One-Pot Pozole Verde de Pollo (Green Mexican Hominy and Chicken Soup)

A one-pot weeknight version of the hearty Mexican classic

Why It Works

  • Streamlining multi-day, multi-pot traditional pozole recipes into a single Dutch oven makes this recipe doable on a weeknight.
  • Searing the green salsa adds depth to its flavor.
  • Pumpkin seeds add nutty flavor and a creamy texture.

I've been close friends with pozole rojo—the Mexican meat and hominy soup flavored with dried red chiles—for years, but only vaguely acquainted with pozole verde, its heartier, greener cousin that comes from the mountainous state of Guerrero. I'd made Rick Bayless's version from Authentic Mexican (at Amazon) years ago, and was familiar with the one the late Diana Kennedy wrote about in The Art of Mexican Cooking (at Amazon). When my wife, Adri, and I were in Mexico City, I was hoping to get a few educational tastes of it, but alas, it was not to be.

A bowl of green pozole verde topped with avocado and radish.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

See, Thursday is traditionally pozole day, and most restaurants that make the soup will serve it only on Thursdays, as I found out when I was greeted with stares that said oh, the poor gringo, bless him! when I asked for it on a Saturday. Oops.

Nevertheless, we live in this glorious modern age where videos and recipes from foreign lands are but a few mouse clicks away, so with a few recipes to get me started, I felt comfortable enough to arrive at my own version of pozole verde.

A spoonful of homemade Mexican green pozole lifted from a black bowl.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

If you've ever cooked that great Bayless recipe, you know that it's a beast. Dried hominy soaked and cooked for hours. Pork and chicken simmered, skimmed, and picked. Pumpkin seeds toasted. Tomatillos boiled. Sauces blended and seared, soup seasoned and combined. And nearly all of it takes place in separate vessels, making cleanup a huge chore. The truth is, unless you've got the day off, cooking pozole on a Thursday is nothing more than a "sueño imposible."

My goal was to come up with a recipe that is not only delicious, but fast enough that it can reasonably be made on a Thursday night. The recipe I came up with may or may not be authentic, but it sure as heck is delicious.

Step #1: Toasting the Pumpkin Seeds

The first step was to strategize a cooking order so that I could reduce a four-pot recipe down to a single Dutch oven, and that meant toasting pumpkin seeds first. Not every green pozole recipe contains pumpkin seeds, but I love their nutty flavor and the creamy texture they lend to the soup when puréed. They also help to keep the soup smooth and emulsified, which is good news: It means I can skip skimming off excess fat down the line. Pumpkin seeds need to be toasted in a dry pot, so they're the first to go in. I toasted three ounces of seeds until golden brown and fragrant (be careful: they pop as they toast!).

I emptied out the Dutch oven and turned to my meat and vegetables.

Chicken stock being poured over chicken leg quarters, which are layered on top of tomatillos, onions, and jalapeños in a Dutch oven for pozole.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Step #2: Cooking the Chicken and Vegetables

The vegetables are straightforward: tart tomatillos as the base, along with chiles (I used a mix of poblano, Anaheim, and jalapeño, though you can use any combination you'd like) and an onion. Choosing a single meat to use as the base of my soup went a long way in reducing its complexity, and since chicken cooks so much faster than pork, I decided to stick with chicken. I tried various cuts before settling on whole legs, which are cheap, cook fast, offer plenty of flavor and body to the soup base, and stay moist and tender even after reheating the soup multiple times. (This is important because for complex recipes, I like to make enough to last for several meals.)

Rather than cooking them separately as some recipes dictate, I combined my chicken and vegetables in the Dutch oven, then covered them with store-bought low-sodium chicken stock. (If I had enough homemade on hand, I would have used that, but even with store-bought, the chicken legs and vegetables lend enough flavor to doctor it up.)

For aromatics, I added a couple tablespoons of Mexican oregano, which is more fragrant and hoppy than its domestic counterpart. If you have access to epazote, a few sprigs tossed in the pot are a good idea, as are a few sorrel leaves if you can find them. But the soup will still taste delicious without them.

Chicken, tomatillos, and aromatics are brought to a simmer for pozole.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

I brought the whole thing to a light simmer and cooked until the chicken was tender, which took about 40 minutes. Once the chicken was cooked, I took it out of the pot and set it aside to cool while I turned my attention back to the vegetables.

Step #3: Building Flavor for the Broth

Whether you're making pozole rojo or verde, the basic technique is to make a broth, then separately purée your main flavoring ingredients into a salsa, which you then use to season the soup. My first thought was to skip this step and simply purée everything in the pot together, but without any sautéing or charring of the vegetables beforehand, the soup lacked complexity.

The solution was to use the liquid-searing technique common in Mexican salsas. I started by straining the broth and transferring the solids to the jar of a blender, where I blended them together with the toasted pumpkin seeds and a small handful of cilantro. Next, I dried out the Dutch oven and heated up some oil until smoking hot, then I poured the purée directly into it, allowing it to sputter and spit for a moment. This technique develops rich, deep flavors in no time and those flavors come through in the finished soup.

As I was pouring the strained broth back into the pot to thin out the sauce, I realized that I'd missed out on another opportunity to build flavor. Rather than using oil to sear the salsa, why not use the chicken fat floating directly on the surface of the stock?

For my next batch, I skimmed off some chicken fat and added it to the Dutch oven. A little stock came along with it, but it quickly evaporated as the fat heated up, leaving behind a layer of concentrated proteins that started browning on the bottom of the pot. Once that layer of proteins was deeply browned and the fat was just starting to smoke, I poured in my purée, followed by the remaining stock.

This was the best batch yet, with a smooth, creamy texture and a rich flavor from the seared salsa and the browned proteins at the bottom of the pot.

Step #4: Finishing and Serving the Pozole

With the soup base finished, all that was left to do was to pick the chicken meat from the legs and add them to the soup along with a can of hominy (people who love hominy swear that dried hominy is the only way to go, but I find canned hominy to have a pleasingly toothsome bite and corny flavor that's more than satisfying for a weeknight meal).

Pozole is almost as much about the garnishes as it is about the soup base. I like to serve it with diced white onion, diced avocado, diced radishes, thinly sliced hot chiles, and chopped fresh cilantro leaves at the table so that your guests can customize to their hearts' content. (Pro tip: Cut the garnishes while that chicken is simmering!)

Overhead view of a bowl of green pozole, garnished with cilantro, radish, avocado, and thinly sliced serrano chile. Ramekins of the garnishes are nearby.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

All told, the soup took just over an hour from start to finish, with at least half that time hands-off simmering. Not bad for a Thursday night dinner that feels like the kind of meal you'd have to play hooky to pull off.

January 2017

Recipe Details

One-Pot Pozole Verde de Pollo (Green Mexican Hominy and Chicken Soup)

Cook 70 mins
Active 30 mins
Total 70 mins
Serves 6 servings

Ingredients

For the Soup:

  • 3 ounces pumpkin seeds (85g; about 1/2 cup)

  • 2 1/2 pounds bone-in chicken leg quarters (1.2kg; about 3 leg quarters)

  • 1 pound tomatillos (450g)

  • 1 large white onion, roughly chopped

  • 1 jalapeño pepper, stems and seeds removed, roughly chopped

  • 1 poblano pepper, stems and seeds removed, roughly chopped

  • 1 Anaheim pepper, stems and seeds removed, roughly chopped

  • 6 cups homemade or store-bought low-sodium chicken stock (1.5 liters)

  • 2 tablespoons dried oregano, preferably Mexican (about 8g)

  • 2 sprigs epazote (optional)

  • Salt

  • Handful fresh cilantro leaves and fine stems

  • 1 (28-ounce; 800g) can white hominy, drained (see note)

To Serve:

  • Diced avocado

  • Diced radishes

  • Thinly sliced serrano or jalapeño peppers

  • Chopped fresh cilantro leaves

  • Finely chopped white onion

Directions

  1. For the Soup: Heat pumpkin seeds in the base of a large Dutch oven over medium-high heat, stirring constantly, until they start to pop and smell nutty, about 4 minutes. Transfer pumpkin seeds to a bowl and set aside.

    Pumpkin seeds are toasted in a dry Dutch oven for pozole verde.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  2. Add chicken, tomatillos, onion, peppers, chicken stock, oregano, epazote (if using), and a large pinch of salt to the Dutch oven. Bring to a boil over high heat, then reduce to a bare simmer. Cook, stirring occasionally, until chicken and vegetables are completely tender, about 40 minutes.

    Chicken, tomatillos, and aromatics are brought to a simmer for pozole verde.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  3. Using tongs, transfer chicken to a large plate or bowl and set aside. Discard epazote sprigs (if using). Set a large fine-mesh strainer over a large bowl and strain the broth through it. Transfer solids to the jar of a blender. Add pumpkin seeds and cilantro to the blender. Blend on high speed until smooth. Set aside.

  4. Using a ladle, carefully skim off a few tablespoons of fat from the strained stock and add it to the Dutch oven (it's okay if a little stock gets in as well). Heat over high heat, swirling and stirring until the watery stock completely evaporates and starts to form a browned layer in the bottom of the pan. (It will spatter a bit. The more you stir, the less it will spatter.) As soon as the chicken fat starts to smoke, pour in the contents of the blender all at once and cook, stirring, for about 15 seconds (it will spatter a lot—wear an apron!). Immediately pour in strained chicken stock and fat and stir to combine. Bring to a bare simmer, stir in hominy, season to taste with salt, and keep warm.

    A 4-image collage of cooked aromatics being strained from soup broth, puréed with pumpkin seeds in a blender, and then fried in the Dutch oven with skimmed chicken fat.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  5. By this stage, the chicken should be cool enough to handle. Discard the skin and bones and shred the meat into bite-size pieces with your fingertips. Stir the picked chicken back into the soup.

    Picked chicken in a bowl, ready to add to pozole verde.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  6. To Serve: Ladle the hot soup into bowls and garnish with diced avocado and radish, sliced chiles, chopped cilantro, and chopped white onion. Serve immediately.

    A bowl of green pozole topped with radishes, avocado, and jalapeño slices.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Special Equipment

Dutch oven, tongs, fine-mesh strainer, blender

Notes

You can use dried hominy in place of canned. Soak dried hominy in water overnight. Drain and cook in fresh water at a gentle simmer until tender, about one and a half hours. Drain and use as directed.

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Nutrition Facts (per serving)
685 Calories
32g Fat
45g Carbs
56g Protein
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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 6
Amount per serving
Calories 685
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 32g 41%
Saturated Fat 7g 35%
Cholesterol 240mg 80%
Sodium 1986mg 86%
Total Carbohydrate 45g 16%
Dietary Fiber 14g 50%
Total Sugars 9g
Protein 56g
Vitamin C 41mg 207%
Calcium 117mg 9%
Iron 6mg 31%
Potassium 1526mg 32%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)