The accompanying recipe brings all that to the table, but rather than taking a half-day to cook the traditional way, this one – thanks to a few strategic shortcuts – comes together in less than an hour.

Instead of tomatoes, posole verde calls for tomatillos, which look like small green tomatoes with papery skins and have a mouthwatering tangy flavor. You just remove their husks and rinse and rub off their lightly sticky coating, then cook them with onions and garlic until they are tender. The softened tomatillos, onions and garlic (whose flavor deepens and mellows when prepared this way) are pureed with toasted pumpkin seeds, which add a creamy richness to the dish, plus jalapeños, cilantro and oregano.

The flavor-packed puree is cooked down for 15 minutes until it has deepened in flavor and color, and that’s when the shortcuts come into play: chicken broth (homemade if you have it), two cans of hominy, which are akin in convenience to using canned beans, and cooked, shredded chicken breast, perhaps left over from a store-bought rotisserie bird.

They are added to the tomatillo puree, and everything is simmered together until warmed though. The posole is served with an array of garnishes, such as cilantro, lime (a must), radishes, onion and avocado, that make the dish pop with color, texture and flavor. The end result is a meal in a bowl that can make any weeknight feel like a special occasion.

Krieger’s newest cookbook is You Have It Made: Delicious, Healthy, Do-Ahead Meals (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016). She blogs and offers a weekly newsletter at www.elliekrieger.com.