As an alternative to Cordelia's instructions, I present...

Dan's No-Fail* Chicken Quesadilla Recipie

*this is not guaranteed not to fail.

Ingredients

Procedure

  1. Cook the chicken, THOROUGHLY. Grill it if you like. Salmonella is no fun.
  2. Chop all the vegges up. I'd suggest cutting the vegetables to about 1/2-1/3 centimetre in the longest direction. You may want them minced, you may want them diced, I have no idea.
  3. Chop up the chicken. Again, this depends on your preference, but I find that 1/2-1/3 centimetre cubes or whatever will work well.
  4. Mix the chicken with the vegetables in a bowl of some kind. Stir it up, you're making a mix.
  5. Heat up the frypan; medium heat should suffice

    After this next step, you will have to act rather quickly if you do not want overly-done quesadillas

  6. Butter/margarine both sides of a tortilla, and drop it flat into the frypan.
  7. Sprinkle some cheese around half of the tortilla (be as liberal as you like, but keep in mind how much cheese you have); do likewise with the chicken/veggie mix you made (on the same side), and then top with more cheese. It is practical to pay attention to the outside edge of the tortilla, so that when the cheese melts, it can act as a glueto keep the edges together in the next step
  8. Fold the tortilla in half using a spatula or something, so you end up with a semicircle.
  9. Leave the tortilla in long enough to brown (as slightly as you wish); don't forget to flip it over once or twice to try and keep it even
  10. Take the quesadilla out, and cut into two/three/four/eighty pie-pieces
  11. Repeat until tortillas, veggies, or whatever is exhausted
Serving suggestions

Serve with traditional condiments - salsa, sour cream, refried beans, guacamole, or whatever you please. The former two are my favourites, but YMMV.


It is beneficial to have two people doing this. One can make the quesadillas, and the other can cut the finished ones and butter the next tortilla.

Also, if my directions seem often vague, that is intentional. Cooking is not a science, it is an art. Have fun, experiment, see what you like. The benefit about making quesadillas this way is that you can try your first quesadilla while the second is cooking, and if it's not what you wanted, you can change your technique for the third, and so on. Experimentation in cooking is a common theme, of course, but with these, you can try several things in one night, not one per night, which makes discovering the ideal technique much faster.

You may wish to pick up some El Paso (or any other good brand) fajita seasoning, taco seasoning - again, experiment if you like. If you choose to add seasonings, I would suggest adding it to the chicken/veggie mix.