Category: Food and Drink

  • Adobo de Cerdo Huasteco (Pork in Huastecan Adobo Sauce), from “Verde, Blanco, y Rojo” by Ricardo Muñoz Zurita

    Adobo Asando Cebolla y Jitomate
    Roasting Roma tomatoes and onion quarters on a comal (in this case, a cast iron griddle).  That little tomato on the right looks downright happy to be toasting.

    Several years ago, Mexico Cooks! was thrilled to receive a copy of Chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita's newest recetario (cookbook), titled Verde, Blanco, y Rojo en la Cocina Mexicana.  Due to the pressures of moving and settling into a somewhat more frenetic life in Mexico City, the very attractive book sat patiently in the kitchen bookshelf with its 150 or so brother and sister cookbooks, waiting to be chosen.  'Choose me, choose me!' it whispered each time I passed by the shelf.  And finally I listened.

    Adobo Carne de Puerco a Hervir
    Fairly large pieces of maciza de cerdo (lean, fresh pork leg) simmering with onion and garlic.

    My friends and I are very fond of traditional Mexican cuisine.  Like most people, we have our favorite dishes.  And like most people, I have a hard time breaking habits and wading into a new cookbook: it means learning a new format, a new organization of ingredients, and a new dish that I have never prepared. 

    The first task was reading the recipe all the way through to the end to make sure that I had all of the ingredients and utensils on hand prior to starting to cook and that I understood the order of cooking.  It's really no fun at all to start the preparations and discover at the time of need that oops, there is no garlic in its basket and ouch, that one bowl I really wanted to use is full of last night's stew.  You'll want to organize yourself and prepare your mise en place well before you turn on the stove. 

    Adobo Chile Ancho Contraluz
    Differentiating between dried chiles ancho and chiles mulato, which look similar on the outside, can be confusing.  If you open a chile ancho and hold it up to the light, it looks from the inside like red stained glass.  The mulato, on the other hand, looks brown when held to the light.  It's immediately apparent which this is.

    Adobo de Cerdo Huasteco
    Serves 12

    Ingredients
    2 kg (approximately 4.5 pounds) lean pork meat, cut into serving-size pieces
    1 white onion, cut into quarters
    1 head of garlic, split in half
    4 liters water
    4 tsp salt
    8 chiles guajillo
    5 large chiles ancho
    3 large tomatos, roasted
    1/2 white onion, quartered and roasted
    5 garlic cloves
    2 tsp ground cumin
    1 tsp dry Mexican oregano, crumbled
    1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
    4 cloves
    3 Tbsp pork lard (you can substitute oil if you can't get real rendered lard)
    1/2 cup white vinegar
      

    Adobo Asando Chiles Anchos
    Toasting the chiles ancho on the comal.

    Utensils 
    Comal or griddle
    Mesh strainer
    Several small or medium-size mixing bowls
    Mixing spoons
    Heavy-bottom pot with lid
    Blender

     Adobo Asando Chiles Guajillos
    Toasting the chiles guajillo on the comal.

    Procedure
    Put the pork, onion, and split-open head of garlic in a large pot.  Cover with water, add 4 tsp salt and bring to a boil.  Lower the heat until the water is simmering and cook until the pork is tender, about an hour to an hour and a half.  Remove the pork from the water, drain the liquid into a bowl, and reserve both the meat and the cooking liquid for later use.

    Remove the stems, seeds, and veins from all of the chiles and discard them.  Lightly toast the chiles on the comal, being careful not to burn them.  If they burn, they will be bitter.  Soak the toasted chiles in four cups of the reserved cooking liquid from the pork.

    Blend the soaked chiles with enough of the cooking liquid to make a smooth, somewhat liquid paste. 

    Roast the tomatoes, onions, and remaining five cloves of garlic on the comal, then blend them until they make a very smooth sauce.  If necessary for blending, add just a little of the reserved meat cooking liquid.  Using the wire mesh strainer, strain and reserve. 

    Grind the cumin, the oregano, the pepper, and the cloves together until they are powdered.  Set aside for later use.

    Over a high flame, heat the lard or oil in a heavy-bottomed pot until it smokes slightly.  Add the ground chiles (splatter alert!) and fry for about 15 minutes or until the mixture is reduced by about one-fourth.  Add the blended tomato mixture, the spices, and salt to taste.  When the mixture comes to a boil, lower the fire and allow to simmer until the sauce has reduced a little.

    Add the meat, the vinegar, and three cups of the reserved meat cooking liquid.  Correct the seasonings and cook with the lid ajar over low heat (or bake covered in a 350° oven) for about an hour.  The finished sauce should be thick enough to cover the meat without sliding off the pieces.  Correct the salt and serve.

    The finished recipe also freezes very well.  Mexico Cooks! served half the recipe as comida for six and froze the rest for a later meal. 

    Adobo Chiles Remojándose
    Both types of toasted chiles then soaked for a few minutes in some of the freshly cooked hot pork broth.

    Adobo Chiles Molidos Caldo y Especias
    The mix of various seasonings (foreground), the blended and strained chiles (left rear) and the blended tomato/onion/garlic mixture (right rear). 

    Adobo en la Olla
    The pork now needs to simmer in the adobo for an hour or more, either in the oven or over a very low fire.  The fragrance will drive you crazy, it is so tantalizing.  Mexico Cooks! prepared this recipe on top of the stove using the cast iron comal as a heat diffuser. 

    Adobo en el Plato
    Adobo de cerdo huasteco, ready to eat!  Serve the dish with steamed white rice, the green vegetable of your choice, and plenty of hot-off-the-comal corn tortillas.

    Adobo Verde Blanco Rojo Larousse
    The wonderful Spanish-language Verde, Blanco, Rojo en La Cocina Mexicana, by my friend Chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita of the three Mexico City Restaurantes Azul.

    Looking for a tailored-to-your-interests specialized tour in Mexico? Click here: Tours. 

  • In Retrospect: The First Annual Encuentro de Cocineras Tradicionales de Oaxaca. AND: Announcing the Dates for 2018!!

    Encuentro Oaxaca Poster 2017 1
    Oaxaca hosted its first-ever Encuentro de Cocineras Tradicionales on April 24-25, 2017.  The festivities included more than 50 traditional home cooks from Oaxaca's eight regions, plus two days of conferences and other activities.  Doña Martina Sánchez is the person shown on the poster; she's making a tlayuda, a very large, thin corn tortilla that will subsequently be topped with any number of ingredients. 

    Empanadas de don?a Martina Sa?nchez 1
    Indescribably delicious empanandas, prepared by doña Martina Sánchez at the Mexico City press conference prior to the Encuentro.  Photos copyright Mexico Cooks! unless otherwise noted.

    Oaxaca Plaza de la Danza 2a Wide
    From 1:00PM until 9:00PM, the cocineras tradicionales (traditional cooks) sold plates and platters and bowls of both well- and little-known dishes to the hordes and throngs of avid attendees.  More than 10,000 people showed up over the course of two days.  The Encuentro was a tremendous success in every respect.  Remember that admission to the Encuentro–including entry to its many conferences—is FREE.

    Celia Floria?n Puebla July 2016
    Señora Celia Florián, traditional cook, restaurant owner (Las 15 Letras, Calle Abasolo 300, Centro Histórico, Oaxaca), and one of the principal organizers of the Primer Encuentro de Cocineras Tradicionales de Oaxaca.  My dear friend Celia is a truly great woman, in every sense of the word.

    Oaxaca thrilled Mexico Cooks! with an invitation to an April 23-26 hosted press trip to Oaxaca, for the sole purpose of eating, drinking, photographing, and writing about the first Encuentro de Cocineras Tradicionales in that city.  The event took place during the celebration of the city's 485th anniversary of founding, and what a celebration it was!  The Encuentro, primarily organized by Señora Celia Florián and hosted by Oaxaca's city government and other organizations, the event included more than 50 traditional cooks who set up their cooking fires on the Plaza de la Danza, just in front of Oaxaca's beautiful Basílica de Nuestra Señora de la Soledad.

    Oaxaca Los Rubios Daniel Cui IGER 1
    La Danza de los Rubios of Santiago Juxtlahuaca, Oaxaca, pounded the stage to open the Encuentro with its fiercely colorful, tremendously flashy rendition of this more than 100-year-old dance.  Normally danced during Carnaval, the bailable (dance) made the first day of the Encuentro into a wonderful festival.  Photo courtesy Daniel Cui, IGERS Mexico.

    Encuentro Oaxaca Pig Roasting 1
    Just one of a huge number of whole pigs, spit-roasted over firewood at the Encuentro.  This one was almost ready to be served, together with puré de papa (mashed potato), all in the style of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, in far-southern Oaxaca.  

    Oaxaca Istmo Carne de Cerdo con Pure? de Papa Gaby Vargas
    My plate, filled with tender, juicy, wood-roasted, mouth-watering carne de cerdo (pork meat), Isthmus-style puré de papa (mashed potato), and delicious sauce. Rosario Cruz Cobos, the cocinera tradicional istmeña who served the crowd, wears the typical clothing of the Tehuana: a woman from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec: hand embroidered velveteen blouse coupled with a colorful skirt and typically white lacy underskirt, gold filigree jewelry, and a ribbon or flower wreath around the head.  Photo courtesy Gaby Vargas.

    Oaxaca Encuentro Mendoza Sisters
    From left to right: Rufina Mendoza Ruíz, Abigail Mendoza Ruíz, Mexico Cooks!, and Marcelina Mendoza Ruíz.  The Mendoza Ruíz sisters are arguably the best-known cocineras tradicionales in Oaxaca–and probably in all of Mexico.  Indigenous Zapotecas from Teotitlán del Valle, they operate Tlamanalli, their family restaurant.  Abigail Mendoza has literally traveled the world educating people about Mexican and Oaxacan food.  It's a privilege to be a friend of the loving Mendoza family.

    Oaxaca Tichindas en Caldo 1
    Tichindas en caldo de frijol: sweet-water mussels hand-gathered from their muddy flats along the coast of Oaxaca and prepared in a slightly spicy, slightly savory, slightly sweet sauce of smoothly-ground beans that knocked my socks off.  The mussels themselves, shells and all, were just over an inch long. From now on, when I think para chuparse los dedos (finger-lickin' good), this will be the dish in my mind.  I ate this bowl of mussels on the last day of the Encuentro; on the first day, a friend gave me the last tiny bit of a tamal with one of these mussels, still in the shell, wrapped in rich masa (corn dough). The next day, I went looking for those tamales, but they were completely sold out.  This bowl of tichinda soup was my consolation prize, but wow, a prize indeed.

    Tehuanas Primer Encuentro Oaxaca 25 abril 2017
    Three members of a fascinating and tender round table conference; one of the topics was "food memories from your childhood".  The Tehuanas (women from the Istmus of Tehuantepec) are (left to right): Sra. Aurora de Toledo, owner of Restaurante Zandunga; Sra. Deyaniro Aquino Pineda, owner of Restaurante La Teca; and Sra. Ofelia Toledo Pineda, owner of Restaurante Yu Ne Nisa.  All three traditional restaurants are located in the city of Oaxaca.

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgQROnZ1SY0&w=560&h=315]
    Tejate, one of the iconic drinks of Oaxaca, is made from corn masa, Oaxacan chocolate, canela (Mexican cinnamon), pixtle (the finely ground large brown seed of the mamey fruit), and flor de cacao (also known as rosita). After those ingredients are beaten by hand (see video), water and ice are added.

    Oaxaca Tlacolula Mamey Resized
    Mamey fruit for sale at a market in Oaxaca.  The mamey tastes very much like a baked sweet potato. The cut fruits–so beautiful!–have had their single large seeds removed to be sold separately.

    Ocotla?n Mercado Venta de Rosita y Semilla de Mamey MC
    At the top of the photo are long sticks of Mexican cinnamon.  In the woven tray is flor de cacao, or rosita. At the bottom are pixtles, the large brown mamey seeds, ready to be ground to a fine powder for tejate.

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFg7WqFmn3U&w=560&h=315]
    In this video, the vendor has added cold water and ice to the tejate mixture–it's almost ready to serve.  You can see that the surface of the tejate is foamy and thick, while the liquid she mixes from on high is thin, as it is supposed to be.  Tejate is a delicious and extremely refreshing cold chocolate drink.  When you're in Oaxaca, be sure to try it!

    Rueda Tejate Solo 1
    The finished product: freshly made, chilled tejate, ready to be served using the hand-painted jícara floating in it.  We thoroughly enjoyed a cooling, large jícara-full (the jícara is the round fruit of southern Mexico's crescentia crujete tree) at Oaxaca's Mercado Benito Juárez.

    For two full days and evenings, thousands of hungry people lined up at this event for Oaxacan regional food specialties that are rarely seen outside the comunidades (small indigenous towns) where they are made.  Oaxaca residents, Mexicans from states near and far, and foreign tourists devoured anything and everything that the cocineras tradicionales prepared; everything I tasted was a thrill.  The Encuentro was enlivened by constant live music and other entertainment, the city was in full fiesta mode for its anniversary, and everyone was excited and happy to be present.  

    Rueda Poster Metate 1
    YOUR ATTENTION PLEASE!!  Announcing the dates for the second Encuentro de Cocineras Tradicionales de Oaxaca: April 25-28, 2018, and once again in the Plaza de la Danza, in front of the Basílica de Nuestra Señora de Soledad in the city of Oaxaca.  Book your trip as soon as possible!  The event is a do-not-miss.  Not only has the organizing committee added an additional food and conference-filled day to the festivities, but more than 30 additional cocineras tradicionales will be present–85 total!–selling 400 DIFFERENT traditional platillos (dishes).  Every centavo in sales earned by the cocineras belongs to them–eat a lot, so these marvelous home cooks are able to take your pesos home to their pueblos and families!

    Encuentro Oaxaca Comensales Marichuy
    Eager comensales (diners) pass along one of three sides of the Plaza de la Danza, where the cocineras tradicionales served food.  No admission fee at the Encuentro means that one can purchase more of the very inexpensive dishes that the traditional cooks prepare and serve. Photo courtesy Marichuy Garduño.

    Oaxaca Aguas Casilda Group
    Part of the invited Mexico City press group took a culinary tour of Oaxaca's Mercado Benito Juárez.  I'd been there many times before, and nevertheless learned a tremendous amount from our guide.  We're sitting for our portrait at Aguas Frescas Casilda, an institution in Oaxaca.

    Over the course of many years, Mexico Cooks! has been invited to countless culinary festivals in Mexico.  The Primer Encuentro de Cocineras Tradicionales de Oaxaca will always stand out in my mind as extraordinary: as the first in Oaxaca and as being entirely exemplary of Oaxaca's marvelous hospitality.  Profound thanks to Celia Florián, to the Oaxaca city government, to the Oaxaca tourism department, to CANIRAC Oaxaca (Cámara Nacional de la Industria de Restaurantes y Alimentos Condimentados–Mexico's national restaurant association), to the cocineras tradicionales, and to all who made this marvelous event possible.  Trabajar en equipo siempre es mejor (it's always better to work as a team) has never been truer.  Three cheers and huge gratitude to all.

    The truth is, we ate more in three days than is really conscionable.  Between the traditional food at the Encuentro and our meals at Oaxaca's legendary restaurants, we all but waddled our way through the city.  Do come this year–it's worth every extra pound of weight that you'll take home! 

    Looking for a tailored-to-your-interests specialized tour in Mexico? Click here: Tours.

  • Fresh Fruit on Ice, A Treat from Tocumbo :: The Story of Paletas La Michoacana

    Popsicle Eater
    When I was a little girl, a Popsicle was a big deal. Summertime meant that the ice cream truck, bell tinkling, would trundle through the neighborhood where I lived. After a frantic plea to Mom for money, she counted out coins and I raced to the corner where the rest of the kids were already gathered, waiting for the vendor to dig through his icy case for cherry, lime, orange, or the reviled banana. The odor of amyl acetate (the chemical used for artificial banana flavoring) remains cloyingly in my memory.

     

    Popsicle 

    Remember? Hot summer days made those frozen snacks melt quickly, down childish fingers and the side of the hand, down the wrist and almost to the elbow in sticky trails of blood red and pale green. Nips of the cold treat slid in a chilly track from tongue to stomach, giving a few moments relief from childhood summers' heat and humidity. We didn't care that they were artificially flavored; Popsicles were a summer joy. Once I was an adult, I left them behind in favor of more sophisticated gelatos and sorbets.

    Long before I dreamed of venturing to Mexico, Ignacio Alcázar of Tocumbo, Michoacán had a vision. Paletas—frozen treats similar to Popsicles—were on his mind. Tocumbo was a tiny village in the 1940s.  Life there was harsh and subsistence was difficult. Eking a hardscrabble living from the sugar cane fields of the region around Tocumbo depended as much on Mother Nature's vagaries as on a farmer's backbreaking work. In those days, the pay for cutting 2,000 pounds of sugar cane–one ton!–was two pesos. Campesinos (field workers) could expect to earn a maximum of three pesos a week.

    Mountain Views Michoacán
    Michoacán's mountains in the summer, near Tocumbo.

    But making a living selling paletas depended solely on creating a desire for something delicious and refreshing to satisfy someone's antojo (whim). In the mid-1940s, Ignacio Alcázar, his brother Luis, and their friend Agustín Andrade left the misty mountains and pine forests of Michoacán and headed for Mexico City, the country's burgeoning hustle-bustle capital. The men had made paletas in Tocumbo for several years, but it was time to try their hand in the Mexico's biggest city. 

    In 1946, the three men, illiterate native sons of Tocumbo, established an ice cream shop in downtown Mexico City. The new paletería (paleta shop) wasn't elegant, but it worked. People clamored for more and more paletas. The Alcázar brothers and Andrade expanded, and expanded again. They sold franchise after franchise of their paleta brainchild to their relatives, friends, and neighbors from Tocumbo. The single shop that the two men started became the most successful small-business idea in Mexico in the last half century, known across the country as La Michoacana. More than 15,000 La Michoacana outlets currently exist around Mexico, most of them owned by people from the town of Tocumbo.

    Plaza_sign 
    Mexico City alone has more than 1,000 La Michoacana outlets. Usually the paleterías are called La Michoacana, La Flor de Michoacán, or La Flor de Tocumbo.  Every Mexican town with more than 1,000 residents has one. Only Pemex, the Mexican petroleum company, has blanketed Mexico so completely.

    When I moved to Mexico in 1981, a Mexican friend insisted that she was going to buy me a paleta. "A Popsicle?" I scoffed. She took me by the scruff of the neck and all but shoved me into the nearest La Michoacana. I peered into the freezer case and was amazed to see hundreds of rectangular paletas, organized flavor by flavor, lined up in stacks in their protective plastic bags.

    And what flavors! Mango (plain or with chile), blackberry, cantaloupe, coconut, guava, and guanábana (soursop) were arranged side by side with strawberry, vanilla, and—no, that brown one wasn't chocolate, it was tamarindo. Some were made with a water base and some with a milk base. Every single paleta was loaded top to bottom with fresh fruit. There was nothing artificial about these. I was hard pressed to decide on just one flavor, but I finally bit into a paleta de mango and was an instant addict.

    La Michoacana Logo
    A new and very modern logo for an old-time business: La Michoacana.

    The story of the paleteros (paleta makers) from Tocumbo piqued my curiosity. For many years I've been determined to visit this out-of-the-way town. I finally made the trip to the place where it all started. Getting to Tocumbo isn't simple, but driving the two-lane back roads winding along green mountains is lovely.

    The names of the towns I passed through (Taracuato, Tlazazalca, Chucuandirán, Tinguindín) roll off the tongue in the ancient rhythmic language of the Purhépecha (central and western Michoacán's indigenous people). Women, teenage girls, and children wear beautiful ropa típica (native dress) as they walk to market or gather wood in the hills. Fragrant wood smoke mixes in the air with the crisp scent of pine. Wildflowers dot the roadsides and mountains with purple, orange, yellow and blue.

    The well-manicured entrance to the town of Tocumbo lets you know immediately that you have arrived. No statues of Miguel Hidalgo or Benito Juárez grace the junction, nor is there a proud plaque commemorating a favorite local hero. Instead, the townspeople have erected a two-story statue of (what else?) a paleta. I'd seen photos of the monument, but the actual sight of the huge frozen delight made me laugh out loud.  What joy to be here! 

    Plaza_paletas_2 
    Carefully trimmed trees, flowers, and lawns edge both sides of the road into town. Large, well-appointed homes line the streets and the local trucks and cars are recent models and very well maintained. Tocumbo has one of the highest per capita incomes of any town in Mexico.

    My first stop was at the Tocumbo parroquia (parish church). Named in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the church is modern and beautifully adorned with stained glass. The architect who designed the church is Pedro Ramírez Vázquez.  Arquitecto Ramirez also designed some of Mexico's most famous buildings, including the Basílica of our Lady of Guadalupe, the 1968 Olympic Games installations, Aztec Stadium, the National Anthropology Museum and the National Medical School buildings, all in Mexico City.

    Arquitecto Ramírez was one of the most outstanding building designers in Mexico; he died just a few years ago and received all due honors at his funeral. It's particularly telling of the economic power of the town that the people of Tocumbo contracted with him to design their parish church. 

    Tocumbo_templo 
    La Parroquia del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús, Tocumbo, Michoacán.

    As I sat for a bit in the town plaza, two local women strolled across the square eating paletas. After we greeted one another, I asked who the best person in town would be to give me local history. They directed me to the mayor's office on the other side of the plaza.

    I spent several hours at the Tocumbo mayor's office talking with town official German Espinoza Barragán, who told me long stories of life and times in Tocumbo, and the history of the paleta.

    Sr. Espinoza mentioned that many people erroneously believe that all La Michoacana stores throughout Mexico are owned by one family. "You already know that the founders were Ignacio Alcázar, his brother Luis, and their friend Agustín Andrade, and that they sold the first La Michoacana franchises to their relatives and friends. After that, the relatives and friends sold franchises to their relatives and friends, and the business just continued to spread. With a simple formula of handmade products produced every day and sold inexpensively, the business has produced hundreds of jobs as well as a high standard of living that's different from any other town in the region."

    Sr. Espinoza commented, "All of our streets are paved, and all have street lights. People live very well here, although it's difficult to say how many actually do live here year round."

    I looked up from my notes. "Why is that?"

    "A lot of tourists from all over Mexico and many other countries pass through this town," he began. "Many see that our life here is peaceful, our climate perfect, and our town beautiful, so they ask about renting or buying a house here. Once they see Tocumbo, everyone wants to stay."

    I nodded in agreement. The thought had occurred to me.

    Sr. Espinoza nodded too. "People say, 'Find me a house to rent.' I just tell them to forget it, it's hopeless. Then they tell me, 'But so many of the houses here in town are vacant! Surely the owners would like to rent their houses.' I shake my head, even though up to 75 per cent of the houses here in Tocumbo are vacant for eleven months of the year.

    "The thing is, everyone comes home at Christmas. No matter whether so-and-so's family lives all year round in Chiapas or Tijuana working in their La Michoacana store, in December everyone is here. No one wants to miss Christmas at home; no one wants to miss the paleta fair. Where would they stay, if their houses were rented? 

    Plaza_paletas_1 
    "During the 1990 census, INEGI (the Mexican census bureau) tried to count the number of people in town. They counted about 2,400 people. But truly, triple that number call Tocumbo 'home'. No one misses the holiday season here. They come home to tell their stories, to find out the last word in the business, to look for a girlfriend, to get married, to have quinceañeras (a girl's15th birthday celebration), to baptize their babies. They put off all of these festivities for months, until the winter low season for selling paletas arrives and they can come home.

    "This year, the Feria del Paletero (Fair of the Paleta Maker) starts on December 22 and ends on December 30. There will be sports events, free paletas, rides for kids and adults, and other things for everyone to do. You should come."

    "The success of the Tocumbo paleta business must inspire people all over Mexico," I commented.

    Once again Sr. Espinoza nodded. "It's a kind of work that offers even the person with the least schooling a way to make a good living, without going to work in the United States and without getting involved in selling illegal drugs."

    Plaza_fachada 
    He returned to the history of the business. "Of course, word of the success of the new paleta business in Mexico City reached Tocumbo really fast. All Tocumbo packed its suitcases and went to get in on the gold mine. Everybody was buying paleta stores. And the best is, all the contracts were made on the solid word of the parties, without any paperwork, and all the loans to start the businesses were made between the buyers and the sellers. No banks were involved.

    "This first generation of paleteros (paleta makers) in the 1940s felt the obligation to let everyone have a part of the success. Remember that Tocumbo is a very small town. Almost everyone is related to everyone else. Everyone of that generation had grown up together, and everyone shared just a few last names. The belief was 'today it's your turn, tomorrow it's mine'. And everyone lived by that.

    "Today, things are a little different, but only a little. There's still room for all the paleterías in Mexico, and the majority belong to Tocumbans. Even though other ice cream stores like Santa Clara and Dolphy have opened and there are even new brands coming in from the United States, there's no other big success like we have had. To start with, the paleta is the people's business, not corporate business. Other businesses might spend huge amounts of money on advertising and special wrappings, but we Tocumbans don't run our businesses that way. We're flexible, we save our money, and we work very hard. The paleterías are open from early in the morning till late at night, every day of the year. Even when the owners are home for the holidays, their employees are working in the stores. We make only as many paletas as we can sell each day. We don't use chemicals in our paletas, and we adapt the flavors to the regions where our stores are." 

    Plaza_paletas 
    Sr. Espinoza went on to tell me that the most popular flavor paleta is mango, because it's the fruit that everyone in Mexico loves. He continued, "In the south of Mexico, we have to offer mamey, zapote, and plátano. Where people have more income, we can sell a paleta for twelve or fourteen pesos. Where income is lower, such as in the states of Chiapas and Oaxaca, we sell a paleta for ten or eleven pesos. We keep our stores very simple, so everyone can feel comfortable to come inside. And we try to open our stores in places where lots of people congregate: near schools, near hospitals, and near sports facilities."

    The story of this business amazed me. I shook my head and said, "What was the next step for the paleteros?"

    "When we saw that so many Mexicans were living in the United States, the next logical move was to start stores there. We started moving there too, and opened the first shops in California, Texas, Arizona, and Florida. And now—now there are La Michoacana stores in Pennsylvania, in Chicago, and in New York. Next will be Central and South America, you'll see.

    "Did you look at the monument at the entrance to town?" Sr. Espinoza asked me. 

    Tocumbo_entrada_2 
    "Of course! It's wonderful," I exclaimed.

    "On the way out of town, look at it again," he said. "Look, a little drawing of it is on my business card." He handed me the card. "See the blue ball of ice cream in the paleta? And see the paletas all over the ball?" I did see them. "The blue ball represents the earth, and the bright colored paletas cover it." He smiled at me. "And someday, paletas from Tocumbo, Michoacán will truly cover the globe."

    I have absolute faith that he's right.

    Note: a plagiarist from San Miguel de Allende has stolen both information and carefully cropped photos from the original publication of this article.  She's done it twice now, don't be fooled by imitations.  

    Looking for a tailored-to-your-interests specialized tour in Mexico? Click here: Tours.

  • Cena :: Mexico’s Late-Evening Supper, and Almost Anything Goes

    DF Camotero 1
    The man who operates this cart in Mexico City's Centro Histórico (Historic Center) wheels his baked plátanos y camotes (bananas and sweet potatoes) around during the day.  In residential areas, when downtown businesses are closed, you are most likely to hear the steam whistle's raucously high-pitched TWEEEEEEEEEEET during mid-to-late evening hours. Each plateful is either a roasted banana or a sweet potato dripping with sweetened condensed milk.  

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sPScvWIQWSM&w=400&h=300]
    The video shows you exactly how the camotero (guy who pushes the cart, tends the wood fire, roasts and sells the camotes or plátanos) operates.

    Cena (supper) in Mexico is a mixed bag.  For an ordinary cena at home, it's a tiny meal: a cup of hot chocolate or hot milk, a pan dulce (sweet bread), or a quick taco made with what's left over from comida (the main meal of the day).  Comida being the large meal that it usually is, cena is meant only to tide you over from just before bedtime till early the next morning.

    Rose Tacos al Pastor
    If you're out partying till the wee hours, a few tacos al pastor (shepherd-style marinated pork tacos) on the street might be just the ticket for your cena.  Note the whole pineapple at the top of the trompo (vertical spit).  The pineapple cooks along with the meat–see the gas grate behind the trompo?–and the taquero (taco master) slices and tosses, in one quick motion, a few small sweet slices into your grill-warmed tortilla.  Top with red or green salsa, a pinch of sea salt, and a shower of minced onion and cilantro for a taste of heaven.

    Encuentro Buñuelos
    Buñuelos are another favorite food for cena, either eaten at a cenaduría (supper spot) or purchased from a street vendor.  Some people still make them at home–the dough is very similar to that of a wheat flour tortilla, stretched over the round bottom of a clay pot till thin.  Traditionally, the dough is stretched over the maker's knee to achieve each buñuelo's large size and round shape!  They are then fried and served either whole and dusted with granulated sugar or broken into pieces in a bowl and drizzled with piloncillo (brown sugar) syrup.

    Conchas
    Conchas (pan dulce), reposted from the breakfast article: food for cena is often the same food we eat for desayuno.

    Just as an aside: in addition to cena, some people in Mexico still partake of merienda, a light snack that can come sometime between comida and cena.  This 'light snack' can be as simple as a couple of cookies and a cup of té de manzanilla (chamomile tea) or it can be a more complex offering similar to an English tea.  Mexico Cooks! will leave the question of how to find stomach room for merienda up to you.

    Atole de Grano en Cazo
    Not all food eaten for cena is sweet.  Case in point: this Pátzcuaro, Michoacán specialty is atole de grano, a savory corn soup that's colored and flavored with anisillo (a wild anise-flavored herb).

    Rosewood Hotel SMA
    The 1826 Restaurant at the Rosewood Hotel in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, is an enticing spot for cena whether it's a romantic evening for you and your main squeeze or whether you are supping with a group of friends.

    Cynthia Mesa de Cerca
    One February, Mexico Cooks! and a group of friends attended a gala Valentine's Day cena at Restaurante Los Danzantes in Coyoacán, Mexico City.  The dinner was presented by Cynthia Martínez and a team from Restaurante San Miguelito of Morelia, Michoacán.

    If you are invited to a cena baile (dinner dance) or a cena de gala (black tie dinner)at a restaurant, events center, or private home, your hosts will pull out all the stops.  Champagne, beautiful entradas (appetizers), a superb multi-course meal, snazzy dessert, alcoholic beverages and music are de rigeur.

    JASO Mexico Cooks! Research
    Mexico Cooks! researches possibilities for an elegant cena at Restaurante JASO, Colonia Polanco, Mexico City.  As I often say, "It's a tough job, but somebody has to do it."  I'm so lucky that I get to be that 'somebody'!

    From street tacos to stilletos and tuxedos, cena in Mexico will keep you going till morning.  Provecho!

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  • It’s Time for Comida, Mexico’s Main Meal of the Day

    Entrada
    A stylized modern entrada (appetizer), served at Restaurante Quintonil in Mexico City.  

    Mexico's main meal of the day is comida, which is eaten sometime between two and five o'clock in the afternoon.  Prime time for comida is three o'clock; in many places all over the República, businesses still respect the old-time rule that closes business doors during mid-afternoon meal time.  In fact, unless the business mentions that it observes horario corrido (continuous work day) you can assume that from two until at least four in the afternoon, its doors are closed to business.  Its workday is from 10:00AM to 2:00PM and from 4:00PM to 8:00PM.

    Azul Histórico 5 Crema de Cilantro
    Crema de cilantro (cream of cilantro soup).  The soup course comes after the entrada. Soups include caldos (broths), consomés (clear soups), cremas (creamed soups), and other styles of sopa aguada–liquid soup.

    In cities and towns all over Mexico, you'll find fondas, comida económica, and comida corrida restaurants.  All of these small, usually family-run restaurants specialize in full meals that stoke your furnace for the rest of your workday and beyond.  In addition, in many cities there are high-end restaurants that specialize in comidas for professional and business lunches, others that are designed for the ladies-who-lunch trade, and still other, family-style restaurants that invite everyone from the oldest great-grandpa to the newest newborn to enjoy time together.

    FondaFinaFideoSeco 1
    A sopa seca can be anything from the high-end version of fideos secos (similar to angel hair pasta, cooked in a tomato and chile sauce) offered at Fonda Fina in Mexico City, to a plate of codos con crema (elbow macaroni with cream sauce) served at at your own table, or at your grandmother's.

    Amecameca Ensaladas Varias
    A variety of prepared salads for sale in a market.  Sold by the kilo or portion of a kilo, these salads are meant to be taken home and eaten along with your comida.

    Encuentro Mole con Pollo
    Mexico's signature mole con pollo (mole with chicken) is popular for the platillo fuerte (main dish) at a comida, whether served at home or in a restaurant.  Many regions of the country have special mole recipes; some, like those found in Puebla or Oaxaca, are very well known.  Others, especially some from the state of Michoacán, are less well known but equally delicious.

    Albóndigas en el Plato
    These Jalisco-style albóndigas (meatballs) are traditional and typically served as a platillo fuerte for comida, along with their delicious sauce, a big helping of steamed white rice (another sopa seca), a garnish of avocado, and a tall stack of tortillas.

    Many soon-to-be-visitors to Mexico write to me saying something like this: "I want to plan for breakfast in the hotel and a meal in such-and-such a restaurant at lunchtime.  Then we want to go for dinner at such-and-such restaurant."  Unless you are a professional eater–and I know that some of you are!–it's difficult to fit all of that food into one day, given the times of day that meals are usually eaten here.  If your breakfast is included in the cost of your hotel or B&B, many of the available dishes will look like those featured here last week.  They're very, very filling.  Just a few hours later, it's time for comida, an even more filling meal when eaten in a restaurant.  

    Carne y Salsa Listo para Hornear
    Carne de cerdo en salsa verde (pork in green sauce) is a typical home-style dish (in this instance, just being put into the Mexico Cooks! oven) often served for comida.  Of course it is preceded by an appetizer, a liquid soup, and perhaps a salad; it's accompanied by red or white rice, refried beans, and a stack of tortillas–and followed by dessert!

    Torta Especial Los Cun?ados Aguascalientes con Chilpancingo 2
    The famous and enormous torta especial, from Tortas Los Cuñados, across the street from Mexico Cooks!' home. This torta is served hot; it's a multi-meat sandwich with a huge amount of melted quesillo (Oaxaca cheese), then garnished with lettuce, tomato, and pickled chiles jalapeños), served on a bread called telera.  The word telera means shuttle; the bread called that because it's shaped like one.  This kind of delicious hot sandwich is neither lunch nor a complete comida; I treat myself to one every few months, and it is always fantastic. 

    "Lunch", as it is eaten in the United States or elsewhere, is a concept that does not exist in Mexico.  You might see a restaurant sign reading "LONCHERÍA", but it refers to a kind of cold sandwich, known as a 'lonche', not to a place where you can have lunch.  A lonche can be eaten at any old time–between meals, instead of meals, before or after a movie, and so on.

    Carnitas
    This is a boiling pot of Michoacán carnitas–huge chunks of lean pork, boiled in freshly rendered lard until the pork is fork-tender on the inside, with crisp, chewy outsides.  Coarsely chopped and served by the platter, ready to stuff into hot-off-the-fire tortillas and top with minced onions, chopped cilantro, super-spicy salsa, a sprinkle of sea salt and a squeeze of lime, carnitas can be a rustic and delicious comida all on their own.

    Muertos Taco Carnitas
    Here are those same carnitas, in a taco.  On the side is a slice of pickled chile manzano, hot as Hades but much more delicious.

    Gelatina Pinar
    Gelatina is a common light dessert following a heavy comida.  This one includes three layers of different kinds of gelatina plus some fruit–and a whole prune.

    Flan Napolitano
    You might prefer a slice of old-fashioned creamy flan.

    Next week, we finish our day of Mexico's meals with cena: supper!

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  • Desayuno de Campeones, Breakfast of Champions: What Breakfast in Mexico is All About

    Classic American Breakfast Cold Cereal
    A classic quick breakfast in the USA, circa 1950s: cold unsweetened cereal–probably corn flakes–with a banana, milk, and sugar.

    Several times a month, Mexico Cooks! receives vacation-time queries from folks in the United States about mealtimes and what's eaten at breakfast, lunch, and dinner when one is in Mexico.  It can be challenging to plan a trip to any country, including Mexico, where mealtimes are different from what you might think of as 'normal'.  This week and for the next two weeks here at Mexico Cooks!, you'll learn more about meals and mealtimes.  

    Conchas
    In Mexico, a huge variety of pan dulce (sweet bread) is available for breakfast.  These are conchas (shells), so-called because of the shell-like design impressed into their sugared tops. Have your pan dulce with either hot chocolate, coffee, or a steaming cup of atole (a corn-based hot beverage).

    It can be even more challenging for anyone raised in one frame of reference to understand that breakfast isn't always about what you have  thought of as your first meal of the day, since you were a child.  Many years ago, when I was first living in Mexico, the light bulb came on for me: breakfast food is whatever you happen to eat for breakfast, not necessarily cold or hot cereal or bacon and eggs.  You know how leftover pizza straight from the refrigerator is a guilty breakfast for a lot of people in the States?  A slice is really a perfectly adequate breakfast.  Lots of Mexican breakfasts are just like that: whatever food is available at the moment.

    Susana's Corunda, Pátzcuaro
    The corunda is a regional tamal from Michoacán.  This corunda, filled with cream cheese and topped with Mexican table cream and a sauce made of chile perón (a deliciously spicy yellow chile), makes a great desayuno when accompanied by a cup of hot atole made with a seasonal fresh fruit.

    People in Mexico frequently eat two morning meals. The first is desayuno, which comes from the root word ayunar, to fast.  Desayuno literally means "I un-fast" and is ordinarily eaten first thing in the morning, maybe before work while you are standing in the pre-dawn kitchen thinking about the coming day on the job or gobbled while you are hurrying the kids into their school uniforms.  This breakfast consists of something quick and simple or a smear of yesterday's frijolitos refritos on a leftover tortilla, washed down with a glass of fresh orange juice; a pan dulce still hot from the corner bakery, accompanied by a glass of chocomil (Mexico's ubiquitous instant chocolate milk powder).  It's just enough to help your brain kick into gear.

    Calabaza Lista Pa'Comer
    This Mexico Cooks! desayuno includes home-made calabaza en tacha bathed in hot milk plus a slice of pan relleno con chilacayote (bread filled with sweetened chilacayote squash paste), served with fresh juice or coffee.

    Molletes
    At home, Mexico Cooks! occasionally prepares molletes, an old-time family favorite.  I grill a bolillo (a dense-textured and crusty white bread roll), add a thick smear of chile-spiced refried beans, and top them with huevos volteados (over-easy fried eggs).  Add salsa al gusto–to your taste.  With a fresh fruit accompaniment, this almuerzo is really stick-to-your-ribs.

    Around 10:30 or eleven o'clock in the morning, when the stomach starts to require something more substantial to keep the body going, many people take a break for almuerzo.  There really is no adequate word in English for this meal.  It's not breakfast and it's not a snack.  Almuerzo is typically a larger meal than desayuno.  Workers on a construction job, for example, often stop work, build a little fire, and heat up yesterday's leftovers that they've brought along in a 'tuper'–the generic word for a covered plastic container.  Warmed-up leftovers, a stack of tortillas, and a fresh-made pot of coffee keep the girders going up. 

    El Portalito Enchiladas Verdes Abiertas
    Another really hearty almuerzo: a plateful of enchiladas verdes con pollo deshebrado (enchiladas with shredded chicken in green sauce) topped with finely grated white cheese and minced onion, accompanied by a guarnición (side) of refried beans.

    Pátzcuaro Breakfast
    Here's another typical almuerzo in Mexico: chilaquiles verdes (fried tortilla strips simmered in green sauce), topped with grated white cheese and thinly sliced white onions, then crowned with huevos a gusto (eggs however you like them).  Add a side of frijolitos refritos, a plate of ripe papaya, a warm-from-the-oven bolillo, either salsa or butter for the bread, and a great cappuchino, all served on a sunny terrace.  Heaven…

    Next week, next meal!  We'll save your place at the table. 

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  • Doña Yola’s Albóndigas de Pollo (Chicken Meatballs) en Salsa Verde. Love At First Bite…

    Doña Yola la Chef
    Several years ago, Mexico Cooks! was thrilled to meet doña Yolanda Rodríguez Orozco.  At the time, she was cooking at a now-defunct buffet restaurant in Morelia, Michoacán.  In Mexico, 'doña' is an honorific indicating true respect for a woman (it's don for a man).  Affectionately known to one and all as doña Yola, she cooked with tremendous love as the primary seasoning for whatever she put on the table.

    One of the most delicious items on the menu at that restaurant was Albóndigas de Pollo en Salsa Verde (chicken meatballs in green sauce).  Because I promised that I would share the recipe with all of you, doña Yola graciously shared her amazingly easy recipe with me.  Simple to prepare and marvelous to taste, these meatballs instantly made it to star status on Mexico Cooks! dining table.  These albóndigas are entirely different from the ones Mexico Cooks! wrote about two weeks ago.

    Pechuga de Pollo Molida
    A chicken vendor grinds fresh boneless, skinless chicken breast to order for me at the weekly tianguis (street market) in my neighborhood. You can ask the butcher at your supermarket to grind the breasts for you.  Bring the skin and bones home to freeze for another day–for chicken broth.

    Espinacas
    Gorgeous dark green vitamin-rich spinach, ready to chop for the albóndigas.

    Hierbabuena con Huevos
    Fresh mint grown in a pot on my terrace or available at any market, along with beautiful local red-shelled eggs.

    Albóndigas de Pollo en Salsa Verde Estilo doña Yola
    Chicken Meatballs in Green Salsa, doña Yola's Way

    Ingredients for the meatballs
    1 kilo (2.2 lbs) freshly ground boneless, skinless chicken breast
    100 grams (1/4 lb) raw fresh spinach (stems removed), finely chopped
    1 small white onion, finely minced
    1 clove garlic, finely minced
    1 Tbsp fresh mint, finely minced
    1 chile serrano, finely minced
    1/2 cup cooked white rice
    3 eggs, lightly beaten
    1 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce
    Sea salt to taste
    Freshly ground pepper to taste
    1 tsp cornstarch or as needed

    Mezcla
    Ground chicken, spinach, onion, garlic, mint, and chile serrano, ready to mix with cooked rice.

    Procedure
    Lightly mix the first seven ingredients together.  Beat the eggs and Worcestershire sauce together and mix by hand into the mixture.  Add sea salt and ground black pepper to taste.  Add cornstarch until the mixture holds together well when you form a small amount into a ball.  Form the mixture into balls approximately 2" in diameter.  Makes 20 albóndigas.  Plate the meatballs in a single layer (Mexico Cooks! likes to re-use washed Styrofoam meat trays from the supermarket for holding the albóndigas), then cover and refrigerate until ready to cook.

    Tomate y Chile
    Tomates verdes (tomatillos) and chiles serranos for preparing salsa verde.  Remove the tomatillos'  papery husks and wash the sticky tomatillos thoroughly.

    Ingredients for Salsa Verde
    10-12 tomatillos (known in Mexico as tomate verde), husks removed
    3 or 4 whole chiles serranos
    1 bunch fresh cilantro, largest stems removed
    Sea salt to taste

    Hervido

    Procedure
    In a large pot of water, bring the tomatillos and chiles to a full rolling boil.  Boil just until the tomatillos begin to crack; watch them closely or they will disintegrate in the water.  

    Listo para Licuar
    Using a slotted spoon, scoop the cooked tomatillos and chiles into your blender jar.  Allow to cool slightly  There's no need to add liquid.  Cover, hold the blender cap on, and blend until smooth.  Be careful not to burn yourself, if you try to blend this mixture before it cools, it tends to react like lava in the blender.  Don't ask me how I know this.

    Listo para Licuar 2
    While the blender is running, remove the center of its cap and, little by little, push the cilantro into the whizzing sauce.  Blend just until smooth; you should still see big flecks of dark green cilantro in the lighter green sauce.  Add sea salt to taste and stir.

    Ya en la Salsa
    Pour the salsa into a 2-quart pot.  Add the meatballs and bring to a simmer.  Cover and allow to simmer for about 30 minutes.  Mexico Cooks! prepared six meatballs for comida (main meal of the day) for two, but two meatballs apiece were plenty for us.  We ate the leftovers (and another two meatballs) the following day.  We froze twelve raw meatballs without salsa for subsequent meals.

    Para dar Hambre
    Albóndigas de pollo en salsa verde, plated with white rice cooked with carrots, Mexican style.

    Mexico Cooks! is so grateful to doña Yola for sharing her recipe with us.  These albóndigas de pollo are not only easy to prepare and very healthy (with high vitamin K and beta carotene content and no added fat), but they are also absolutely delicious.

    Provecho!

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  • Lenten Delicacies from Mexico :: Meatless Meals Are Traditional Treasures During Cuaresma (Lent)

    Ash Wednesday, which marks the beginning of the penitential season of Lent, will be February 14, 2018.  The following article has been very popular as a meatless meal reference since it was first published on Mexico Cooks! in 2009.  So many people want to know what we eat in Mexico when we're not eating meat!  Enjoy…and buen provecho!

    Torta de Papa con Frijolitos Negros
    Tortitas de papa (potato croquettes, left) and frijoles negros (black beans, right) from the south of Mexico are ideal for a Lenten meal.

    Many Mexican Catholics mark la Cuaresma (Lent), the 40-day (excluding Sundays) penitential season that precedes Easter, with special prayers, vigils, and with extraordinary meatless meals cooked only on Ash Wednesday and on the Fridays of Lent.  Many Mexican dishes–seafood, vegetable, and egg–are normally prepared without meat, but some other meatless dishes are particular to Lent. Known as comida cuaresmeña, many of these delicious Lenten foods are little-known outside Mexico and some other parts of Latin America.

    Many observant Catholics believe that the personal reflection and meditation demanded by Lenten practices are more fruitful if the individual refrains from heavy food indulgence and makes a promise to abstain from other common habits such as eating candy, smoking cigarettes, and drinking alcohol. 

    Atole de Grano
    Atole de grano, a Michoacán specialty made of tender corn and licorice-scented wild anisillo, is a perfect cena (supper) for Lenten Fridays.

    Miércoles de Ceniza (Ash Wednesday), February 14, marks the beginning of Lent in 2018.  Shortly before Ash Wednesday, certain food specialties began to appear in local markets. Vendors are currently offering large dried shrimp for caldos (broths) and tortitas (croquettes), perfect heads of cauliflower for tortitas de coliflor (cauliflower croquettes), seasonal romeritos, and thick, dried slices of bolillo (small loaves of dense white bread) for capirotada (a kind of bread pudding).

    Romeritos en Mole
    This common Lenten preparation is romeritos en moleRomeritos, a mildly acidic green vegetable, is in season at this time of year.  Although it looks quite a bit like rosemary, its taste is more like verdolagas (purslane).

    Tortas de Camarón
    You'll usually see tortitas de camarón (dried shrimp croquettes) paired for a Friday comida (midday meal) with romeritos en mole, although they are sometimes bathed in a caldillo de jitomate (tomato broth) and served with sliced nopalitos (cactus paddles).

    Huachinango Mercado del Mar
    During Lent, the price of fish and seafood in Mexico goes sky-high due to the huge seasonal demand for meatless meals.  These beautiful huachinango (red snapper) come from Mexico's Pacific coast.

    Tortita de Calabacita
    Tortita de calabacita (little squash fritter) from the sorely missed Restaurante Los Comensales in Morelia, Michoacán.  Mexico Cooks! featured the restaurant (the name means 'The Diners') in October 2009.  Less than a year after our interview with her, the elderly Señora Catalina Aguirre Camacho, the owner of Los Comensales since 1980, became increasingly incapacitated to continue to operate her wonderful restaurant.  This dish is wonderful for a Lenten supper.

    Trucha Zitácuaro
    Chef Martín Rafael Mendizabal of La Trucha Alegre in Zitácuaro, Michoacán, prepared trucha deshuesada con agridulce de guayaba (boned trout with guava sweet and sour sauce) for the V Encuentro de Cocina Tradicional de Michoacán held in Morelia in December 2008.  The dish would be ideal for an elegant Lenten dinner.

    Plato Capirotada
    Capirotada (Lenten bread pudding) is almost unknown outside Mexico.  Simple to prepare and absolutely delicious, it's hard to eat it sparingly if you're trying to keep a Lenten abstinence! 

    Every family makes a slightly different version of capirotada: a pinch more of this, leave out that, add such-and-such.  Mexico Cooks! prefers to leave out the apricots and add dried pineapple instead.  Make it once and then tweak the recipe to your preference–but please do stick with traditional ingredients.

    CAPIROTADA

    Ingredients

    *4 bollilos, in 1" thick slices (small loaves of dense white bread)
    5 stale tortillas
    150 grams pecans
    50 grams prunes
    100 grams raisins
    200 grams peanuts
    100 grams dried apricots (or dried pineapple)
    1 large apple, peeled and sliced thin
    100 grams grated Cotija cheese
    Peel of one orange, two uses
    **3 large cones piloncillo (Mexican raw brown sugar)
    Four 3" pieces of Mexican stick cinnamon
    2 cloves
    Butter
    Salt

    *If you don't have bolillo, substitute slices of very dense French bread. 
    **If you don't have piloncillo, substitute 1/2 cup tightly packed brown sugar.

    A large metal or clay baking dish.

    Piloncillo Cones 2 Sizes
    Piloncillo–cones in two sizes of Mexican raw brown sugar.  The recipe calls for three of the larger cones.

    Preparation

    Preheat the oven to 300°F.

    Toast the bread and spread with butter.  Slightly overlap the tortillas in the bottom and along the sides of the baking dish to make a base for the capirotada.  Prepare a thin syrup by boiling the piloncillo in 2 1/2 cups of water with a few shreds of cinnamon sticks, 2/3 of the orange peel, the cloves, and a pinch of salt.  Boil until the liquid mixture is very slightly thickened.

    Place the layers of bread rounds in the baking dish so as to allow for their expansion as the capirotada cooks.  Lay down a layer of bread, then a layer of nuts, prunes, raisins, peanuts and apricots or pineapple.  Continue until all the bread is layered with the rest.  For the final layer, sprinkle the capirotada with the grated Cotija cheese and the remaining third of the orange peel (grated).  Add the syrup, moistening all the layers little by little.  Reserve a portion of the syrup to add to the capirotada in case it becomes dry during baking.

    Bake uncovered until the capirotada is golden brown and the syrup is absorbed.  The bread will expand as it absorbs the syrup.  Remember to add the rest of the syrup if the top of the capirotada looks dry.

    Cool the capirotada at room temperature.  Do not cover until it is cool; even then, leave the top ajar.

    Platos Servidos Capirotada
    Try very hard not to eat the entire pan of capirotada at one sitting!

    A positive thought for the beginning of Lent: give up discouragement, be an optimist.

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  • Super-Delicious Soupy Meatballs :: Albóndigas de Jalisco, Diana Kennedy’s Way

    Albóndigas Ingredientes
    These and just a few other ingredients for albóndigas de Jalisco (Jalisco-style meatballs) combine to become a simple but delicious meal.

    It's been downright chilly both day and night here in Mexico City for the couple of months since the end of November.  Winter, with lows around 30ºF don't sound too bad compared to what winter is like in northern climes, but at our altitude of nearly 8000 feet above sea level and with no central heating, it's time to think about staying warm.  In Mexico Cooks!' household, cool days always mean something warming and delicious for our comida (midday meal).  Subtly-flavored albóndigas–especially as prepared from this recipe, adapted from Diana Kennedy's book The Cuisines of Mexico–are the perfect comfort food.

    Albóndigas Ingredientes en Licuadora
    You only need to blend eggs and a few herbs and spices to give a most wonderful Mexican touch to the meat mixture for these albóndigas (meatballs).

    This is a dandy recipe for cooks of any level: if you're a beginner, you'll love the simplicity and authenticity of the flavors of the end product.  If you're a more advanced cook, the people at your table will believe that you worked for hours to prepare this traditional Mexican meal. 

    All the ingredients you need are undoubtedly easy for you to get even if you live outside Mexico.  Here's the list, both for the meatballs and their sauce:

    Ingredients
    Albóndigas

    1.5 Tbsp long-grain white rice
    Boiling water to cover
    3/4 lb ground pork
    3/4 lb ground beef
    2 eggs
    1/4 scant teaspoon dried oregano
    4 good-sized sprigs fresh mint (preferably) OR 1 tsp dried mint
    1 chile serrano, roughly chopped
    3/4 tsp salt
    1/4 scant teaspoon cumin seeds OR ground cumin
    1/3 medium white onion, roughly chopped

    Albóndigas Carne con Líquido
    Add the liquified eggs, onions, chile, herbs, and spices to the ground meats and mix well with your hands.

    Sauce
    3 medium tomatoes (about 1 lb)
    1 chile serrano, roughly chopped (optional if you do not care for a mildly spicy sauce)
    Boiling water to cover
    3 Tbsp lard, vegetable oil, peanut oil, or safflower oil (I prefer lard, for its flavor)
    1 medium white onion, roughly chopped
    8 cups rich meat or chicken broth, homemade if possible
    Salt to taste

    For serving
    2 or 3 carrots, cut into cubes or sticks
    2 good-size white potatoes, peeled and cut into cubes or sticks

    Utensils
    A small bowl
    A large bowl
    A blender
    A saucepan
    A fork
    A large flameproof pot with cover

    Preparing the meatballs
    Put the rice in a small bowl and cover with boiling water.  Allow to soak for about 45 minutes.  I use the glass custard cup that you see lying on its side in the initial photo–it's just the right size.

    While the rice is soaking, put both kinds of meat into the large bowl.  

    Put the eggs, onion, and all herbs and spices–in that order–in the blender jar.  Blend until all is liquified.  Add to the meat mixture and, using your hands, mix well until the liquid is thoroughly incorporated.

    Rinse out the blender jar for its next use in this recipe.

    Drain the rice and add it to the meat mixture.  Form 24 meatballs, about 1.5" in diameter, and set aside.

    Preparing the sauce

    Albóndigas Jitomate Cocinándose
    Bring about 2 cups of water to a full rolling boil.  Add the whole tomatoes and allow to cook for about five minutes, until the skins split.  Watch the pot, though: this procedure might take a bit less or a bit more time. 

    Albóndigas Pelando Jitomate
    When the tomato skins split, take the tomatoes one by one out of the water and peel them.  If you've never tried it, believe me: this is miraculously easy–the skins are not too hot to handle and they slip off the tomatoes like little gloves.  You can see that I have stuck a fork into the stem end of the tomato for ease of handling.

    Skin the tomatoes and put them in the blender jar.  Add the roughly-chopped onion and chile serrano.  Blend until thoroughly puréed.

    Albóndigas Manteca
    Freshly rendered manteca (lard) for frying the sauce.  If all you can get in your store is a hard brick of stark white, hydrogenated lard, don't bother.  It has no flavor and absolutely no redeeming value.  If you want to use lard, ask a butcher at a Latin market if he sells freshly rendered lard.  If none is available, use the oil of your choice.

    In the flameproof cooking pot, heat the lard or oil and add the tomato purée.  Bring it to a boil and let it cook fast for about three minutes.  Splatter alert here!

    Turn down the flame and add the broth to the tomato sauce.  Bring it to a simmer.  Add the meatballs, cover the pot, and let them simmer in the liquid for about an hour.

    Albóndigas Zanahoria
    After the first hour of cooking, add the carrots and the potatoes to the tomato broth and meatballs.  Cover and cook for an additional half hour.  When I made the albóndigas this time, I cubed the vegetables.  I think the finished dish is more attractive with the vegetables cut into sticks.

    Albóndigas Cocinándose
    The rich fragrance of the cooking albóndigas and their broth penetrates every corner of our home.  By the time they're ready to eat, we are more than eager!

    Albo?ndigas Caseras Febrero 2017 1
    Albóndigas de Jalisco served with steamed white rice (you might also like to try them with Mexican red rice), sliced avocado, and fresh, hot tortillas.  This flat soup plate filled with albóndigas and vegetables needs another ladle full of sauce; we prefer to eat these meatballs when they're very soupy.  A serving of rice topped with three meatballs plus vegetables and sauce is plenty. 

    Albóndigas freeze really well, so I often double the recipe; I use a flat styrofoam meat tray from the supermarket to freeze the uncooked meatballs individually, then prepare the sauce, thaw the meatballs, and cook them as described.

    The single recipe serves eight.

    Provecho!

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  • Warm Yourself from the Inside Out: Caldo de Pollo, Mexico’s Delicious Chicken Soup

    First published about six years ago, this is by far the most popular of Mexico Cooks!' nearly 600 archived articles.  There's just something wonderful about comfort food, no matter what culture prepares it!

    Seasoning Ingredients Caldo
    Seasoning ingredients for preparing the caldo (broth) for Mexican caldo de pollo (chicken soup).  Clockwise from top right in the photo: unpeeled carrots, white onions, chiles serrano, garlic, fresh bay leaves, cilantro, and thyme.  I also added a big sprig of fresh hierbabuena (mint) and a smaller sprig of fresh epazote (wormseed).  If you can't find fresh epazote, leave it out.  The dried variety adds no flavor to any of your recipes.

    There are few meals more undeniably Mexican than delicious, home-made caldo de pollo (Mexico's marvelous chicken soup, with fresh vegetables).  During the winter, when the temperature is chilly even in Mexico, what better to warm us from the inside out than Mexico's traditional, rich, delicious caldo de pollo (chicken soup)?  You who live in even colder countries will love it as much as we do.  Nothing could be simpler to prepare.  The ingredients are easy to obtain, the broth all but cooks itself, and the final preparations are simple and fast.

    Pollo Listo para Caldo
    This beautiful chicken weighed approximately 5.5 pounds before cooking.

    Mexico's chickens are perfectly suited to caldo de pollo.  Yellow skin and pink flesh create a fragrantly savory stock.  If you've traveled to Mexico and visited our markets, you may have wondered why our recently sacrificed raw chickens look so…so chicken-y, so golden and inviting.  They're fed ground marigold petals along with their feed!  The bright golden color of the flowers is transmitted not only to their skin and flesh, but also to the yolks of their eggs, which sit up high and sunny in your breakfast skillet.  Several years ago, a shall-remain-nameless neighboring country to the north imported some of its frozen chicken to our supermarkets: grey, pitiful whole chickens and lumps of breast and leg meat lay in freezer compartments waiting to be purchased.  Mexican housewives, used to fresh, plump chicken, looked at these icy products and recoiled.  Few of these ugly corpses sold and I currently notice that no imported frozen chicken is available in any of the supermarkets I visit from time to time.

    Mexico Cooks!
    prefers to remove as much fat as possible from the chicken before cooking, leaving only a little to give body and flavor to the broth.  The skin stays on, both for color and flavor.

    Pollo en la Olla
    In the pot: the chicken back and legs, along with the seasoning ingredients and water, ready to cook.

    Caldo de Pollo (Mexican Chicken Soup)

    For the broth
    1 whole chicken, approximately 5-6 pounds
    1 1/2 white onions, peeled
    2 large cloves garlic, peeled
    2 large carrots, peeled and cut in half
    2 chiles serrano, sliced from tip to stem end
    2 bay leaves
    6 stems cilantro
    Large sprig fresh hierbabuena (mint)
    Small sprig fresh epazote (wormseed), optional.  If you can't get it fresh, leave it out.
    Large pinch of thyme
    Sea salt to taste
    Water to cover all broth ingredients
    14-quart stock pot

    Mercado Patas de Pollo 1
    If you can buy chicken feet where you are, put several in the cooking pot to give color and depth of flavor to the broth.  You'll thank me, honest you will.

    Procedure
    Remove as much fat as possible from the raw chicken.  Remove the bag of menudencias (heart, gizzard, liver, etc).  Mexico Cooks! prefers to separate the entire breast and wings from the back and legs, using the back and legs for preparing the broth and reserving the breast and wings for later use.

    Put the skin-on chicken back, legs and all seasoning ingredients except the salt into the stock pot.  Add cold water to cover the ingredients.  Bring to a boil, lower to simmer.  Skim the broth once with a wire skimmer.  Simmer, partially covered, for approximately 1.5 hours.  Cool slightly and add sea salt to taste.  Remove all vegetables, herbs, and the chicken back and legs from the pot.  Chill the broth overnight and peel off any congealed fat.

    Because I prefer to eat breast meat, I often shred the cooked leg and back meat to be used in other recipes.  However, when I made this batch of caldo de pollo, I took large chunks of the dark meat and added them to the broth.

    Ingredients for Eating
    Ingredients for the final preparation of the caldo de pollo, to cook in the broth just before serving.  Clockwise from top right: calabacitas (tender zucchini, about 3" long), peeled carrots, chicken breast, fresh green beans.  Potatoes, ready to be peeled, are in the foreground.

    To finish the caldo de pollo:

    Ingredients
    1/2 pound fresh green beans, broken in thirds
    4 carrots, peeled and cut into 1" lengths
    4 to 6 calabacitas (tiny zucchini will do), cut into 2" lengths
    2 or 3 large potatoes, cut into 16 pieces
    1 chayote, peeled and cut into 16 pieces–use the tender, white seed, too, it's delicious (optional)
    1 large ear of fresh corn, husked and cut into sections (across the ears) approximately 2" wide
    2 or 3 half chicken breasts, cut into three pieces each
    2 or 3 chicken wings, pointed end sections removed

    About an hour before mealtime, remove the chicken backs, legs (and the feet, if you used them) from the pot and bring the broth to a simmer.  Add all of the above ingredients to the broth.  Simmer for half an hour, or until the chicken and vegetables are done.

    During the half hour that the vegetables and chicken are cooking in the caldo de pollo, prepare a pot of traditional Mexican rice.  In a couple of tablespoons of vegetable oil, sauté the amount of rice you want (I usually use 1 or 2 cups of raw rice) until  the rice is uniformly golden brown.  Add 2 cups of tomato water for every cup of rice, bring to a boil, cover the pot and lower the heat to simmer until the rice is fluffy, about 20 minutes.

    Tomato Water for Rice
    3 raw Roma tomatoes, skinned
    1/3 white onion, roughly chopped
    1 small clove garlic, peeled
    1 small chile serrano, stem removed but using the seeds, if you want a slightly spicy rice  (optional)
    2.5 cups cold water
    Sea salt to taste

    Add all ingredients to your blender and whiz until smooth.  Strain through a fine colander and use the liquid for cooking rice.

    Albo?ndigas Pelando Jitomate
    Tip for Skinning Raw Tomatoes
    Bring a small pot filled with water to a boil.  While the water comes to a boil, wash the tomatoes, then cut a 1/8" cross-mark in the stem end of each one.  Put the tomatoes into the boiling water and boil for a minute–literally a minute, until the tomato skin begins to split.  Set the timer or watch the pot to see when the tomatoes begin to split their skins.  Then use a fork, tines stuck into the stem end of the tomatoes, to lift them out of the water and hold each one while you peel it.  The tomatoes will be easy to peel.

    To Prepare Mexican Red Rice
    1.5 cups raw rice–use your preferred variety of long-grain raw rice (not pre-cooked): not Uncle Ben's, not instant rice, or other rice of that type).
    2 Tbsp vegetable oil
    3 cups tomato water
    1 tsp salt or to taste
    Heavy, lidded pot, wider than it is deep

    Put the oil in the pot and over a medium flame, heat the oil until it shimmers.  Add the rice and let it fry, stirring often, until the rice is light golden brown.  Add all of the tomato water and the salt.  Bring the pot to a boil, cover leaving the cover slightly ajar, and lower the flame to its lowest point.  Allow the rice to simmer for approximately 20 minutes (use a timer!) or until all the tomato water is absorbed and the rice grains are tender.

    Caldo de Pollo 5 Oct 2018 1
    The finished product, steaming and delicious any time of year.  

    At meal time, have the following on the table for garnish and further seasoning: a large bunch of fresh cilantro, stems in a glass of water; a plate of halved limones or limes, a dish of sea salt; and a cooked (not raw) or bottled table salsa of your choice.  Plenty of hot-from-the-griddle corn tortillas round out your meal.

    Salsa Purhépecha Chile Perón
    Mexico Cooks! favorite bottled salsa: Cosecha Purhépecha Salsa Casera de Chile Perón (Home-style sauce made of chile manzano, known as chile perón in Michoacán).  It's made in Chilchota, Michoacán, and I normally keep a big stash of it in my Mexico City pantry.

    To serve your caldo de pollo, add a large spoonful or two of steaming hot rice to each diner's bowl.  Next, add chicken and a good amount of each of the vegetables.  Fill each bowl with hot, fragrant broth.  Every diner can then add a pinch of sea salt, some cilantro leaves, a squeeze or two of jugo de limón, and salsa to his or her own taste.

    Makes four to six servings with a lot of rich broth left over for other uses.  I strain the broth and then freeze it in gallon ziplock freezer bags.

    Provecho!

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