Category: Food and Drink

  • Old Fashioned Kitchen Sayings from Mexico :: Dichos de Antaño de la Cocina Mexicana

    Tzintzuntzan Frijolitos al Fogón
    Frijoles boil in a clay pot placed on a creative fogón (on-the-ground cooking fire).  The fire ring is the wheel rim of a truck, the wood is what was available.  The clay pot ensures old-fashioned flavor and Mexico Cooks!' interest in the cooking process ensured old-fashioned hospitality. "When will the beans be ready?" I asked.  "Come back at 1:30," the cook told us.  "They'll be ready to share, and I'll make some tortillas."

    Twenty or more years ago, Mexico Cooks! ate a once-in-a-lifetime meal in Mexico.  Simplicity itself, the comida (midday meal) consisted of steamed white rice piled with home-grown sliced bananas, homemade fresh cheese, frijoles de la olla (beans in their pot liquor, freshly cooked as in the photo above), and hand-patted tortillas, hot from the comal (griddle).  That meal, served in an outdoor kitchen, was our introduction to Mexican tradition, authenticity, and hospitality, all on a level we had never known before.

    Food, shared with friends and acquaintances, brings us together in elemental hospitality.  Food and the sharing of it in Mexico have, since earliest times, given rise to wonderful dichos (sayings) from the kitchen. 
    A Comer y a Misa...
    This hand-embroidered tablecloth was made for display at Pátzcuaro's Museo Regional del Arte Popular (Regional Folk Arts Museum).  Every one of its many, many sayings stitched into the cloth is a dicho de la cocina The one closest to the bottom of the photo says, "Del plato a la boca, se cae la sopa." ("Between the plate and the mouth, the soup spills")–which means "between one's intention and one's accomplishment, a lot can go wrong".

    Quoting a dicho de la cocina always brings a smile.  Here are a few favorites:

    • Mujer que guisa, se casa a prisa.  (The woman who cooks is soon married.)
    • A comer y a misa, a la primer llamada.  (To eat and to Mass, go at the first call.)
    • Mejor llegar a tiempo que ser invitado.  (It's better to arrive on time than to be invited.)

    Mesa para Visitas
    Whether rich or poor, people always invite others to share their table.  It's seriously offensive to refuse an offered meal.

    • Al que nace para tamal, del cielo le caen las hojas.  If you're born to be a tamal, your corn husks will fall from heaven.
    • Come a gusto y placentero y que ayune tu heredero.  Eat what you like and at your pleasure–let your descendants fast!
    • Cuando el ratón está lleno, hasta la harina le sabe amarga.  When the mouse is full, even flour tastes bitter to him.

    Pozole Rojo
    Red pozole, made with pork, chiles, and nixtamal de maíz cacahuatzintle (a type of processed dried corn), is one of Mexico's most comforting meals.  For a wonderfully rich recipe, try this one from our friend Rolly's favorite cook, Doña Martha.

    • Desayunar como rey, comer como príncipe y cenar como mendigo.  Eat breakfast like a king, eat at midday like a prince, and have supper like a beggar.
    • El hambre es la buena, no la comida.  Hunger is the good thing, not the food.
    • El que parte y comparte, se queda con la mejor parte.  The one who cuts and serves the food gets the best part.

    Uchepos de Nata
    Uchepos de leche
    are a regional Michoacán specialty served for breakfast or supper.

    • Fuchi… ¡quiero más!  It's AWFUL…give me some more!
    • Gástalo en la cocina y no en medicina.  Spend your money in the kitchen, not on medicine.
    • Invierno buen tiempo para el herrero, el panadero y el chocolatero.  Winter's a good time for the ironworker, the baker, and the chocolate maker.

    Caldo de Pollo Casera 1
    Mexican caldo de pollo–traditional chicken soup–is hearty with shredded chicken, carrots, calabacita (similar to zucchini), potatoes, and chayote.  Dressed and seasoned at the table with a spritz of jugo de limón (Key lime juice), roughly chopped cilantro, minced onion, and a spoonful of spicy salsa, it's absolutely essential to one's comfort and well-being.

    • La comida entra por los ojos. Food comes in through the eyes.
    • La paciencia es amarga, pero sus frutos son dulces.  Patience is bitter, but its fruits are sweet.
    • La venganza es dulce al paladar, pero amarga para la garganta.  Vengance is sweet in the mouth, but bitter in the throat.

    Outdoor Kitchen
    An outdoor kitchen is still common in rural areas of Mexico.  This one, near Morelia, Michoacán is lovely, dressed in soft blue paint and flowers.

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

  • Mexico’s Most Popular Drink :: The Michelada, Perfect for Midsummer!

    Michelada 1
    A perfect michelada, rimmed with Tajín and topped with crunchy fresh cucumber.  Spicy, salty, beery, umami-rich, and completely refreshing.

    Here in Mexico–everywhere in Mexico!–the single most popular beer drink is the michelada. Its ingredients, always based on beer, depend on the bartender, the part of the country one is in, or on one's personal taste.  A michelada is an any-time, any-season drink.

    We see fútbol (soccer) stadiums full of people slugging down liters of stadium-prepared micheladas, parties at home where no other alcoholic beverage is served, and restaurant tables full of people slurping them down along with their barbacoacarne asada, or pozole–or accompanying a hamburger and fries, or a salad.  The michelada goes with just about any sort of food.  Popular wisdom also knows it as a super hangover cure, so hey–beer for breakfast in your hour of need?  Why not, just this once?

    Michelada Corona
    The primary ingredient of any michelada is beer.  Most people prefer a light-colored lager, but once in a while someone will order a michelada made with dark beer. Corona is just one option; any light-colored lager will do. First and foremost is to use the lager you prefer: Corona, Pacifico, Modelo, or any other. And your beer doesn't even have to be made in Mexico; use whatever country's beer you like best. Photo courtesy Corona.

    The seasonings in a michelada typically include either Clamato, V8, or plain tomato juice, plus Worcestershire sauce, a very hot bottled salsa like Valentina, Cholula, Yucateca, or any of dozens on the grocer's shelf, salt—lots of salt—powdered chile, the umami-heavy seasoning liquid called Maggi, and freshly-squeezed jugo de limón (the juice of a Key lime). 

    Michelada Tajin
    Rim a frosted pint mug or glass with powdered Tajín (a commercial mix of powdered dry chile, limón flavoring, and salt).  You can find Tajín in almost any supermarket. There are imitators, but if you can find Tajín, it's the best.  Photo courtesy Tajín. 

    Tip to the wise: to evenly rim a glass: put a generous quantity of Tajín in a saucer.  In another saucer, put about 1/4 cup of water or jugo de limón (Key lime) Holding your mug or glass upside down and level, dip its opening just a bit into the water, then into the Tajín.  Voilà!

    Campbell's Tomato Juice 64 oz 1

    Campbell's tomato juice contains tomato juice from concentrate, potassium chloride, ascorbic acid, citric acid, salt, malic acid, and other flavorings.  Photo courtesy Campbell's.

    Michelada clamato
    Clamato contains water, tomato concentrate, high fructose corn syrup, MSG, salt, citric acid, onion powder, celery seed, garlic powder, dried clam broth, unspecified spices, vinegar, natural flavors, food coloring, and ascorbic acid to maintain color.  Photo courtesy Clamato.

    Now add the rest of the ingredients.  Here's a recipe to get you started; experiment with micheladas till the flavor blend is exactly the way you like it.

    Micheladas a la mexicana

    • light-colored lager beer of your choice
    • Clamato, V8, or tomato juice
    • 3 or 4 splashes hot sauce, more or less to taste.  Try Valentina, or Cholula, or use your favorite.
    • 2 splashes of Worcestershire sauce
    • 2 splashes of Maggi sauce 
    • Juice of one lime

      Fill the glass about ¼ to ? with the V8, tomato, or Clamato juice. Add the hot sauce, the lime juice, the Worcestershire sauce, and the soy sauce. If you used Tajín to salt the rim, pour any excess from the plate into the glass.  Fill the rest with cold beer and top off your micheladas with sticks of celery or jícama, skewers of shrimp or olives, half-moons of cucumber, freshly-cooked octopus–really, anything within the limits of your imagination.  And for good measure, add another splash of Maggi. 

    Michelada Worcestershire Sauce
    In the United States, the ingredients in Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce are: distilled white vinegar, molasses, sugar, water, salt, onions, anchovies, garlic, cloves, tamarind extract, natural flavorings, and chili pepper extract.  Anchovies–did you know that?  Photo courtesy Lee & Perrins.

    Michelada Valentina--4-Lt
    Valentina is arguably Mexico's best-known bottled salsa. The photo shows the four liter bottle–nearly a gallon! That size should keep you in micheladas for quite a while. If you'd prefer a smaller bottle, you can buy Valentina, either hot or extra-hot, in a 12.5 ounce size.  The ingredients are water, chile peppers, vinegar, salt, spices and sodium benzoate (as a preservative). The taste can be described as a citrus flavor, with a nicely spicy aftertaste. Photo courtesy Valentina.

    Michelada Maggi
    If you're not already using Maggi for cooking, look for it until you find it for your micheladas.  Of Swiss origin, Maggi is ubiquitous, literally a global phenomenon, used all over the world to add an extra touch of taste to savory recipes.  It's indispensable in a michelada, bringing the utmost in umami to the drink.  Your micheladas will be pale in flavor without it.  The ingredients of Maggi vary by country; if you have an MSG sensitivity, be sure to look for that in the ingredients list.  Some countries' Maggi have it, some don't.  Photo courtesy Maggi.

    Michelada V8
    V8 Original juice contains a blend of reconstituted vegetable juices including tomatoes, carrots, celery, beets, parsley, lettuce, watercress, and spinach, plus a tiny percentage of salt, ascorbic acid, citric acid, and natural flavoring. Photo courtesy V8. <

    Now add the rest of the ingredients.  Here's a recipe to get you started; experiment with micheladas till the flavor blend is exactly the way you like it.

    Micheladas a la mexicana

    • light-colored lager beer of your choice
    • Clamato or V8 or tomato juice
    • 3 or 4 splashes hot sauce, more or less to taste.  Try Valentina, or Cholula, or use your favorite.
    • 2 splashes of Worcestershire sauce
    • 2 splashes of Maggi sauce 
    • Soy sauce to taste.
    • Juice of one limón (Key lime)

      Fill the glass about ¼ to ? with the Clamato juice. Add the hot sauce, the lime juice, the Worcestershire sauce, and the soy sauce. If you used Tajín to salt the rim, pour any excess from the plate into the glass.  Fill the rest with cold beer and top off your micheladas with sticks of celery or jícama, skewers of shrimp or olives, half-moons of cucumber, freshly-cooked octopus–really, anything within the limits of your imagination.  And for good measure, add another splash of Maggi. 

    Limo?n criollo
    Finally, the taste of freshly squeezed jugo de limón (juice from the key lime) will brighten up your michelada in a way that regular lime juice won't.  You'll find limones in many supermarkets and Latin specialty markets.  The juice of one limón per liter of michelada is the ratio you want.  Mexico Cooks! photo. 

    The name michelada is said to be made of three words: 'mi' (my) 'chela' (a popular nickname for any beer) and 'helada' (icy cold). How many micheladas are consumed in Mexico every year?  Untold millions!  Do your part this summer to keep the numbers up!

    Salud!  (To your health!)

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

  • Chiles Rellenos en Nogada, El Rey de los Chiles :: Stuffed Chiles in Walnut Sauce, The King of Chiles

    Chile en Nogada Fonda Fina Aug 21 2017 MC
    Chile en nogada (chile poblano stuffed with a seasonal filling and topped with fresh walnut sauce, chopped parsley, walnut meats, and pomegranates), as served by chef Juan Cabrera Barron at Fonda Fina, Mexico City, August 21, 2017.

    Freshly Cut Walnuts Chile en Nogada
    Freshly harvested nuez de castilla (walnuts), an essential for seasonal chiles en nogada.  Photo courtesy El Sol de Puebla.

    Mexico celebrates its independence during the entire month of September with parades, parties, and traditional food and drink, served in restaurants and at home.  The traditional festive dish served beginning in July and throughout the weeks just before and after the Independence Day holiday is chiles en nogada, a magnificent tribute to the seasonal availability of a certain kind of peach, the locally grown panochera apple, in-season granadas (pomegranates) and nuez de castilla (freshly harvested walnuts). From mid-July until early October, seasonal local fruits, fresh pomegranates, and newly harvested walnuts make chiles en nogada possible.  Mildly spicy chiles poblano, stuffed with picadillo and topped with richly creamy walnut sauce and pomegranate seeds, flaunt the brilliant green, white and red of the Mexican flag. 

    Manzana panochera y pera lechera
    The panochera apple, grown in the Mexican state of Puebla, and pera lechera (milky pear), also grown in the area, are two must-have ingredients for making chiles en nogada in Mexico.  If you live outside Mexico, small crisp apples and very crisp pears (Bosque or d'Anjou) would substitute.

    This festive dish is traditionally served on September 15 or 16 in honor of Mexico's Independence Day, though it is popular anytime from late July through October. During late July, August and September in the highlands of Mexico, particularly in Mexico City and Puebla, vendors wander tianguis (street markets) and other markets, selling the clean, white meats of nuez de castilla. It is important to use the freshest walnuts possible, as they produce such a creamy, rich sauce that it is worth the effort to buy them peeled or peel them oneself.  Yes, the recipe is time-consuming…but you and your guests will jump up and shout "VIVA!" when you've licked the platters clean. 

    Ingredients

    For the meat:  

    • 2 pounds beef brisket or other stew meat or 1 pound ground beef and 1 pound ground pork 
    • 1 small white onion, quartered 
    • 2 large cloves garlic 
    • about 1 Tbsp sea salt

     For the picadillo (filling):  

    • 4 Tbsp safflower or canola oil
    • the shredded or ground meats
    • 1/3 cup chopped white onion
    • 3 large cloves garlic, minced
    • 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon 
    • 1/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper
    • 1/8 tsp ground cloves
    • 3 heaping Tbsp raisins
    • 1 or 2 chiles serrano, finely minced
    • 4 Tbsp chopped fresh walnuts 
    • 4 Tbsp slivered blanched almonds (optional)
    • 2 Tbsp finely diced biznaga (candied cactus, optional)
    • 1 fresh pear, peeled and chopped
    • 1 apple, peeled and chopped
    • 4 ripe peaches, peeled and diced
    • 3 Tbsp Mexican pink pine nuts.  Substitute white if you aren't able to find pink.
    • 3 large, ripe tomatoes, roasted, peeled and chopped
    • sea salt to taste

    Flaneur Chiles Poblanos Rojos Tehuaca?n 2016
    Fully mature chiles poblano, picked fresh in Tehuacán, Puebla.  

    Rajas Chiles Asados y Pelados
    Green chiles poblano are normally used for chiles en nogada.  These have been roasted and peeled and are ready for stuffing.

    For the chiles:

    –6 fresh chiles poblanos, roasted, peeled, slit open, and seeded, leaving the stem intact   

     For the nogada (walnut sauce):  

    • 1 cup fresh walnuts 
    • 6 ounces queso de cabra (goat cheese), queso doble crema or standard cream cheese (not fat free) at room temperature 
    • 1-1/2 cups crema mexicana or 1-1/4 cups sour cream thinned with milk 
    • about 1/2 tsp sea salt or to taste
    • 1 Tbsp sugar   
    • 1/8 tsp ground cinnamon 
    • 1/4 cup dry sherry (optional)

    Pomegranate
    Remove the arils (seeds) from a pomegranate.  We who live in Mexico are fortunate to find pomegranate seeds ready to use, sold in plastic cups.

    For the garnish 

    –1 Tbsp chopped flat-leaf parsley
    –1/2 cup fresh pomegranate seeds 

    Preparation:

    Cut the meat into large chunks, removing any excess fat. Place the meat into a large Dutch oven with the onion, garlic, and salt. Cover with cold water and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Skim off any foam that collects on the surface. Lower the heat and allow the water to simmer about 45 minutes, until the meat is just tender. Take the pot off the stove and let the meat cool in the broth. Remove the pieces of meat and finely shred them. 

    If you are using ground meats, the above step is unnecessary.  Simple brown the ground meats and then add the rest of the ingredients under the heading "picadillo" (above).

    Biznaga cristalizada
    Candied biznaga cactus.  Do try to find this ingredient in your local market.  There isn't an adequate substitute, so if you don't find it, leave it out.

    Warm the oil in a large, heavy skillet and sauté the onion and garlic over medium heat until they turn a pale gold. Stir in the shredded meat and cook for five minutes. Add the cinnamon, pepper, and cloves, then, stir in the raisins, the two tablespoons of chopped walnuts. Add the chopped pear, apple, biznaga, and mix well. Add the tomatoes and salt to taste, and continue cooking over medium-high heat until most of the moisture has evaporated. Stir often so that the mixture doesn't stick. Let cool, cover, and set aside. The picadillo may be made a day or two in advance.

    Chiles en Nogada
    Beautifully home-prepared chiles en nogada, as presented several years ago at a traditional food exhibition in Pátzcuaro, Michoacán.

    Make a slit down the side of each chile, just long enough to remove the seeds and veins. Keep the stem end intact. Drain the chiles, cut side down, on paper towels until completely dry. Cover and set aside. The chiles may be prepared a day in advance. 

    At least three hours in advance, put the walnuts in a small pan of boiling water. Remove from the heat and let them sit for five minutes. Drain the nuts and, when cool, rub off as much of the dark skin as possible. into small pieces. Place the nuts, cream cheese, crema, and salt in a blender and purée thoroughly. Stir in the optional sugar, cinnamon, and sherry until thoroughly combined. Chill for several hours. 

    Preheat the oven to 250ºF. When ready to serve, reheat the meat filling and stuff the chiles until they are plump and just barely closed. Put the filled chiles, covered, to warm slightly in the oven. After they are heated through, place the chiles (cut side down) on a serving platter or on individual plates, cover with the chilled walnut sauce, and sprinkle with the chopped parsley and pomegranate seeds. 

    Azul Histo?rico Chile en Nogada
    Chile en nogada as served at Restaurante Azul Histórico, Mexico City.

    Chile en Nogada PdeH Aug 13 2017 MC
    Chile en nogada as served at Restaurante Pasillo de Humo, Mexico City.

    This dish may be served at room temperature, or it may be served chilled. It is rarely if ever served hot. 

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

  • Albóndigas de Pollo en Salsa Verde :: Chicken Meatballs in Green Sauce, doña Yola Style

    Doña Yola la Chef
    Several years ago, Mexico Cooks! was thrilled to meet doña Yolanda Rodríguez Orozco.  At the time, she was working 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 our dining table.

    Pechuga de Pollo Molida
    A chicken vendor grinds fresh chicken breast to order at the weekly tianguis (street market) in our neighborhood.  You can ask the butcher at your supermarket to grind the breasts for you.

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

    Hierbabuena con Huevos
    Fresh hierbabuena (mint) grown in a pot on our terrace or available at any market, along with beautiful fresh local 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 chicken breast
    100 grams (more or less 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 well-washed biodegradable meat trays from a supermarket for holding the albóndigas), then cover and refrigerate until ready to cook.

    Tomate y Chile
    Tomates verdes (you probably know them as 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.  There's no need to add liquid.  Cover, hold the blender cap on, and blend until smooth.  Be careful not to burn yourself, this is a hot mixture and 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 our comida (main meal of the day), but two meatballs apiece were plenty for the two of 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!

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

  • A Few of Mexico’s Old Favorite Herbs–and Some You Might Not Have Met Yet

    Colegio Culinario Hierbabuena
    Fresh hierbabuena (mint) growing in a Morelia friend's garden.

    The  cuisines of Mexico–and you know that there are many different regional cuisines–are a fantastic amalgam of indigenous corn-based food preparations with an overlay of Spanish ingredients, a strong influence of Moorish flavors, and a lagniappe of French artifice from the mid-to-late 19th Century. There is no one cuisine in this big country, although some popular dishes are found in every region. Not every cook prepares enchiladas with the same list of ingredients; tacos, although ubiquitous in Mexico, can be different at every crowded taco stand.

    Garlic in Wire Basket 1
    Mexico Cooks! stores garlic in this 3" diameter wire basket, hanging from a cup hook on the side of a cupboard.  Circulating air keeps the garlic fresh for quite a while.

    Canela Mexicana 1
    Mexican canela (cinnamon), for sale in a Oaxaca market.  Mexican cinnamon sticks (actually grown in Sri Lanka and imported to Mexico) are usually about two feet long and, unlike the short, hard, nearly flavorless cinnamon sticks sold outside the country, are easily broken into the length piece you need for a recipe.  Grind it into horchata (usually a chilled rice drink), use it to flavor a comforting, sweet and hot atole (a thick corn drink), or use it for traditional seasoning in arroz con leche (Mexican rice pudding).  Naturally there are many other Mexican recipes that require canela.

    Many of the herbs and spices that you use in your own kitchen are also used in the Mexican kitchen. Garlic, cinnamon, oregano, and thyme are in widespread use here. Cumin, cloves, and mint show up frequently. Lemon grass, which we usually think of as an ingredient in Thai or Vietnamese dishes, is commonly grown in many parts of Mexico and is used to make tea.

    A good part of the differences in the regional cuisines of Mexico is each region's use of herbs. Some of those herbs are completely unknown to those of us whose familiarity with Mexican food stops with Pepe's Taco Hut on Main Street, USA. Pepe, whose mother's family emigrated to the USA from the Mexican state of Hidalgo, prepares the restaurant's platillos fuertes (main dishes) from recipes passed down from his abuelita (grandmother), who lived for 97 years in the same Hidalgo village. He's adapted those recipes to include the ingredients he can find in the States and to the palates of his customers.

    Orégano Orejón
    This herb, a large-leafed, strong-flavored, and fuzzy variety of oregano called orégano orejón (big-ear oregano), is unusual even in Mexico. Mexico Cooks! once had a pot of it, but the plant has unfortunately gone to the great beyond.  I'd love to have another pot of it.

    Standard oregano is quite common in Mexican cooking. It can be used either fresh or dried. A small pot of oregano in a sunny spot of your kitchen garden will usually be plenty for all your cooking needs. If you live in a place where the growing season is short, harvest oregano periodically through the summer, tie the stems in small bunches, and hang upside down in a dark place to dry. It dries very fast and retains most of its aroma and flavor. Discard the stems and store the crisp leaves in an airtight, lightproof containers.

    Because the growing season in many parts of Mexico is almost year-round, I can always cut a fresh sprig of oregano or two to use when making spaghetti sauce, pescado a la veracruzana, (fish prepared in the style of Veracruz) or other tomato-based sauces. I wash the sprigs and either strip off the leaves into the pot or put the entire sprig into the sauce for seasoning.

    Mexican Basil 1
    In Mexico, albahaca (basil) is used primarily in Italian restaurants and pizza shops, although Genovese basil is all but unknown here.  However, Mexican basil is widely grown and used in an unusual way: many small businesses put a pot of growing basil just outside the front door to their shops.  Why?  The creencia (belief) is that a flower pot filled with an albahaca plant will draw clients and money to the business.

    Romero Rosemary 1
    Romero (rosemary).  This non-native herb is used very little in Mexico's cuisines.  However, some 'modern Mexican' chefs are making cold rosemary infusions to be drunk either before or with a meal.

    The Mexican kitchen uses a wide range of other herbs. The Spanish names read like a mysterious litany: epazote, estragón, hoja santa, hierbabuena; comino, clavo, and romero. In English, they are (in order) wormseed, tarragon, holy leaf, mint, cumin, cloves, and rosemary.

    Mercado 100 Epazote
    Epazote
    grows wild all over Mexico and in parts of the United States. Several months ago I paid ten pesos (approximately 50 cents USD) at a tianguis (street market) for a pot of it to plant in my garden. As I was carrying the pot home, my neighbor, doña Mago, saw me and exclaimed, "Porque compraste eso?" ("Why did you buy that?").

    "Well, you know" I answered, "I like it to cook in my beans, to make quesadillas, for the flavor—"

    "No, no, no, amiga!" she cried (always looking out for me), and pointed a finger toward the corner. "It grows up through the cracks in the sidewalk just down the street. You should have asked me to show you where to find it. You could have saved your money. When I want some, I just go over there and cut a piece." It's true. When I was out for a walk the next day, I noticed for the first time the epazote plant she had mentioned.

    Regardless of my profligate waste of ten pesos, I do like to cook a big sprig of epazote in a pot of beans. The herb is originally from Mexico and Central America. The indigenous language name that was given to epazote is derived from the Nahuatl words 'epti' and 'zotle': the combined word means 'skunk sweat'. As you can imagine, the herb has a very strong and distinctive flavor. According to Mexican kitchen lore, epazote also has anti-flatulent properties, which is why it might be smart to add it to the boiling bean pot.

    Tamales de Pollo Guajillo Cebolla Titita
    Veracruz-style tamal ready to wrap in its hoja de plátano (banana leaf)–the leaf is the flat, dark green part under the masa (corn dough).  Carmen Titita Ramírez Degollado, owner of the El Bajío restaurant chain in Mexico City, was giving me instructions on how to make this style tamal.

    Banana leaves are used for wrapping meats to prepare barbacoa (southeastern Mexican barbecue, cooked in a pit) and for wrapping and flavoring tamales from Veracruz and Oaxaca, in southeastern Mexico.  Another plant used to give uncommon seasonings to Oaxacan cuisine is hoja de aguacate (avocado leaf). You won't be able to run right out to your nearest Safeway or HEB store to find either of these. If you live in an area where there's a large Asian population, you'll find packages of frozen banana leaves in any well-stocked Asian food market. As for avocado leaves—well, the only avocado leaf that gives anise flavor to a dish is aguacate criollo, a kind of avocado native to Mexico and doesn't grow elsewhere. Unfortunately there's no seasoning substitute for them; the standard Hass avocado leaf has no flavor.

    Hoja Santa
    Hoja santa
    (holy leaf) is also known as acuyo.

    Hoja santa is used extensively in Mexican cooking. It's a large, heart-shaped leaf that comes from a tall, bushy plant—a plant that will take over the garden space that it's planted in and then some, if you let it. It's a native of Mexico and has medicinal properties as well as seasoning uses. The flavor of hoja santa is reminiscent of anise, and it combines exceptionally well with fish or chicken. 

    As you can see, Mexican home cooking is far more than tacos and enchiladas. The more unusual kitchen herbs of Mexican cuisine add intense flavor without adding that blast of spiciness that we have so often mistaken for the only seasoning of Mexico.

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

  • What’s in Season in Mexico’s Markets This July?

    Mercado de Sonora Calabaza
    At the Mercado de Sonora in Mexico City, this gigantic freshly cut squash looks more like a huge flower. The squash, an extremely hard-shelled variety known as calabaza de Castilla (Castilian squash), was approximately two feet in diameter! Behind it are plátanos machos (plaintains). The squash, carefully cut in half to show its beautiful flesh and seeds, is resting on taro root rhizomes.

    Those of you who live somewhere outside Mexico and are enjoying seasonal fresh fruits and vegetables right now might be surprised to learn that even in Mexico, where the growing season can be year-round, there are times when it's the season for (insert name of item here) and we all rush to buy what's new in our markets. Whether Mexico Cooks! shops at a tianguis (street market), at an enclosed municipal market, or at a modern supermarket, seasonal fruits and vegetables are must-haves–otherwise, they won't be back in the markets till next year.

    Mercado de Jamaica Nopales
    The most recently arrived seasonal fruit for summer 2021 is the tuna (prickly pear cactus fruit).  Available by the ton from late June until sometime in September, the tuna is considered to be Mexico's national fruit.  It even appears on Mexican flag!  You can see how it grows: that's a nopal cactus paddle, with tunas growing around the outside edge. More are piled up in the boxes. The spiny, thick green peel encloses a marvelous fruit.  

    Mercado de Jamaica Tuna Pelada
    Here's a tuna that I just peeled.  Peel-and-eat, seeds and all.  Cut the ends from the tuna, make a lengthwise slit down one side of the skin, and with your fingers, simply pull the skin away from the flesh.  Chilled, the sweet, crisp tuna flesh is as refreshing as watermelon–and similarly textured. A longtime friend of mine, don Baldomero (QEPD), used to tell me, "Cristina, chickens eat little stones to help their digestion.  We Mexicans eat tunas!"

    Hongos Silvestres Morilla Mercado Jamaica
    Can you even believe it?  The cool, refreshing rainy season in central Mexico means wild mushrooms!  The season is just beginning.  I bought these glorious fresh morels at a municipal market where I often take touring foodies. Women from small towns in mountainous areas around Mexico City forage for these and other mushrooms (chanterelles and lobster mushrooms, anyone?) and sell them at local markets.  These morels were so inexpensive (80 pesos the kilo–about $4.00USD) that I bought a kilo (2.2 pounds) and gave half to my neighbor.

    Hongos Silvestres Mercado Santo Nin?o Morelia
    What you may know as lobster mushrooms (Hypomyces lactifluorum) are called trompa de puerco (pig snout) here in central Mexico. Contrary to its mushroom name, this is actually a fungus that attacks a kind of wild white mushroom, deforming it into the delicacy you see in the picture. These do sometimes appear at farmers' markets in the USA, but prepare to pay through the snout for them: upwards of $30.00USD per pound.  Here, they're a tenth that price.

    Flor de Calabaza Mercado Paracho  Michoaca?n
    These enormous just-cut flor de calabaza (squash blossoms) appear in Mexico's markets as the plants are setting their fruit.  The Purépecha indigenous woman in the photo has brought her flowers to sell on the street in Paracho, Michoacán.  Tidbit of information: only the male blossoms are cut for eating; the female flowers, notable by the spherical beginning of a squash at the base of each flower, are left on the vine to bear fruit.

    DF Mangos Parai?so Mercado Coyoaca?n
    Mangos!  It's still mango season in Mexico, and the varieties are many.  These are Paraíso (aka Hayden): about five inches long and plump as can be, the flesh is tender, sweet, and incredibly popular as a snack.  Mangos are the most-cultivated fruit in the world, with India leading the way in mango cultivation!

    Mango Flowers  Pa?tzcuaro Feb 2011
    Here's a ready-to-eat mango-on-a-stick, offered by a street vendor in Pátzcuaro, Michoacán.  Spritzed with a little jugo de limón (juice of the Key lime), sprinkled with a big pinch of salt, and dusted with crushed, dried, red chile–absolutely marvelous.  People in Mexico look forward all year long to the several months of mango season.

    Papaya
    July is also papaya season.  This variety, the usual one that we see in Mexico, is the Carica papaya–otherwise known as the Maradol.  Ranging in size from about eight inches long to a jumbo-size foot and a half, the Maradol papaya has very thin orange skin, meaty, deep orange flesh and usually a zillion firm black seeds, each about half the size of a small pea.  Eat this fruit any time: diced for breakfast, in a smoothie, or accompany your comida (main meal at midday) with a refreshing agua fresca de papaya–a papaya fruit water.

    Limo?n Criollo
    Limón criollo: Mexico's small spherical 'native' limones are known in the United States as Key limes.  These limones aren't really native to Mexico; they originated in Asia and were brought here by the Spanish nearly 500 years ago. Available all year and used ubiquitously for everything from squeezing onto fresh fruit to squeezing into your bowl of caldo de pollo (chicken soup) to spritzing onto your hands for slicking down your head of unruly hair, these green to greenish-yellow limones are available all year long.  July is their peak season, though. Their flavor is completely different from either the lime OR the lemon; oddly enough, neither Persian limes (the large oval green ones) nor Eureka lemons (the large oval yellow ones) are grown for the fresh fruit market in Mexico.  Once in a great while we see them imported.

    Sandi?a
    Last, the sandía (watermelon).  Available all over Mexico and in season right this minute, the sweetness of the fruit is as refreshing as a cool shower.  Native to somewhere in Africa–there's lots of controversy about where–and over 5000 years old, Mexico's watermelon is grown primarily in this country's western and eastern coastal states.

    Paracho Fruta con Avejas
    Fresh mango, papaya, and watermelon, ready to be seasoned just the way you like them.

    Here in Mexico, many tropical fruits are eaten sprinkled with salt, crushed, dried red chile pepper, and a squirt or two of limón.  If you've never tried it this way, you'll be surprised at how this multi-level flavor combination changes a standard sweet fruit experience to a rush of OH MY GOODNESS! in your mouth.  Many years ago, when my elderly mother visited me in Mexico, I presented her with an already-seasoned breakfast plate of fresh ripe-picked pineapple from Veracruz, ripe-picked strawberries from Michoacán, ripe-picked papaya from Chiapas, and field-ripened cantaloupe from Mexico's west coast.  Always an adventurous eater, she gobbled it right down and sighed in contentment.  She said, "Cristina, I've never really understood tropical fruit before.  It needs all those seasonings to make it just perfect."  My mother was right.

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

  • The Perfect Ending to Your Meal :: Gelatina, the Most-Eaten Dessert in Mexico

    3-D Flores de Gelatina
    Three-dimensional flowers made of gelatin, by my friend Irene Martínez.  Irene creates these flowers inside a square or circular shape–each petal formed by injecting a gelatin of a different color into the main shape.  Her work is almost too beautiful to eat!

    Whether you're having a midday meal at a traditional Mexican restaurant anywhere in the República or celebrating at a private party at the home of Mexican friends, you can be almost 100% sure that a prominent item on the dessert menu will be gelatins. Outside a schoolyard, students on break line up for a gelatin snack.  As you browse the produce at any town's tianguis (street market) or elbow your way through the crowds at a fiesta patronal (patron saint's celebration), you'll see vendors selling plastic cups and glasses of—you guessed it, jewel-colored gelatin desserts. Gelatina is a shimmering sweet fact of life in Mexico, popular with young and old alike.

    What is this Mexican obsession with a food that smacks of 1950s Middle America? Delight in gelatin desserts has been prevalent in Mexico for years; marketing experts here report that it's eaten daily in nearly 90% of Mexican homes. Mexicans consume more gelatin desserts than any other country in the world—three times the quantity of gelatin consumed in the United States alone. In restaurants, the dessert tray will almost always include a variety of gelatin desserts. When Señora Fulana (Mrs. So-and-So) is invited to a party at the home of her best friend, it's very traditional for her to take along a gelatin dessert, all fancied-up and ready for the admiration of the rest of the attendees. At a birthday party, the dessert of preference is rarely cake and ice cream. It's almost always a plate of cake and a jiggling serving of gelatin, which requires no refrigeration to maintain its shape.

    There are far more ways to prepare gelatin desserts in Mexico than your mother's Jell-O™ mixed with fruit cocktail or shredded celery and carrots. Some of the desserts are prepared with water, some with milk, and some are prepared as a layered combination of both.  Some are major productions involving hours of labor intensive preparation time.

    Fruit_gelatin_3
    My friend Sra. Abundis prepared this clear gelatina.  It's approximately 15" in diameter and stuffed with fresh red and green grapes, canned pineapple, and peaches.

    Tiger_gelatina 
    Sra. Abundis and Cristina prepared and painted this marvelous tiger gelatina for a child's birthday party.

    Several months ago it was my task to prepare individual serving cups of gelatin for a two-year-old neighbor's birthday party—it seemed like I made hundreds. I thought it would be a complicated and difficult project, but it turned out to be quite a lot of fun. After asking another neighbor's advice, I learned that it's possible to buy powdered gelatin at any dulcería (candy store) or grocery store. The variety of available flavors is amazing: in addition to the ordinary strawberry, lime, and orange, I also found pistachio, almond, tamarindo, peach, and, of all things, sherry.

    While I could have kept my project simple, I decided to get fancy. No single-flavor cups of gelatin for this party! I read the directions printed on each bag and learned to prepare this flavor with water, that one with milk. I combined a layer of strawberry (prepared with water) with a layer of pistachio (prepared with milk). Recklessly, I disregarded the instructions to use water to prepare the peach flavor and used milk instead, combining an opaque peach-flavored layer with a clear orange-flavored layer.

    Gelatina_pinar
    Commercially made in Guadalajara for sale in supermarkets, this three-layer single-serving gelatina includes a fruit layer (complete with a prune and its pit), a milk-based layer, and a clear layer.  The gelatina comes with its own tiny yellow plastic spoon.  These 200 gram gelatins are prepared with preservatives and artificial coloring.  Each one costs 7.1 pesos, or 65 cents US.

    Pride Gelatin  Amando Caputo 1
    Home-made layered gelatin prepared by Amanda Caputo, especially for Pride Month 2021!  

    It's so simple. Of course you can do this at home, even North of the Border. Just buy two different flavors of your favorite brand of gelatin dessert powder, some four-ounce plastic glasses, and have at it. Prepare one flavor and fill each glass to the half-way point. Refrigerate and allow that flavor to set. Prepare the second flavor, using either milk or water, pour it on top of the already jelled flavor, and refrigerate until set.

    One traditional recipe is for Mousse de Rompope (eggnog-flavored gelatin dessert). It is so delicious that it bears repeating now.

    Rompope (rohm-POH-pay) Mousse with Strawberry Sauce

    The mousse:
    2 envelopes of unflavored gelatin
    1/4 cup water
    1 cup heavy cream
    2 cups rompope (Mexican eggnog flavored liqueur)
    1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
    4 egg whites

    In a small bowl, sprinkle the gelatin onto the water and let stand until absorbed, about five minutes. Meanwhile, heat the cream slightly in a small saucepan. (Do not boil.) Remove from heat and stir in the gelatin, mixing well to dissolve. Strain into a bowl; add the rompope and vanilla and mix well. Set aside.

    In a large bowl, beat the egg whites until they form stiff peaks. Fold in the eggnog mixture, and then pour into a lightly greased 1.5 quart ring-mold, bowl or specialty pan. Refrigerate at least four hours, preferably overnight.

    Strawberry Sauce:
    1 pound strawberries, stems removed
    2 tablespoons sugar
    1 tablespoon almond extract, anisette or Frangelica (hazelnut flavored liqueur)

    Place strawberries, sugar and flavoring in a bowl and let stand for two hours. Purée in a blender, strain and set aside.

    Just before serving, remove the mousse from its mold and drizzle with strawberry sauce. Garnish with slightly sweetened whipped cream. If desired, the mousse can be molded with a graham cracker crust.

    The preparation of gelatin desserts has been raised to a fine art in Mexico. Special classes in gelatin preparation fascinate housewives and give rise to thriving cottage industry here. Recipes metamorphose from the relatively simple preparations in the preceding recipes to the most elaborate of flavor and design combinations. Recently, the craze for making individual clear gelatin desserts which contain flowers also made of gelatin has hit Mexico like a bombshell.

    Flower_gelatina
    Flower gelatins like this one, made and copywrited by the Abundis family, are called gelatinas encapsuladas.  The flowers are made with a syringe.  Neither Sra. Abundis nor Cristina took classes in making the flowers, although many handicrafts schools and individuals offer those courses.

    This week I was fortunate to spend some time with Sra. Abundis and her daughter, mi tocaya (my namesake) Cristina, who operate a small home-based business in Guadalajara.  The Abundis family invited me to come watch and take pictures as they prepared special gelatinas for a child's birthday party.   Mother and daughter have worked together for the last two to three years, preparing made-to-order gelatins for birthdays, baptisms, girls' fifteenth birthday parties, baby showers, engagement parties, and weddings.

    The gelatina personality of the day was Spiderman.  Cristina explained that the gelatin for the Spiderman mold and many more are milk-based, while other gelatins are water-based.  Milk gives the gelatina a more nutritious aspect than does plain water and also makes Spiderman's features show up better after they're painted.

    Ingredients
    In the Abundis kitchen, Spiderman is fresh out of the mold.  A selection of milk ingredients is lined up behind him, along with a small plate full of individual-serving Spiderman heads.

    Sra. Abundis showed me the basic ingredients for the dessert; once the basics are assembled, they're flavored with vanilla.  Spiderman is prepared with powdered milk.  Other gelatinas are made with sweetened condensed milk or with evaporated milk.  The Abundis family uses pure cane sugar and unflavored gelatin for its desserts.  No preservatives are added.  These home-prepared gelatinas must be consumed within 48 hours of their preparation.

    Many fancy gelatinas are painted once they're chilled and set.  Spiderman is no exception.  The paints are special vegetable food coloring gel, manufactured here in Guadalajara. 

    Cristina_paints
    Sra. Abundis watches closely as Cristina paints Spiderman's red base coat.

    While Cristina painted, Sra. Abundis told me that when her relatives moved from Mexico City to Guadalajara in 1940, there was no gelatina in the city.  Finally the relatives found a source–one stall at the Mercado Corona in Guadalajara's Centro Histórico sold it.

    Spidermans_eyes
    Cristina starts the initial work with black gel food coloring, outlining Spiderman's eyes.  She holds a licenciatura (bachelor of arts) in graphic design from the University of Guadalajara.

    "The gelatina has to be very cold in order to paint it," Cristina commented.  "If it's not as cold and firm as possible, the paint will run."  Spiderman stayed briefly in the freezer between coats of food coloring gel.

    Spiderman_with_threads
    Spiderman's intricate thread work is complete.

    I asked Sra. Abundis and Cristina which molds are most popular for parties. "Right now, Spiderman is the one all the kids want.  Of course they also like Buzz Lightyear, Sponge Bob, all the Disney princesses, and Barbie.  The old favorites like Winnie the Pooh, Mickey Mouse, and Tweetie Bird are always popular."

    Josua_3 
    Josua Isai Abundis Linares, Cristina's nearly six year old nephew, participated eagerly in the time I spent with his family.  He and I both anticipated our dessert: one of the individual Spiderman heads.

    Cristina added, "For adult parties like weddings and baby showers, people want gelatinas encapsuladas, the ones with the flowers, to accompany their special cakes.  And it's funny, the kids gobble down their gelatinas, but the adults want to save theirs.  The flowers are so beautiful."

    Spiderman_finished
    Cristina shows off the finished product: Spiderman in person!  Sra. Abundis painted the blue base.  The cost of this fantastic super hero is 130 pesos, approximately $11.50 USD.

    "The people who ordered this Spiderman for their child's party will pick it up late this afternoon.  The party is tomorrow."  Cristina was happy that she finished the painting with no smears.  

    For dessert after your midday meal, for a snack or for a light supper, sweet wiggly gelatina satisfies every time. Cooling and slithery, a gelatina is just the ticket when you need a little something, but you don't want too much.

    They knew what they were talking about, way back then, when they said, "There's always room for…"

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

  • Caldo de Res, Otherwise Known As Cocido

    Cocido Cocina?ndose 1
    A big pot of cocido, simmering last week in the Mexico Cooks! kitchen.

    Nearly 40 years ago, long before the website Mexico Cooks! was a possibility–when I was just beginning to learn Spanish and some simple things about the totally-new-to-me Mexican kitchen, I would occasionally hear the word cocido from friends in Tijuana.  I looked it up in my dictionary.  I learned that cocido was the past participle for the verb cocer, to cook, or to boil.  The dictionary gave this example: "Estoy a dieta, solo puedo comer pollo cocido." (I'm on a diet, I can only eat cooked [boiled] chicken.)  OK!  That was easy.  But no, cocido isn't chicken.  Back to the drawing board.  For literally years I thought that cocido was a mystery dish that I would never see, understand, or taste.

    About 20 years ago, I was looking at a homestyle restaurant menu and the lightbulb finally went on in my brain.  I asked the waiter for a bowl of caldo de res (beef and vegetable soup), and he nodded as he wrote the order–and said, "Cocido para usted, señora."  Wait!  What?  He smiled and said, Sí, cocido.  O como dijo usted, caldo de res."  ('Yes, 'cocido', or as you said"–well, you get it.)  Like many things in Spanish, this is an example of their being more than one word for the same thing.  Part of cultural literacy is learning what is colloquially used as a name for something that also has a more formal name. 

    Now that I knew what cocido is, I found someone to teach me how to make it, and today–if you don't know how already–I'm going to teach you.  It's the simplest thing in the world, very healthy, and truly a Mexican home staple.  An all-but-boiling bowlful is just the ticket for a warming meal in the winter, or conversely, a cooling meal when the weather is hot.

    Cocido (Caldo de Res) from Michoacán

    Ingredients
    Medium white onion, coarsely chopped
    1/2 head of garlic (sliced horizontally across the head, skin and all)
    1 medium bay leaf
    2-3 Tbsp sea salt
    4-5 liters cold water
    1 kilo (2.2 pounds) meaty, bone-in chambarete (beef shank), cut across the bone
    1 kilo chuck meat, in large cubes
    .5 kilo (1 pound) bone-in costilla de res (meaty beef ribs), cut into 2" to 3" pieces

    3 or 4 medium carrots, peeled and cut into rounds
    250gr green beans, ends removed and each bean cut or broken in half
    3 or 4 large potatoes, peeled and cut into chunks or thick slices
    1 middle-size chayote, cut into eighths, seed and all
    1 small chile serrano, slit from tip almost to the stem end (optional)
    4 small calabacitas (or zucchini), cut into thick slices
    A quarter kilo (half pound) white cabbage, coarsely cut into chunks
    A good-size fistful of cilantro, stems and all
    5 or 6 sprigs of fresh hierbabuena (mint, and optional but you will love the flavor it adds)
    2 or 3 ears of fresh corn, each ear cut into thirds (optional)

    Special equipment
    A 12-to-14 liter lidded pot 
    Long wooden spoon 

    Cocido Water Boiling 1
    Bring 4 or 5 liters water, the onion, the half garlic head, the salt, and the bay leaf to a boil.  Turn the heat down to a simmer.  When the meat begins to produce foam on the surface of the water, scoop out and discard the foam.  This will clarify your beef broth.

    Cocido Chambarete 1
    A portion of the beef and its trimmings, rinsed, patted dry, and ready to go in the pot.

    Cocido Chambarete al Agua 1
    One piece at a time, quickly add the beef to the boiling water.  In just a minute or two, the beef will take on a deep brown color.  After skimming away the foam, allow the beef to simmer for about two hours.

    Ejote
    Remove the ends of the green beans and cut or break each one in half.

    Cocido Calabacita y Zanahoria 1
    Carrots and calabacita (zucchini), ready to go in the pot.

    Cocido Chayote 1
    When you're ready to chop the chayote, try to pierce the skin with your fingernail.  If it pierces easily, there's no need to peel the chayote, just chop it skin and all.  The seed is flat, round, white and soft.  The whitest part of the already cut chayote in the photograph is the seed–your knife will slide right through it, no need to remove it and cut it separately.  Now, let's chop the other half of this chayote!

    Cocido Col 1
    Coarsely chop the white cabbage, or leave it in narrow wedges, as in the photograph above.

    Cocido Papa Alfa 1
    Peel and cut up the potatoes.  These are the standard white potato in Mexico: the papa Alfa.  I started with three and added another.  You can use a different kind of potato: russet, Yukon Gold, Red Bliss, whatever potato you prefer will be delicious.

    For the tomato seasoning for the broth: put the coarsely chopped tomato, the 1/4 onion, a clove of garlic, and the chile serrano (if you're using it) into your blender.  Add the 2 cups water.  Cover and blend until smooth.   Pour this mixture into the boiling pot.

    Add all of the vegetables, including the cilantro, to the pot.  Allow the pot to return just to a boil, then lower the heat to simmer and cover, leaving the cover slightly ajar.  After 15 minutes cooking, stir the pot–the vegetables will have softened enough to be completely under water.  Simmer for approximately 45 minutes.

    Correct the salt to taste. 

    Prior to serving, remove the cilantro and the mint from the pot.

    Encuentro Tortillas Infladitas
    Freshly patted tortillas, toasting on a clay comal (griddle).  They're supposed to inflate as they toast!

    Cocido Servido 1
    An all-but-overflowing bowlful of cocido.  The house smelled delicious as it cooked, and the cocido itself was wonderful.  And there's plenty left for the next few tomorrows!

    Serve with limón (Key limes) to squeeze into the broth, hot tortillas, with corn tostadas, or with toasted bolillos (white flour, super-dense Mexican rolls).

    Serves 6 to 8 as a main dish.

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

  • WE’RE BACK! It’s Time to Take a Tour with Mexico Cooks! :: Book NOW for the Dates You Want.

    Tourism to Mexico is definitely back!  After over a year of waiting for tourism to be possible again, Mexico Cooks! has recently booked and completed three tours and has more in the works.  If you'd like to visit Mexico this summer or in early fall, contact me ASAP to save the dates you'd like to travel with me.  We can tour in Michoacán–off the beaten path and fabulous–in Oaxaca, in Guadalajara, or in Mexico City: each of those cities and their surrounding towns has the GREEN LIGHT for visitors!  Make plans now so I can reserve your tour dates.  And PS–as of April 28, 2021, I am fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

    Cristina Market Tour Pa?tzcuaro
    A market tour in Pátzcuaro, Michoacán. I'm holding a mamey fruit.  The mamey's scientific name is poutería sapote.  I've never seen a mamey in the USA or in Canada, have you?  Ask me about its dark-brown seed…

    One of the great pleasures of my life is the number of tours Mexico Cooks! gives to lots of excited tourists.  Small, specialized tours are a joy to organize: the participants generally have common interests, a thirst for knowledge, and a hunger for–well, for Mexico Cooks!' tour specialties: street and municipal markets, food and the preparation of food–and of course eating!  Touring a food destination (a street market in Michoacán, an enclosed market in Guadalajara, a crawl through some Mexico City street stands, or meals in a series of upscale restaurants) is about far more than a brief look at a fruit, a vegetable, or a basket of freshly made tortillas.

    Tamal de Trigo Pátzcuaro 2012
    A Pátzcuaro street vendor holds out a partially unwrapped tamal de trigo (wheat tamal).  It's sweetened with piloncillo (Mexican raw sugar) and a few plump raisins, wrapped in corn husks, and steamed.  Taste?  It's all but identical to a bran muffin, and every tour participant enjoyed a pinch of it.

    La Conspiracio?n Aguachile de Ribeye 24-07-2021 1
    This is the single best dish I have eaten in 2021.  Aguachile de ribeye (frizzled leeks, locally grown avocado, and mildly spicy aguachile atop a large, perfectly cooked ribeye, at my favorite restaurant in Morelia, Michoacán. Order it as an appetizer to share, or as your personal main dish.  The owners say it won't be on the menu for long, so come the minute you can and we'll have our tour's opening dinner there.  Honestly, you'll crave it when you get back home!  (And no, those aren't beans on the plate–it's the knobby texture of the plate!)

    Tours Donna and Adobe in Tzintzuntzan
    A tour planned to your specifications can lead you to places you didn't know you wanted to go, but that you would not have missed for the world.  Here, Donna talks with the man who makes these enormous adobe bricks.  He let her try to pick up the laden wheelbarrow.  She could barely get its legs off the ground!  He laughed, raised the handles, and whizzed away with his load.

    DF La Ideal 3
    Several times in recent years, small groups wanted to tour traditional bakeries in Mexico City.  The photo shows one tiny corner of the enormous Pastelería La Ideal in the Centro Histórico.  Just looking at the photo brings the sweet fragrances back to mind.  And never mind the taste of the delicious pastries!

    Tours Ramon and Annabelle Canova GDL Tianguis del Sol
    Ramon and Annabelle wanted an introduction to how ordinary people live and shop in Guadalajara.  We spent a highly entertaining morning at the Tianguis del Sol, a three-times-a-week outdoor market in Zapopan, a suburb of Guadalajara.  Our first stop was for breakfast, then we shopped for unusual produce, fresh spices, and other goodies that they don't often see in their home town.  Annabelle said she felt right at home because so much of the style and flavor of this market was similar to what she experienced in the markets near her home town in the Philippines.

    Ramon and Annabelle Karne Garibaldi GDL
    We went for comida (main meal of the day, at around 3:00PM) to the original location of Guadalajara's Karne Garibaldi.  The restaurant does one thing–carne en su jugo (meat in its juice)–and does it exceptionally well.  The food is plentiful, delicious, and affordable.  The place is always packed, and usually has a line to get in!

    Tours Ramon and Annabelle Tejuinero Tlaquepaque
    Ramon wanted to try tejuino, a regional drink specialty in the Guadalajara area.  Mixed when you order it, the refreshing, barely fermented drink is thickened with a bit of masa de maíz (corn dough) and served with a pinch of salt and a small scoop of lemon ice. 

    Recorrido Nopales Encimados
    Pillars of nopal cactus paddles, each pillar taller than a man, at Mercado de la Merced, Mexico City.   La Merced is the largest retail market in Mexico, if not in all of Latin America.  It's the ultimate market experience and just a partial tour takes the better part of a morning.  Comfortable walking shoes are a necessity–let's go!

    Mercado SJ Lechón
    A more intimate, up-close-and-personal Mexico City market tour takes us through the Mercado San Juan.  The San Juan is renowned for its gourmet selection of meats, fish and shellfish, cheeses, and wild mushrooms–among a million other things you might not expect to find.

    Bazar Sábado Pepitorias 2
    Pepitorias are a sweet specialty of Mexico's capital city.  Crunchy and colorful obleas (wafers) enclose sticky syrup and squash seeds.  Mexico Cooks!' tour groups usually try these at the Bazar Sábado in San Ángel.

    Tours Charming Woman and Piano Tapetes Morelia
    Lovely and fascinating people and events are around almost any Mexican corner.  The annual Festival Internacional de Música de Morelia opens every year with several blocks of carpets made of flowers.  Residents of Patamban, Michoacán work all night to create the carpets for the festival.  This piano is made entirely of plant material.  Enlarge any picture for a closer view.

    Tours FIMM Tapete Blanco y Rojo 2
    Entire flowers, fuzzy pods, and flower petals are used to create the carpets' ephemeral beauty and design; these carpets last two days at most. 

    Tours Rosalba Morales Bartolo con Tania Libertad Morelia 11-17-2012
    In November 2012, one of Mexico Cooks!' tours was dazzled by a special Morelia concert given by Tania Libertad.  With Tania is Rosalba Morales Bartolo, a fabulous traditional cook from San Jerónimo Purenchécuaro, Michoacán, who presented the artist with various handcrafted items from the state–including the lovely coral necklace and rebozo (shawl) that Tania is wearing.

    Cristina con Cola de Res 1
    What in the world is THAT?  A tour at a major Mexico City market offered this laugh to my clients: me swinging a cow tail!  No matter where we start our tour and no matter what we plan together for your itinerary, a Mexico Cooks! tour always includes a terrific surprise or two, special memories to take home, and the thirst for more of Mexico.  

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

  • Adobo de Cerdo Huasteco :: Pork in Huasteca 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 tomatoes, 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.