
Ah, King Ranch Casserole. My own earliest cooking memory is of using kitchen shears to cut yellow corn tortillas into triangles and helping my mom lay them out in a 9x13 pyrex baking dish. King Ranch Casserole is sort of a Nolen specialty - everyone in the family likes it, almost everyone in the family makes it, and everyone uses a slightly different approach.
I don't make it as often anymore since I started being more mindful of what I eat, but it's still great for potlucks, extended family dinners, and other gatherings.
Software:
Approximately 1 lb cooked chicken, cut or shredded into bite-size pieces
30 corn tortillas (yellow or white are fine, but you want the thin type, not the thick, pillowy 'homestyle' ones)
1 can (14.5 oz) chicken broth
1 can Ro-Tel tomatoes and green chiles, drained (not sure if this is available outside the southwest)
1 can Cream of Chicken soup
1 can Cream of Mushroom soup
1 medium onion, diced
Approximately 4 cups shredded cheddar and jack cheeses
Hardware:
9x13 baking dish, the deeper the better
aluminum foil
large mixing bowl
ladle
Preparation:
My approach is to start by roasting 1lb of boneless chicken breasts in the oven. Preheat oven to 375 degrees, toss chicken breasts in olive oil, paprika, salt and pepper. Roast in baking dish until thoroughly cooked (internal temp 165-175 degrees) and let cool. Pour drippings into mixing bowl, dice chicken and add to mixing bowl.
Alternatively you can use a boiled & shredded whole chicken (my mom's method), a rotisserie chicken from your local mega-mart, leftover turkey meat (Uncle James' favorite) or if you lack functioning taste buds, canned cooked chicken.
Either way, add the tomatoes, condensed soups, broth, and 1/2 the cheese to the mixing bowl. Some Nolens sweat the onions before adding them (cook them over medium heat with a little oil and salt to soften them) but I like the crunch and stronger flavor of adding them straight in. Stir to combine the ingredients and set aside.
Now for construction! (You can either layer the whole tortillas or cut them into triangles, as my mother does, and layer those - as far as I can tell it doesn't significantly affect the final product.) Cover the bottom of the pan with tortillas (minimizing overlap) and ladle on approx 1/4 of the filling. Repeat until you have 5 layers of tortillas, the last of which will NOT be topped with filling. Top it with the remaining cheese and cover with foil.
Set aside in the refrigerator for a up to a couple of days, or bake immediately for 2 hours at 350 degrees. After 2 hours, remove the foil and continue baking until the top is beginning to brown.
Let rest at least 15 minutes before serving - even after 15 min, it will be hot under that insulating layer of cheese and tortillas!
When I was a teenager (and James and Jon were ~13-14 and 10, respectively) we would have to make 3 of these for family gatherings; James, Jon and I could eat two in a single sitting, and the third was for everyone else. I don't recommend this for adult metabolisms (a casserole contains about 4800 calories by my calculation) but it is wonderfully filling, delicious, relaxing home-style comfort food.
