once tomatoes, onions, cilantro and jalapeno's are chopped, juice the limes over the chopped veggies. To get a lot of juice out of your limes, rub them on the counter under your palm before you cut them and if they've been in the fridge for awhile you can microwave them for 10 seconds to help them be softer and yield more juice. Now it's time for the salt. Go easy on the salt at first, you can always add but you can't take any out. Mix, taste, add salt if needed. It is best chilled for one to two hours. While it chills the salt will make the tomatoes bleed their juice. The acid from the limes will soften the taste of the onions and the jalapeno's and all the flavors will marry. Before serving, mix the juice that has settled back through the dish. Enjoy! For an extra kick try adding avocados to the mix.
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