This comprehensive recipe guides you through creating flavorful hot tamales. It involves slow-cooking Boston butt with a robust spice blend, preparing a masa dough with the reserved cooking liquid, and meticulously assembling the tamales with a rich meat filling. The tamales are then steamed to perfection, yielding a traditional and satisfying dish.
1. Meat Tenderness: Ensuring the Boston butt is 'very tender and falling apart' is crucial for a melt-in-your-mouth filling. Low and slow simmering is key. 2. Masa Consistency: The masa dough should resemble thick mashed potatoes—moist but not wet. Adjust the cooking liquid gradually to achieve this, as too much will make it sticky and too little will result in dry tamales. 3. Corn Husks: Thoroughly soaking the corn husks ensures they are pliable and easy to work with, preventing cracks during assembly. 4. Steaming: Pack tamales tightly upright in the pot to maintain their shape during steaming. Maintain a consistent, low simmer, not a rolling boil, to cook them gently and evenly. 5. Flavor Enhancement: Toasting and grinding your own cumin seeds will yield a much more aromatic spice. For richer flavor, use good quality lard in the masa dough.