Shrimp Enchiladas with Cream Sauce are the kind of dinner that feels a little restaurant-style but still uses a normal grocery list. The shrimp cook fast, the sauce is creamy without being heavy, and the whole pan comes out bubbling and golden around the edges.
I like this version because the shrimp stay tender. They are cooked just until pink, then tucked into warm tortillas before the final bake. That keeps them from turning rubbery while the sauce thickens around them.
The cream sauce leans on green chiles, sour cream, cumin, and Monterey Jack. It is mild, cozy, and easy to make spicier with jalapeƱo or hot sauce at the table.
What Fills These Enchiladas
Choose medium or large shrimp that smell clean and briny, not fishy. The sauce is simple, so the filling needs fresh aromatics, good cheese, and tortillas that can hold up under the bake.
- Shrimp. The main filling. Chopping them into bite-size pieces makes every slice easier to serve.
- Onion and bell pepper. They soften into the filling and add sweetness under the cream sauce.
- JalapeƱo. A little fresh heat keeps the dish from tasting flat.
- Garlic and cumin. They give the sauce a warm, savory base.
- Green chiles. Mild canned chiles bring tang and gentle heat without overpowering the shrimp.
- Sour cream and milk. They turn a quick roux into a smooth white enchilada sauce.
- Monterey Jack. It melts cleanly into the pan and gives the top a soft, stretchy finish.
- Flour tortillas. Soft tortillas roll easily around the seafood filling and soak up just enough sauce.
- Cilantro and lime. Fresh finishing touches that brighten the creamy bake.
Build The Creamy Pan
- Start the filling. Cook onion, bell pepper, and jalapeƱo in a little oil until softened. Add garlic near the end so it turns fragrant without burning.
- Cook the shrimp. Stir in chopped shrimp, cumin, salt, and pepper. Cook just until the shrimp turn pink and opaque, then take the pan off the heat.
- Make the sauce. Melt butter in a saucepan, whisk in flour, then slowly add milk. Simmer until lightly thickened, then whisk in green chiles and sour cream off the heat.
- Roll the tortillas. Spread a little sauce in the baking dish. Fill each tortilla with shrimp mixture and cheese, then roll tightly and place it folded side down.
- Sauce and bake. Pour the remaining cream sauce over the enchiladas, scatter on more cheese, and bake until bubbling, 22-25 minutes.
- Rest and garnish. Let the pan sit for 5 minutes so the sauce settles. Finish with cilantro, lime, and pico de gallo if you like.
Cream Sauce That Stays Smooth
The sauce behaves best when the roux cooks for a full minute before the milk goes in. That small step removes the raw flour taste and gives the sauce enough body to coat the tortillas. Add the milk slowly while whisking. It will look too thick at first, then loosen into a silky base.
Take the pan off the heat before adding sour cream. High heat can make sour cream look grainy. If you like the white sauce style, you may also want chicken enchiladas with sour cream white sauce for another cozy baked pan.
The Shrimp Timing Matters
Shrimp are small and unforgiving. Cook them until they curl loosely and turn pink, then stop. The FDA seafood-safety guide lists 145°F as the safe cooking temperature for seafood. In a hot skillet, chopped shrimp often get there quickly.
Do not brown the shrimp hard for this dish. A strong sear sounds tempting, but enchiladas need tender filling more than crust. If you want a shrimp dinner with brighter grilled flavor, try grilled shrimp tacos with cilantro sauce another night.
Tortilla Choices And Rolling
Flour tortillas are easy because they stay soft and roll without much fuss. If yours feel stiff, wrap them in a barely damp towel and microwave for 20 seconds. Corn tortillas add deeper flavor, but they need more care. Warm each one in a lightly oiled skillet until flexible before filling.
Use a modest amount of filling in each tortilla. Overstuffed enchiladas split and push shrimp into the sauce. A line of filling down the center is enough. For a red chile direction with a beefier flavor profile, the site also has beef and bean burritos with red chile sauce.
Make-Ahead And Leftovers
You can cook the filling and make the sauce earlier in the day. Keep them separate in the refrigerator, then warm the sauce gently before assembling. Fully assembled enchiladas can wait in the fridge for a few hours, which makes this useful for a weekend family meal.
Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The USDA leftovers guide gives the standard 3-4 day refrigerator window for cooked leftovers. Reheat covered at 325°F until hot, or warm single portions gently in the microwave. For another creamy seafood dinner, creamy garlic butter shrimp bowl keeps the same comfort-food mood with rice instead of tortillas.
Summary
These shrimp enchiladas are best served hot from the oven with cilantro, lime, and pico de gallo. They reheat gently and can be assembled a few hours ahead.
FAQs
- Can I use frozen shrimp for shrimp enchiladas?
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Yes. Thaw frozen shrimp in the refrigerator overnight or under cold running water if you are short on time. Pat them very dry before cooking so they sautƩ instead of steam.
- Can I make these enchiladas with corn tortillas?
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Yes, corn tortillas work well and give a more traditional flavor. Warm them first so they bend without cracking. A quick pass through a lightly oiled skillet makes them easier to roll.
- How do I keep shrimp from getting rubbery?
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Cook the shrimp only until pink and opaque before rolling. They finish warming in the oven, so they do not need a long sautƩ. If using small shrimp, check them after 2 minutes.
- Can I assemble shrimp enchiladas ahead of time?
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You can assemble the pan up to 6 hours ahead. Cover and refrigerate it, then add 5-10 minutes to the bake time if it goes into the oven cold. For the best texture, do not fully bake and re-bake the shrimp.
- What can I use instead of sour cream?
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Plain Greek yogurt works if you want more tang and protein, but keep the heat low when whisking it into the sauce. Mexican crema is richer and looser, so use a little less milk if you swap it in.
- What should I serve with shrimp enchiladas?
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Serve them with cilantro-lime rice, black beans, pico de gallo, or a crisp cabbage slaw. A squeeze of lime right before serving helps cut through the creamy sauce.
References
Sources cited in this recipe.