Category: Mexican Markets

  • In Memoriam :: Maestros Yuri de Gortari and Edmundo Escamilla, Ever in Our Hearts

    Originally published in 2011, it's time to remind ourselves of the lifelong work done by these two men: Yuri de Gortari and Edumundo Escamilla.  Their contribution to the culinary history and traditions of Mexico are not likely to be met by others in the field.  They were unique and a treasure, and I was so fortunate to call them my friends.

    Recorrido Edmundo en Plática
    Standing at the doors of Mexico City's Catedral Metropolitana, maestro Edmundo Escamilla offers fascinating historical background about the pre-Hispanic marketplace at Tenochtitlán, the capital of the Mexica/Aztec empire.  That enormous marketplace operated where the Zócalo (Mexico City's main square and the current site of the cathedral) now exists.

    A few weeks ago, Mexico Cooks! received the announcement of a recorrido (walking tour) through Mexico City's enormous Mercado de la Merced.  The tour would be given by none other than my good friends Edmundo Escamilla and Yuri de Gortari, the guiding lights who were until their deaths in charge of the Escuela de Gastronomía Mexicana.  After I checked to make sure my favorite walking shoes were in good repair, I emailed back: Amigos, cuentan conmigo! (Friends, count on me!)

    Mercado Tenochtitlán
    Diego Rivera's mural of the great market at pre-Hispanic Tenochtitlán, painted in 1945.  Click on any photo for a better view.

    Twenty of us hardy souls met at the front door to Mexico City's Catedral Metropolitana for a history lesson to begin our tour.  Edmundo–an incredible repository of knowledge about all things Mexican–gave us a talk about the ancient market of Tenochtitlán, about food records just after the Spanish arrived in the New World, and about the evolution of farm-to-market transportation.

    For example, the Mexica (the indigenous rulers who later became known to the world as the Aztecs) were the businessmen and tax collectors of that era.  They kept records of all that was bought and sold in the market at Tenochtitlán, and demanded high tributario (tax payment) from the market vendors.  When the Spanish conqueror Hernán Cortés realized how the Mexica were conducting their lucrative business, he decreed that taxes must no longer be paid to the Mexica.  Instead, the taxes were suddenly payable to none other than Cortés.

    Transportation of goods to market has also changed enormously.  Today, we are accustomed to seeing huge amounts of produce, meats, fish, and every other sort of goods delivered to La Merced by trucks and other vehicles.  Back in the days of the Mexica, on the other hand, the southern part of what is now Mexico City (notably what are now Chalco and Xochimilco) were connected to the marketplace of Tenochtitlán by waterways.  Produce grown on the chinampas (island farms) of Xochimilco's canals was delivered to the central market by boat.

    Recorrido Metro La Merced
    The huge market is large and important enough to have its own Metro station, on Line 1 (the pink line).  Notice that the icon (to the left in the photo) for the Metro stop is a crate of fruit.

    From the Cathedral, we boarded the Metro at the Zócalo, rode to Pino Suárez, and transferred to the pink line, traveling just one more stop to La Merced.  When we entered the market, Yuri took the lead, we twenty participants trailed out behind like ducklings after their mother, and Edmundo brought up the rear.   Each of us was armed with our cellular phone.  In case one or more of us inadvertently became lost from the group, a simple call to the leaders' cell phone brought one of them to the rescue.  The market is unbelievably enormous and packed with people.  It has narrow aisles that were easy to miss when the front man turned left or right, the rear guard was straggling behind, and suddenly uh oh…where did they go?  Fortunately the market is well-marked with aisle and booth numbers, making it easy to give a coordinate and just wait a couple of minutes to be retrieved. 

    Recorrido Ajos con Yuri 2
    Yuri de Gortari (the man in the white shirt at the top right of the photo) talks with the vendor and some of the tour participants about the almost unbelievable quantities of different kinds of garlic for sale at this single booth. 

    No matter what you are looking for–produce of all kinds, kitchen utensils ranging from the smallest toothpick holder to the largest restaurant-size stove, household accessories like baskets, bags, and rope, or candy and other regional sweets–you are bound to find it at La Merced.  Even though Mexico Cooks! was familiar with the market from prior visits, this guided tour gave our group insights that would be impossible to understand on a solo trip.

    Let's let the diversity of the market speak for itself.

    Recorrido Moles Don Pancho
    Moles in pastes and powders at Don Pancho's puesto (stand) at La Merced.  There were easily ten other nearby stands offering tastes of every sort of mole.

    Recorrido Elotes y Granos
    Here in Mexico, it's the season for fresh corn.  This booth–and the next one, and the one after that, and the one around the corner, too–offer corn either as elotes (fresh and tender, on the cob) or already desgranado (taken off the cob).  The fresh corn kernels in the bowl weighed about 25 pounds.

    Recorrido Chiles Habanero Rojo
    Up-close-and-personal with super-spicy Red Savina chiles habaneros, which have a rating of 580,000+ on the Scoville Scale.  Bite into one at your own risk!  This variety is just an example of the many kinds of chiles available at La Merced.

    Recorrido Hoja de Aguacate 2
    Bundles of dried avocado leaves.  Pulverize some in your blender, then cook the resulting powder in a pot of beans to add the leaves' subtle anise flavor.

    Recorrido Chile Jalapeño
    Cucumbers?  No–these are stacks of neatly displayed fresh chiles jalapeños.

    Recorrido Bolsas de Ixtle
    The original eco-friendly bolsa de ixtle.  These colorfully dyed-woven ixtle shopping bags have been made of maguey cactus fiber since pre-Hispanic times.

    Recorrido Huitlacoche
    Huitlacoche (corn fungus) is one of Mexico's true delicacies.  This foot-high pile of the fungus has been removed from the fresh corn cob, but it's also available on the cob.

    Recorrido Dulces Chiquitos Surtidos
    Small candies, sold in the quantity you need–anything from 100 grams to numerous kilos.

    Recorrido Nopales Encimados
    Freshly harvested nopales (cactus paddles) stacked in pillars taller than a man.

    Recorrido Hongos Morillas
    Fresh morel mushrooms.  This sought-after mushroom grows wild in Mexico's forests and is harvested during our rainy season–from about July 1 till the beginning of November.

    Recorrido Papaloquelite
    Much used as a garnish for tacos in Mexico City and the surrounding area, the leaf of the papaloquelite is shaped like butterfly wings.  Its name is derived from the Nahuatl word papalotl (butterfly).  This native herb pre-dates the introduction of cilantro, imported by the Chinese to Mexico.

    Recorrido Jamaica Nacional y Sudan
    On the left, dried jamaica blossoms (a kind of hibiscus) grown in Mexico.  On the right, jamaica imported from the Sudan.  The prices are per quarter kilo (about one-half pound).  The unfortunate reality is that the higher-quality Mexican blossoms are more expensive than the imported version.  Most people prefer to buy Mexican-grown products, but price can be a deterrent.  These flowers are used primarily to prepare agua de jamaica, a refreshing cold drink enjoyed copiously all over the República.

    Our walking tour ended after several hours at the Mercado de la Merced.  Filled with new information and great respect for our tour guides' knowledge, I arrived at home extremely satisfied and tired to the bone.

    Recorrido Virgen de la Merced
    September 24 is the feast day of Nuestra Señora de la Merced  (Our Lady of Mercies), the patron of the Mercado de la Merced.  She is feted there every year with mariachis, flowers, and every sort of celebration.  If you are reading this on her feast day, know that Mexico Cooks! is at the market for the celebration.

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

  • Mid-October in Michoacán :: Wildflowers and Fresh Produce at Pátzcuaro’s Municipal Market

    Pa?tzcuaro Mirasoles y Milpa 1
    The area around Lake Pátzcuaro, in the state of Michoacán, bursts into wildflower bloom in late September, just as the rainy season is ending here.  The flowers are naturalized wild cosmos, known here as mirasoles ("look-at-the-sun").  Entire fields fill with swaths of these delicate flowers, turning our green countryside into a temporary sea of pink.  Behind the mirasoles is a milpa, a field of native Michoacán corn, beans, and squash.

    Pa?tzcuaro Estrella del Campo 1
    These beautiful blossoms, selling now at the municipal market in Pátzcuaro, are called estrellas del campo (stars of the field).  From the tops of the flowers to the bottom of their thin, tender stems, they measure about two and a half feet long.  Each multi-petaled bloom measure about 1.5" in diameter.  I've lived in Michoacán for a long time, but this is the first year I've seen these for sale.  We took three large bunches as a gift to a friend–at 15 pesos the bunch.  The total for a big armful of beauty was the Mexican peso equivalent of about $2.25 USD.

    Pa?tzcuaro Nanches
    Available throughout the year, the native Mexican nanche fruit is in full-blown season right now, piled high on stands around the perimeter of the Pátzcuaro municipal market and on numerous street corners all over the town.  Sold in clear plastic cups (as seen in the photo, courtesy of Healthline) or by the plastic bagful, the vendor will slather these 3/4" inch diameter fruits with jugo de limón (fresh-squeezed Key lime juice), a big sprinkle of salt, and as much highly spicy bottled salsa as your mouth can handle.  The biological name of the nanche is Byrsonima crassifolia.  The fruit is slightly sweet and mildly musty-flavored, a combination that most people love and that I regret to say is not a taste I enjoy at all.  Nanches are packed with nourishment, though–a half-cup of them will give you nearly 60% of your daily Vitamin C requirement, 41 calories, and only 9.5 grams of carbohydrates!  

    Pa?tzcuaro Ciruelas 10-2020 1
    These are jocotes (native Mexican plums), also in season now in central Mexico.  The fruit measures about two to three inches long; the flesh is either bright orange or deep red, and the flavor is marvelous.  Unfortunately the stone of this plum is almost as big as the entire fruit, and although you could eat it out of hand, the delicious jocote is most often made into an agua fresca (fresh fruit water) that is only available during the fruit's short season.  This little plum is replete with Vitamins A and C, phosphorous, iron, and calcium, and is said to work wonders with gum problems.

    Agua de Ciruela San Blas DIF Fiesta
    A bucket of freshly made agua fresca de jocote, with whole peeled plums floating on top.  It's my favorite agua fresca, and only available when these plums are in season: right now!

    Pa?tzcuaro Ani?s Silvestre Chayote Elote 2a
    Who wants to take a guess at what each of the green herbs (and the vegetable) is?  The elotes (tender fresh Pátzcuaro red corn) at the bottom of the photo were part of a small daily harvest brought to sell on the outdoor periphery of Pátzcuaro's market.  Just to the left of the corn, at the bottom of the photo, are some mint branches that the same vendor brought for sale.  But above the mint?  Click on the photo to enlarge it and you'll be able to tell that these are home-grown spiny chayotes.  You are probably familiar with the paler green smooth-skinned chayotes (mirliton in Louisiana, pear squash in other English-speaking locations).  The chayote has an interesting growing habit: unlike most squash, which grows as a vine along the ground, the chayote is airborne–its vines grow on overhead trellises and remind me of grapevines; the small squash hangs down from the vines.  It's an extremely versatile vegetable, taking on the flavors of what you cook it with.  Be sure to eat the soft, tender, flat, white seed–it's considered to be the prize part and is as delicious as the chayote itself. 

    To the right of the chayotes is a big bunch of wild anise, known in Pátzcuaro as anisillo.  Used to make the Pátzcuaro regional specialty atole de grano, this herb is tremendously flavorful.  In case you find some anisillo where you are, here's a recipe for atole de grano.  

    Atole de Grano
    (Fresh Anise-Flavored Corn Kernel Soup)

    Ingredients
    2 fresh ears of tender young corn
    2 cups fresh corn, cut from the cob
    1 bunch wild anisillo 
    3 liters water
    2 whole chiles perón (or substitute chiles poblano)
    1/2 pound recently ground corn masa (dough)–ask at the tortillería near you
    Salt to taste

    Garnishes
    1/2 medium white onion, minced
    Chile serrano or chile perón, minced
    Fresh Key limes, cut in half
    Sea salt

    Preparation
    1.  Clean the ears of corn, remove the silk and cut off the ends.  Cut each ear into three pieces.

    2.  Boil the corn on the cob AND the corn kernels in enough water, for an hour and a half or until the corn is
    tender.

    3.  Cut the stem away from the chiles, take out the seeds and veins.  Cut the chiles into smallish pieces, ready to be whizzed in the blender.

    4.  In the blender, liquify the chiles, the anisillo, and the masa with two cups of water.  Strain and add to the pot where the corn on the cob is cooking.

    5.  Allow to boil gently for about 10 to 15 minutes, until the liquid is slightly thickened.

    To serve
    1.  Place sections of the cooked corn ears into bowls.

    2.  Ladle soup and corn kernels into the bowls.

    3.  Serve with the minced onion, minced chile to taste, sea salt, and Key lime halves to squeeze into the soup.  

    Serves 2 people as a main dish, 3 as a first course.  This soup is both vegetarian and vegan, and gluten-free.

    Foto 11 Atole de Grano en Cazo
    Atole de grano, made in a cazo (large copper kettle).

    Pa?tzcuaro Chile Peron Patita de Pa?jaro Etc 1
    The vendor at this small booth at the Pátzcuaro market had an interesting variety of things for sale.  Bottom right are fresh guavas, just now coming into season.  To the left of the guavas are chiles perón (aka chiles manzano), arguably the most-used chile in this part of Michoacán.  Above the chiles perón are fresh, green chiles de árbol.  To the right are wild mushrooms known as patita de pájaro (little bird foot).  These mushrooms, growing wild in Michoacán's woods and foraged during the rainy season, make a wonderful mushroom soup.

    Pa?tzcuaro Ni?spero 10-2020 1
    These are home-grown loquats, known in Mexico as nísperos (NEE-speh-rohs).  Nísperos are local and are plentiful in markets right now.

    Pa?tzcuaro Gelatinas Yesi 10-2020 1
    Gelatin–this large cupful is called "mosaíco"–mosaic, because of its many colored cubes.  More gelatin is eaten in Mexico than in any other country of the world!  A cupful this size is usually an eat-while-you-walk snack food.  This one was made and sold from a tiny cart with no name, just to one side of the Pátzcuaro market.  The young woman selling the gelatins said her name was Yesi–I said her cart was now dubbed Gelatinas Yesi, and she laughed.

    Pa?tzcuaro Algodo?n 10-2020 1
    Just at the corner of the market, we bumped into don Rafael, who was selling–you guessed it–cotton candy.  Cotton candy HAS no season, it's always available here.  Get the blue, it will turn your lips and tongue blue as a blueberry, but just for a while.  

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

  • Thalía Barrios García and La Cocina de Humo, Oaxaca :: A Do-Not-Miss in Oaxaca’s Capital

    Thali?a Barrios 1
    Thalía Barrios García, chef and cocinera tradicional (traditional cook) and head of the kitchens at both of her restaurants: Levadura de Olla and La Cocina de Humo, both located in the Centro Historico of Oaxaca, Oaxaca de Juárez, Mexico.  Thalía was born and raised in San Mateo Yucutindoó, a town of approximately 2500 inhabitants in the Sierra Sur of the state of Oaxaca.  The town is approximately 100 kilometers (60 miles) from the capital city of Oaxaca.  Photo courtesy UTVCO

    Two months ago, I spent a week visiting many friends in the city of Oaxaca.  I was thrilled; I hadn't travelled anywhere since early 2019.  Pre-COVID, I was accustomed to travel to Oaxaca as many as six times a year, taking tour groups, attending culinary events, and generally taking my Michoacán-based, Oaxaca-related life for granted.  In March 2020, boom!  COVID's impact on Mexico–and everywhere else in the world–shut down tours, culinary events, and travel. This June, I was way beyond eager to see old friends, enjoy long comidas (comida is the afternoon main meal of the day in Mexico) with them, and have the time to visit Thalía Barrios García, the young Oaxaca culinary phenomenon, in one of her two restaurants.  She asked me to have desayuno (breakfast) with her at Cocina de Humo (the smoke kitchen) and I jumped at the chance.

    Thali?a Barrios Cocina de Humo
    La Cocina de Humo is an offshoot of her larger restaurant, Levadura de Olla (literally 'yeast for a clay pot'; in Thalía's native San Mateo Yucutindoó, bread is baked in clay pots).  At La Cocina de Humo, I was privileged to sit in the kitchen for breakfast, next to the comal (in this case, a flat handmade clay griddle seated above a wood fire).  The tiny restaurant space is specifically designed to be a copy of the home kitchens of Yucutindoó.  The photo above is the view from my seat; the comal is just to the left of the vegetables.  All photos by Mexico Cooks! unless otherwise noted.

    Thalía left her hometown when she was 18 years old, to attend culinary school.  Her parents were 100% behind her decision.  Thalía says, "My parents were always behind us kids, they wanted only the best for each of us and dreamed that we would be able to leave our town to achieve something in the wider world.  My parents said, "The only condition is that you do something chingona."  Loosely translated, that means 'badass', and in my opinion, Thalía's middle name should be chingona

    Thali?a Barrios Pastel de Elote  Atole de Pla?tano  Cafe? de Olla
    My first course included café de olla (coffee with cinnamon and other spices, middle left), atole de plátano (a thick corn-based drink, in this case including banana, right), and pastel de elote (a delicious semi-sweet cake made with fresh, early-season corn).  At the back of the photo, the cup is made to resemble the pochote tree trunk–pochote, endemic to Oaxaca and Puebla, is known in English as kapok.

    Thali?a Pochote tree Bio?sfera
    The trunk of a pochote tree.  I took the photo in the Biósfera Tehuacán-Cuicatlán, in the state of Puebla (just north of the Oaxaca state border).  You can easily see the resemblance the trunk, with its soft protuberances (they look like sharp thorns, but they're not), has to the cups used at La Cocina de Humo.  Every aspect of the pochote tree is sacred to the Maya–including to the contemporary Maya.  From its curative bark to its medicinal roots, from its profound shade to its life-giving energy, it is easy to understand why the handmade clay cups at La Cocina de Humo have the shape that they do.  

    Thali?a Barrios Caldo de Ejote de Milpa
    Caldo de ejote de milpa (broth with green beans from the milpa).  The wooden serving spoons for each of these dishes were large, and the handmade bowls themselves were small, thank goodness.  I'm pretty sure that Thalía sent me everything on the menu to taste!    

    Thali?a Barrios Calabacitas Criollas con jitomate rin?o?n
    Calabacitas criollas (diced little squash, similar to zucchini) with jitomate riñón (kidney-shaped tomatoes particular to Oaxaca), seasoned with d
    elicious spices.  All of the dishware at La Cocina de Humo is handmade clay, designed by Thalía and some women potters in San Mateo Yucutindoó.

    Thali?a Barrios Barbacoa de Olla
    Barbacoa de olla (pot-style barbacoa) made of pork, chicken, the leaf of avocado criollo, chile guajillo and chile ancho.

    After finishing the equivalent to a bachelor's degree at the culinary school that is part of Oaxaca's Universidad Tecnológica de los Valles Centrales, Thalía worked in various restaurants until she realized that her strongest point was the traditional kitchen, and not just any traditional kitchen, but the dishes she originally learned from her grandmother, her mother, and her aunts. I first met Thalía several years ago, when she was cooking under the baton of my beloved friend Celia Florián, the cocinera tradicional who is head of the kitchen at Oaxaca's internationally renowned Restaurante Las 15 Letras.  In 2019, Thalía opened her first restaurant, Levadura de Olla. By 2021, she was considered to be the most outstanding participant in the awards of the 50 Best Restaurants of Latin America, given that year in the city of Oaxaca.  And since then, the reviews have been pure praise, pure delight, for her cooking, her restaurants' style, and her own chingona self since the beginning.

    Thali?a Barrios Mole Negro con Pla?tano Frito
    A newly made taco filled with house-style mole negro (black mole) and deliciously fried sweet plátano macho–super-ripe plantain.  This was course number three or four–nothing was large, nothing was overpowering, and every single taste of every single thing was marvelous.

    Thali?a Barrios Estufa
    Stove-side still life with jitomate riñón, at La Cocina de Humo.

    Thali?a Barrios Huevo Revuelto en Salsa de Molcajete
    On reflection, I think this was my favorite of the many separate platillos (prepared dishes) that I ate (at least some of) for breakfast.  This is simplicity itself: a freshly-made salsa de molcajete (a table salsa in which all the comal-roasted ingredients are ground together in a volcanic stone mortar, with a volcanic stone pestle).  While the salsa is hot from the roasting, raw eggs are scrambled into it.  The ingredients were that old cliché: much more than the sum of their parts. I'd have it again tomorrow, and the next day.  And oh joy, I've been invited back to Oaxaca this coming October.  Can you guess where I'll be having breakfast?

    Thali?a La Tienda de Ri?o
    Don't miss the store (Tienda Piedra de Río) in the front of the building where La Cocina de Humo is located.  The pottery is the same as that used in the restaurant, those wonderful pochote cups are available there, and lots of other beautiful Oaxaca kitchen and household things are there as well.  

    I recently read a quote that I love, dedicated to La Cocina de Humo.  I hope you'll love it too, and I hope you'll go to eat there as soon as you possibly can. 

    "Si dios (el qué sea de su confianza) bajara al mundo de los mortales, sería para comer aquí."
    "If god (whichever god you might trust) were to come from Heaven to this mortal world, it would be to eat here."
    ________________________________________

    La Cocina de Humo
    Calle Murguía 304
    Near the corner of Calle Juárez
    Centro Histórico
    Oaxaca 68000
    Oaxaca de Juárez
    Tel: +52 951 169 8076
    Hours: Monday through Saturday 9:00AM – 9:00PM
               Closed Sundays
               Reservation necessary

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

  • Dando la Vuelta en la Ciudad de México :: Roaming Around in Mexico City, Part Four

    Casa Barragán
    Roof at Casa Luis Barragán, Calle General Francisco Ramírez 12 and 14, Col. Daniel Garza, Distrito Federal.  If you are at all interested in modern Mexican architecture, this museum is a must-see.  Arquitecto Luis Barragán changed the face of Mexican building, pioneering in the use of forms and space as joining both utility and beauty.

    Baby Bok Choy Mercado San Juan
    Baby bok choy at the Mercado San Juan.  Each of these little bok choys is about six inches long, perfect for steaming.  Most of the most-used fresh Asian vegetables (long beans, bitter melon, snow peas, bok choy of two or three kinds, and more) are regularly available at this downtown Mexico City market. 

    Tocinera La Guadalupana
    One of my favorite market stall signs: Bacon Shop "La Guadalupana", a Mercado de Jamaica pork butcher puesto (booth) that sells far more than bacon.  And the happy little pigs are mariachis.

    Knit Trees Condesa
    Just around the corner from Mexico Cooks!' former Mexico City headquarters, this tree wears a multi-colored and textured knit jacket.

    Oaxaca Tlacolula Mamey
    A wheelbarrow full of mamey (pouteria sapota), perfectly ripe, beautifully cut, creamy sweetness.  The mamey looks like a small fuzzy football and tastes like a baked sweet potato.  Sunday market, Tlacolula, Oaxaca.

    Metates Oaxaquen?os Tlacolula
    Metates (the rectangular grinding stone) and their metlapiles (the rolling pin), used for grinding everything from chocolate to chiles, beans to edible bugs.  One doesn't use the same metate for everything; separate metates keep the flavors of each of your ingredients pure.  

    Fresh Paint Chilpancinto
    Pink graffiti on a window.  The little sign reads, "Fresh paint".  Click on any image to make it bigger, for a better view.

    Jitomate en las Cenizas
    Tomatoes for salsa, roasting directly on the red-hot embers.  Private home, Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca.  "Sí, siempre los asamos así.  Agarran más sabor." ('Yes, we always roast them this way.  They take on more flavor.')

    Puebla Sello Q para tortillas
    Tortillas freshly toasted on the comal (griddle).  These tortillas, prepared in Puebla by traditional cooks from Querétaro, bear a "Q" stamp indicating their place of origin.  In long-ago years, tortillas were often stamped with similar carved wooden stamps.  The stamps were carved with pictures or letters that identified the owners.  The dye, based on the wild plant called muictle, is steeped in water to bring out the color used to stamp tortillas.

    Morels Mercado San Juan
    Fresh morel mushrooms, Mercado de San Juan, Mexico City.  Morels are available at this market fresh during the rainy season, and dried all year long.

    Antropología Gárgola de Mono
    A pre-Hispanic waterspout in the shape of a monkey's head.  Museo Nacional de Antropología, Mexico City.

    Mercado Benito Juárez Jícaras
    Jícaras (hand-carved or painted drinking cups from the tecomate tree), Mercado Benito Juárez, Oaxaca.

    Mitsu Gato
    Misitu, the Purépecha word for cat.  Mural detail, Santa Fe de la Laguna, Michoacán.

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

  • Dando la Vuelta en la Ciudad de México :: Roaming Around in Mexico City, Part Two

    Pozole Blanco Clandestino 5-2015
    This white pozole from Mexico's state of Guerrero ranks close to the top of Mexico Cooks!' list of best pozoles in Mexico.  The pozolería (pozole place) is right here in Mexico City–come with us next time, we go as often as we can. 

    Frutas Cubiertas
    A selection of beautiful crystallized fruits at Mercado Medellín, one of the several Mexico City markets where Mexico Cooks! takes tours.  In the photo from nine o'clock: sweet potato, pineapple, whole orange, more sweet potato, squash, and at six o'clock, chilacayote squash and another orange. The inner group consists of squash, a limón, and a fig.

    Riviera Nayarit Sangre de Cora Tequila Padrón
    Sangre de cora, a drink prepared with tequila, sweet agua de jamaica, and frothy egg white.  It's adorned with jamaica blossoms.  Jamaica is a cousin of Mexico's hibiscus; in English, it's called roselle. The drink takes its name from the Cora indigenous group, which is native to western Jalisco and the coastal state of Nayarit; the delicious drink was served to me in Mexico City at a press event for the Riviera Nayarit.

    Mercado Benito Juárez Molinillos
    They look like gears, don't they?  Actually, these are molinillos (chocolate frothers), stacked up for sale at a market.  There's nothing else like this market in all of Mexico– Mexico Cooks! would be delighted to take you along for a tour!

    Las 15 Letras Hoja Santa, Quesillo, Chapulín
    Oaxaca is filled with culinary delicacies not seen elsewhere in Mexico.  Here, a platter of Oaxaca quesillo (think string cheese, but a million times better) stuffed with tiny chapulines (grasshoppers) and rolled jelly-roll fashion in anise-flavored hoja santa (holy leaf).  This is one of the most delicious things Mexico Cooks! has eaten in 2015.  Thank you, Restaurante Las 15 Letras!

    Mercado de Jamaica Nuns
    Carmelite nuns buying carnations by the armload at Mexico City's wholesale flower market.  An entire bundle of these flowers, the size of the paper-wrapped flowers standing on the floor, will set you back about 70 pesos–less than $4.50 USD.

    Gai Lan Estilo Jing Teng
    And now for something completely different–gai lan (Chinese broccoli), stir-fried with garlic, as served at our favorite Chinese restaurant: Jing Teng.

    Curuba Mercado San Juan
    These exotic fruits from South America are curuba–banana passionfruit. Each fruit is approximately 3" long and an inch in diameter.  The sweet pulpy seeds are reminiscent of normal passionfruit, but less acidic.  The skin isn't eaten. We recently saw these at one of our favorite downtown markets.

    Mercado de Jamaica Toronja
    Look at the color of the flesh of these ruby red grapefruits!  Mexico Cooks! was particularly taken with the extraordinary cut made by the vendor to display (and give tastes of) the fruit.

    Mercado de Jamaica Nopales
    Mexico's own tuna–aka the prickly pear cactus fruit.  The market vendor who offered these for sale had brought along the entire cactus paddle to show clients how the fruit grows.

    Mercado de Jamaica Tuna Pelada
    The tuna has a zipper-skin that's so simple to peel.  Just cut off each end of the tuna, make a lengthwise slit in the skin, and peel the skin away from the flesh.  Easy-peasy!  The tuna's texture is similar to that of watermelon, the flesh is sweet and refreshing, and the seeds are swallowed. Served chilled, they're even more thirst-quenching.

    Flan from Ajijic
    From a small restaurant in the state of Jalisco, this flan napolitano con queso (flan made with cheese) is one of the best I've eaten.  My comida (main meal of the day) companion assured me that he isn't a flan fan, but one taste of this one and he said, "We should have ordered two."  More the texture of cheesecake than custard, one slice of this rich, creamy dessert was plenty for the two of us.

    Tatuaje Frida, Mano Claudia
    And finally–Frida!  This portrait of Mexico's iconic painter Frida Kahlo is actually a tattoo on the inner forearm of a young woman I saw on the sidewalk outside a market. Claudia very graciously allowed me to photograph just her arm. Here's yet another reason to spend some time with Mexico Cooks!: you never, never know what you'll see next in this enormous and enormously diversified city!  
     
    Looking for a tailored-to-your-interests specialized tour in Mexico? Click here: Tours. 

  • Dando la Vuelta en la Ciudad de México :: Roaming around in Mexico City, Part One

    Flor de Calabaza Morelia
    Mexico's summer always gives us an abundance of flor de calabaza (squash flowers) to be used in the kitchen. Prepared as sopa de guias (squash vine soup), quesadillas, or stuffed with cheese, these flowers are delicious and are readily available in many Mexican markets.  Did you know that only the male flowers are harvested?  The female flowers are left to develop squash.  

    You might like to try this Mexico Cooks! recipe in your own kitchen.

    Flor de Calabaza Estilo Cristina 
    Squash Flowers, Cristina's Style

    Ingredients

    2 large bunches flor de calabaza, washed and patted dry
    1 medium white onion
    4 chiles poblano
    1 chile serrano
    2 large russet or other large white potatoes
    Flour
    Sea salt to taste
    Vegetable oil, freshly rendered pork lard, or half vegetable oil, half bacon grease for frying.

    Procedure

    Peel and dice potatoes into 1/2" cubes.  Boil until just fork-tender.  Drain, allow to dry, and reserve.

    Roast chiles according to your preferred method until the skin is blistered and they are well-blackened.  Sweat for 10 minutes in a closed plastic bag.  Remove skin.  Slice each chile lengthwise to remove seeds.  Dice peppers in 1/2” squares. 

    Rough-chop flor de calabaza into 1 1/2" pieces.

    Dice onion into 1/2" squares.

    Mince chile serrano.

    In a large sauté pan, heat the vegetable oil until it shimmers.  While the oil is heating, shake the reserved potatoes in flour and salt in a plastic bag. 

    Sauté onions and chile serrano in oil or oil/bacon grease mixture.  Add the floured potatoes and sauté until crisp and pale golden, adding more fat if needed.  Add the diced chiles poblano and continue to sauté for about 1 minute.

    Add the flor de calabaza and sauté just until tender. 

    Add sea salt to taste.

    Serves 2-3 as a side dish.

    Bordado Oaxaca Detalle
    Late in the spring, we were invited to attend the opening of El Rebozo: Made in Mexico at Mexico City's extraordinary Museo Franz Mayer. The exhibition, which was originally mounted in London, featured both old and new rebozos (long rectangular shawls) as well as some other typical Mexican garments. One of the many rebozos in the exhibit was an exquisitely embroidered shawl from Oaxaca. This is a detail of that Oaxacan rebozo.

    Giselle Freund Evita Perón
    This photograph of Evita Perón, wife of Argentina's Juan Domingo Perón during his first term as president of that country, was part of an exhibit at Mexico City's Museum of Modern Art (MAM) during the spring and summer.  The photograph formed part of an exhibition of the works of Giselle Freund, a self-taught photographer who worked in Argentina and Mexico in the 1940s and 1950s.

    Para Machucar Chilitos
    This tiny ironwood mortar and pestle (the mortar is only about 2" high) comes from the state of Sonora, in northern Mexico.  It is made specifically for use at the table, for an individual diner to grind one or two chiles chiltepín, which are highly spicy and famously used to season certain dishes from the cuisine of that state.  The grinder is passed from person to person at the table, along with a dish of whole chile chiltepín.

    Chiltepin-chiles
    Chile chiltepín from Sonora.  Each chile is tiny but extremely picante. Photo courtesy Hunter Angler Gardener Cook.

    Ceremonial Tortillas from Guanajuato
    Beautiful ceremonial tortillas from the state of Guanajuato.  The tortillas are made in the usual way and are then stamped prior to baking with a wooden stamp dipped in vegetable dye.  Mexico Cooks! was privileged to see these twice in one summer, first at an event at the Escuela de Gastronomía Mexicana in Mexico City and again at the Primer Encuentro Nacional de Cocineras Tradicionales (First National Meeting of Traditional Cooks) in Morelia, Michoacán.

    Tomate de Árbol
    This is the tamarillo or tomate del árbol (tree tomato), a native of the South American Andes.  Each fruit is approximately 2.5" long.  The flesh is fairly firm and deeply flavorful, both sweet and earthy.  You never know what you'll see when you take a Mexico Cooks! tour–our group found these delicious fruits at a downtown Mexico City market.

    Come back next week for more summertime wanderings with Mexico Cooks!. Our summer was far too interesting for just one article!

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

  • Strawberry Season in Central Mexico :: When? All Year!

    Fresas en Pátzcuaro
    Piled high in every town's market, locally grown strawberries sell all year 'round in parts of Michoacán, Guanajuato, and Jalisco.  Mexico Cooks! photographed these at a daily outdoor market in Pátzcuaro, Michoacán.

    Right about now, fresh produce bounty from South of the Border is available on your supermarket shelves. Fresh red strawberries, grown from Zamora, Michoacán to Irapuato, Guanajuato, will give you the sweet taste of Mexico's sun and warmth. Fresh raspberries grow near the shores of Lake Chapala, while big-as-the-end-of-your-thumb, sweet, delicious blackberries grow locally in Mexico Cooks!' region of Michoacán.  Big beautiful and delicious blueberries are also grown prolifically in both Jalisco and Michoacán.

    When you go to your local super market, take a closer look at those clear plastic containers (known in the trade as clamshells) full of red raspberries, strawberries, blueberries, and blackberries. In the small print on the Driscoll label it says "Product of Mexico". When I still lived in the States, I read that label and imagined a gleaming white-tile packing factory. In my mind's eye, I saw employees in starched laboratory jackets, nurse-like white caps and latex gloves, packing strawberries as the jewel-red fruit came flying down an assembly line. It was a fantasy worthy of Lucy and Ethel at the chocolate factory, in that famous episode of I Love Lucy.

    The first time I visited a nearby raspberry "packing factory", I had to laugh at my own earlier ideas. This packing operation was perfectly simple. Several clean-cut young men with bandannas wrapped around their heads roamed up and down the rows between lush raspberry canes. They hand-picked only the reddest, ripest raspberries and gently placed them into small plastic buckets, the kind five-year-olds use at the beach.

    Kitchen3packing
    Two young women dressed in blue jeans and caps stood at a long folding table (the kind you'd find at a swap meet) and packed those perfectly ripe raspberries into flat after flat of Driscoll clamshells. They packed the plastic boxes into case after case for shipping and then rapidly started packing more.

    Within 24 hours of picking, those berries are in the United States, either in Miami or Los Angeles. A day later, they are shipped out to stores across the United States. In addition, red raspberries from the shores of Lake Chapala are shipped not only to the United States but also to Canada, to England, to all parts of Europe, and to Japan.

    The half pint boxes sell for about $4.99 the box in grocery stores north of the Mexican border.  Here in Mexico, you don't want to know what I pay.  Just remember that I live where all of these berries are grown and we can buy them without a middleman or transportation costs.

    Remember that raspberries are the most delicate fruits in the vast berry family. Treat them with the softest touch, just like handling like a newborn baby. Rinse them gently (never allowing them to soak) just before you serve them.

    In case any of you might have health concerns about Mexican-grown produce, here's what the Driscoll people themselves say about the safety of their raspberries and strawberries:

    "Driscoll's farmers have been leaders in the practice of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) which relies on a balanced method of natural and inorganic means to reduce disease and control pests in the field. To insure that Driscoll's fruit is the safest possible, Driscoll's employs a company which conducts third-party independent residue testing of fruit in every Driscoll cooler and facility every week."

    Kitchen2fields_2
    These fields in the state of Jalisco are Mexican owned and leased to Driscoll solely for growing raspberries and strawberries. The raspberry crop is rotated annually and the packing operation is moved each year to the fields most convenient to the highway.  The plastic protects the raspberries from too much sun, too much rain, and too much wind.

    Far-flung fields of Driscoll's other delicious crop—strawberries–are grown from Zamora and Morelia, Michoacán, and as far east as Maravatio, Michoacán–several other towns in Michoacán.  Two out of every three strawberries grown in Mexico come from Michoacán, and that's a LOT–about 340 thousand tons per year!  Red jewels lie close to the ground, nestled in dark green leaves. The strawberries are ripe and luscious this time of year, ready to be hand picked, packed, chilled, and shipped to all parts of the world. You'll find them, packaged in clear plastic one-pound boxes so you can see exactly what you're choosing, in the produce section of your favorite hometown supermarket. North of the border, the boxes sell for about $2.50 US in season.  Here in Mexico, we're paying closer to the peso equivalent of $2.00 US per kilo (2.2 pounds).

    Fresas con Crema
    Strawberry stands dot the roads leading into and out of Irapuato, Guanajuato.  The stands offer tall wicker baskets filled with sweet, delicious fresh berries as well as frozen strawberries with cream, just ready to dig in.

    These are not those huge strawberries grown more for looks than for flavor. Is there anything more disappointing than biting into a beautiful berry and finding it white in the middle, dry, hard and tasteless? These berries are mid-size and grown for their sweet taste—the best possible flavor—as well as beauty. Ripened more fully prior to picking than those grown elsewhere, these local strawberries are simply perfect.

    Strawberries in Basket
    Wow, a tower of locally grown strawberries!  These are from the area around Irapuato.

    Always refrigerate berries immediately—move them from your shopping bag directly to the refrigerator.  Refrigerator temperatures between 34 and 38 degrees F are best, but be sure not to freeze them! Fresh berries are very sensitive to freeze damage. Do remember this general rule: for every hour your berries are away from refrigeration, you'll lose a whole day's shelf life.

    If you want to freeze red raspberries, spread them out in a single layer on a cookie sheet with sides and place the uncovered cookie sheet in the freezer. After the raspberries are well frozen, shake them gently into a zip-lock bag and immediately put them back in the freezer. Your raspberries, whole and beautiful, will be ready for immediate use when you need them.

    Do not wash your berries until you are ready to prepare and eat them. Moisture will hasten decay of these fragile berries, so keep them dry as well as cold until the last moment.

    Shelf life varies between berries; however, under ideal conditions, strawberries should keep for about two to five days in your refrigerator and raspberries should keep for between one and three days. For best results, consume your berries as soon after purchase as possible.

    If you buy either raspberries or strawberries in plastic clamshells, use the berries and save a clamshell or two for times when you want to store the berries in your refrigerator. farm to protect the berries on the trip home. 

    Here is an interesting statistic about strawberries: Canada imports all of its fresh strawberries from either the United States or from Mexico. The United States is the major importer of Mexican fresh strawberries. Under NAFTA (the North American Free Trade Agreement), duty is no longer charged on strawberry exports to either the USA or Canada.

    Raspberries
    Are you drooling yet? Let's look at two more wonderful recipes for raspberry and strawberry treats.

    White Chocolate Raspberry Cheesecake
    For the ultimate in red raspberry decadence, try this cheesecake.

    18 vanilla wafer cookies
    1 cup macadamia nuts, toasted
    4 1/2 tablespoons butter, melted
    4 ounces white chocolate, chopped
    16 ounces cream cheese, at room temperature
    2/3 cup sugar
    2 teaspoons vanilla extract
    1/2 teaspoons lemon juice
    2 large eggs
    3/4 cup fresh raspberries
    8 ounces sour cream
    3 tablespoons sugar
    1/2 teaspoon vanilla

    Crust:
    Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Finely grind cookies and macadamias in food processor. Add butter and blend until mixture forms very moist crumbs. Press crumbs firmly onto bottom and part of sides of an eight inch spring-form pan. Bake until golden (10 minutes).

    Filling:
    Melt white chocolate in microwave, (about 1 1/2 minutes), stopping every 30 seconds to stir and to make sure it doesn't burn. Set aside. In a large bowl, use your electric mixer to beat cream cheese, sugar, vanilla extract, and lemon juice until smooth. Add eggs, one at a time, beating after each addition, just until combined. Beat in white chocolate.

    Spoon half the batter into the crust. Top with berries. Top with remaining batter. Bake for about 45 minutes or until cake is set around the edges, but center jiggles slightly.

    Let cool for about 20 minutes before adding the topping.

    Topping:
    In a medium bowl, whisk sour cream, sugar, and vanilla. Spoon over cake, spreading the topping to the edge of the pan. Bake five minutes. Allow cake to cool and then refrigerate overnight. Serve plain or garnish with more berries.

    Try the following recipe when you want to serve an unusual fruit treat for a Sunday brunch with friends. You and your guests will love the refreshing berries in a very unusual dressing.  Let me know how you like it!

    Ginger Strawberries Estilo Mexico Cooks!
    This recipe is served cold, and with its hint of spicy ginger it always makes a hit.

    2 pounds fresh ripe strawberries
    1 orange
    2 tablespoons pickled ginger, drained
    1 cup unflavored yoghurt
    2 tablespoons orange marmalade
    2 tablespoons sugar or 2 packets artificial sweetener
    1/4 teaspoon salt

    Remove green caps from strawberries and wash gently. Pat dry in a large terry cloth towel. Cut the strawberries in half and place in a large mixing bowl.

    With a vegetable peeler or zester, cut thin strips of orange peel (orange part only). Cut the orange peel strips into tiny matchstick-size strips, no longer than 1" and no wider than 1/16".

    Cut the pickled ginger to the same size as the orange strips. Mix the ginger and the orange strips together.

    Add the ginger and orange strips mixture, orange marmalade, sugar (or artificial sweetener) and salt to the yogurt. Stir until well-mixed.

    Pour yoghurt mixture over strawberries and stir gently to coat all the strawberries.

    Refrigerate until well chilled. Serves 6 – 8 as a side dish.

    Fresa Mercado de Jamaica March 2016 1
    Remember the taste of a strawberry this red–red all the way through?  I was in a produce market and had already taken a bite of this one when I thought, take its picture!  The world wants to see a real strawberry, right now in 2022!

    Buen provecho!    

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

  • A Beautiful Food and Music Festival in Pátzcuaro, Michoacán

    Chiles en Nogada
    Seasonal chiles en nogada (stuffed chiles poblanos in walnut sauce) were the most popular item at the Pátzcuaro food show one September quite a few years ago.

    Pátzcuaro has just celebrated its 474th anniversary as a certified municipio (similar to a US county seat).  Lots of events were scheduled during the weekend of September 19-21, including a parade, an artisans' fair, concerts, and two regional muestras de gastronomía (food exhibits and sales).

    Joaquín Pantoja 1
    Joaquín Pantoja, Plaza Don Vasco de Quiroga, Pátzcuaro.

    Mexico Cooks! was there, of course.  Would we miss a reason for a fiesta?  We spent a full and diverse day in Pátzcuaro, first listening to a concert by the incredibly talented guitarist Joaquín Pantoja, visiting friends at a nearby gallery opening, strolling around the beautiful Plaza de don Vasco de Quiroga, and eating–you guessed it–wonderful chiles en nogada at Sunday's Muestra de Gastronomía Regional on Plaza Don Vasco de Quiroga.

    Imagine the taste of mildly spicy, fresh chiles poblanos stuffed with a rich meat and fruit picadillo (hash), bathed in creamy walnut sauce, and garnished with fresh pomegranate seeds and parsley.  Normally served in Mexico during July, August, September, and October (the time when both pomegranates and walnuts are harvested), this beautiful dish represents the colors of the Mexican flag. 

    Mesa con Platillos
    Just one of the Muestra de Gastronomía Regional tables in Pátzcuaro. From the beautifully presented platillos (main dishes) to the hand-embroidered tablecloth, the table was a feast for all the senses.

    Pollo en Cuñete
    Pollo en Cuñete, a superb example of comida casera michoacana (Michoacán home cooking) that Mexico Cooks! has never seen on any restaurant menu.

    Pollo en Cuñete

    Ingredients
    1 whole chicken, 4 to 5 pounds, skinned and cut into serving pieces
    11 cloves of garlic, mashed
    1  tablespoon sea salt
    1  teaspoon whole black peppercorns
    2  tablespoons corn or other vegetable oil
    20 new potatoes, peeled
    3/4 cup vinegar, either white or red wine
    1/3 cup olive oil
    2 teaspoons salt
    6 bay leaves
    2 teaspoons dried thyme
    2 tablespoons dried oregano
    2 chiles serrano

    Romaine lettuce
    Pineapple slices
    Orange slices
    Avocado slices
    Radishes

    Procedure
    Rub the chicken pieces with garlic, sea salt, and pepper and refrigerate for one to four hours.

    In a large frying pan, heat the oil and sauté the chicken pieces, putting them in a large casserole dish as they brown.  In the same oil, lightly brown the potatoes.  Remove the potatoes from the oil and reserve.

    Allow the oil to cool slightly.  Add the vinegar (carefully, it will splash) and heat until it begins to boil.  Remove the brown pieces that stick to the bottom of the pan.  Pour the vinegar through a strainer and over the chicken.  Add the olive oil, the salt, the bay leaves, the thyme, and the oregano to the chicken in the casserole dish.  Place the chicken over a high fire until it begins to boil.  Cover it tightly and lower the flame.  Every 10 minutes, turn the chicken.  After 30 to 40 minutes, test for taste and add the chiles and the potatoes.  Cover and cook over a slow fire for approximately 15 minutes, or until the potatoes are done. 

    To Serve
    Cover a large platter with romaine lettuce leaves.  Arrange the chicken pieces on the platter.  Garnish with decoratively cut radishes, peeled orange slices, thinly sliced pineapple, and sliced avocados. 

    Serves 6 to 8 as a main course.

    Ensalada de Cuaresma
    This gorgeous jewel-colored drink is actually ensalada del obispo (the bishop's water), a Morelia traditional speciality served only during Semana Santa (Holy Week).  It's prepared with beets, oranges, lettuce, other vegetables, and peanuts.  You eat it with a spoon and drink the liquid.

    Postres con Papel Picado
    This little section of the muestra de dulces regionales (regional sweets exhibit) features gelatina de frutas con leche (milky gelatin with fruits), pastel de almendras (almond cake), rollo de chocolate (chocolate roll), and ate casero de membrillo (home-made quince paste).  We split a slice of almond cake and a little cocada casera (home-made coconut candy).

    Pátzcuaro Nieve de Pasta
    Pátzcuaro is famous everywhere in Mexico for its ice cream, especially the nieve de pasta (richly creamy ice cream flavored with ground almonds, cinnamon, and honey).  Mexico Cooks! didn't have room to eat even a small cup, but instead stopped a passer-by who waited patiently before taking a bite to have a photo taken of his treasure: nieve de pasta con mermelada de zarzamora (with fresh blackberry marmalade).

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

  • Purépecha Food Fair in Uruapan, Michoacán :: Una Muestra de Gastronomía Purépecha en Uruapan, Michoacán

    Dos_mujeres_con_masa_copy
    The Purépecha woman in the foreground pats out tortillas while her companion sorts through a plate of golden, freshly cut flor de calabaza (squash blossoms).

    The first two mornings of the huge annual Tianguis de Artesanías de Domingo de Ramos (Palm Sunday artisans' crafts fair) in Michoacán begin with a food fair: la Muestra de Gastronomía.   Fifteen or so outdoor kitchens, set up around a charming plaza just a block from the crafts booths, offer cooking demonstrations and inexpensive meals of representative Purépecha dishes.  The food, strictly traditional home cooking and rarely seen outside a Purépecha home kitchen, is, in a word, heavenly.  The Mexico Cooks! group that I introduced to this 2-day food festival trooped into the food fair just in time for Saturday breakfast.  The crowd could have known who we were by the way our mouths were watering with anticipation.  This event starts TODAY, April 9, 2022, in Uruapan.

    Making_tortillas_copy
    Corn is the basis for the indigenous Mexican kitchen, and the tortilla is the basis of its meals.  On the table in front of this woman, you can see the metate (three-legged rectangular volcanic stone grinding stone) and the metlapil (similar to a rolling pin) resting on it, along with the prepared masa from which tortillas are made.  Both the metate and the metlapil are hand-carved from volcanic rock.

    Making_tortillas_2_copy
    To the left of the table is the clay comal (a kind of griddle) that in this instance rests loosely on top of a metal drum inside which the wood cook fire is built.  Prior to use, the comal is cured by rubbing it with cal (builders' lime).  The cal serves two purposes: it gives the comal a non-stick surface and it adds nutrients to the masa as it toasts.

    In the past, all of Mexico's women prepared dried corn for masa by soaking and simmering it in a solution of water and cal.  The name of the prepared corn is nixtamal.  Once it's processed, it's ready to be ground into masa for tortillas, tamales, and other corn-dough preparations.  Some rural women still grind nixtamal-ized corn by hand using the metate and metlapil.  Some take the prepared corn to their neighborhood tortillería (tortilla vendor's shop) for grinding, and some prepare their masa using commercial dried corn flour.  In urban areas, the majority of Mexican families buy tortillas hot off the tortilla baker at the tortillería and carry them home, wrapped in a special towel, just in time for a meal.

    Cal_y_comal_copy
    This woman prepares her stove, made of part of a metal drum with an opening cut away for firewood.  She's spreading a paste made of wood ash and cal on and around the top of the the drum to hold the comal in place.  The white streaks on the red clay comal are cal.  The volcanic rock metate and metlapil are on the bench in the background.  Her well-used clay cooking pots are visible to your left in the photo.

    Tortillera_1_copy
    This joyous woman is patting out blue corn tortillas.  The masa and metlapil are on the metate in front of her.  She's toasting the tortillas and roasting tomatoes and chiles on her clay comal.  The comal is set into a clay stove fired by wood.  The haze that you see is woodsmoke.

    Atpakua_de_flor_de_calabaza_copy
    The Purépecha kitchen repertoire includes numerous atápakuas (literally, a type of thick, soup-like salsa served plentifully over prepared food).  The Purépecha word atápakua has meaning deeper than its simple definition.  Its connotation is food that is picante (spicy), nutritious, and life-sustaining in a spiritual sense.  Mexican culinary historians agree that the preparation of atápakuas dates from as long as 400 years before the Spanish Conquest, around 1100 AD, when the Purépecha were strong rulers in the area of Mexico that is now Michoacán. 

    An atápakua is made from the ingredients that are easily found in the region.  The specialty of one tiny village of the meseta purépecha is atápakua del talpanal (wasp larvae).  Another town's specialty is xururi atápakua, the principal ingredient of which is cotton seeds.  More commonly, indigenous cooks prepare their atápakuas of seasonal and readily available vegetables along with a bit of meat, poultry, or fish.

    We of Mexico Cooks! didn't eat wasp larvae or cotton seeds.  We inhaled bowls of atápakua de flor de calabaza (thick, soupy salsa served over squash flowers, fresh corn kernels, and chunks of corundas de ceniza (unfilled tamales made with freshly ground masa and wood ash).

    Atapakua_close_up_copy_2
    In the closeup of the atápakua you can clearly see the corn kernels (closest to the bowl of the spoon), small pieces of calabacita (similar to zucchini), orange squash flowers, and a piece of corunda made of white corn masa.   For flavor and color, chiles serrano and cilantro are blended into the cooking liquid.  The thin, soupy salsa is then thickened by blending a small ball of masa into the hot liquidThis atápakua is deliciously spicy and tastes as fresh as the garden.  I finished my portion and wanted another bowl.

     Churipo_big
    Photo by Steve Sando, www.ranchogordo.com

    Churipo, shown above, is one of my favorite Purépecha specialties.  Churipo is a hearty soup, the delicious broth flavored by long cooking with beef, cabbage, calabacitas, xoconostle (the sour fruit of a specific nopal cactus), onion, chile, and other ingredients.  Served with a squeeze of limón (Mexican lime), a sprinkle of coarse sea salt, tortillas hot off the comal and corundas de ceniza broken up in the bowl, it's a wonderful meal in one dish.  If your palate will take the heat, eat some raw chiles serrano along with your bowl of churipo.  Remember that the tip of any chile is less picante than the stem end, where most of the seeds are.

    Late in the afternoon, after we'd investigated as many of the crafts booths as we could, we were all in need of something very light and fresh for our comida (middday meal).  We ordered a fruit plate and a plate of guacamole with totopos (triangular fried tortilla chips) at a local restaurant.

    Fruit_plate_with_guacamole_copy

    For dessert we found a traditional dulce: limones, with the pulp scraped away, candied and stuffed with cocada (coconut candy).  They're so sweet that half of one of these is plenty!

    Cocadas_en_limones_copy

    This was such a sweet finish to a fascinating day in Michoacán.  If you'd like to travel to this event in 2022, be sure to email Mexico Cooks! in time to save your place on a fabulous food tour.

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

  • Chile Poblano Strips with Onion, Corn Kernels, and Cream, A Classic of the Mexican Kitchen :: Rajas de Chile Poblano

    Delicious and eaten at any time of the year, rajas de chile poblano con crema, cebolla, y elote (strips of poblano chile with cream, onion, and young tender corn) is the perfect dish for a Lenten Friday!

    Chile Poblano
    The mild-to-not-so-mild chile poblano is one of the most commonly used fresh chiles in Mexico's kitchen.  A very large, fleshy chile, it can measure as much as seven or eight inches long.  The stem end is much wider than the point, and the color ranges from dark green to almost black-green. Shopping tip: if you buy chiles poblano that are flat on all sides, they will roast more quickly than if they are deeply creased in spots.  The flat sides will evenly touch the roasting surface.

    The chile poblano is commonly used for preparing main dishes such as chiles rellenos, including the seasonal and festive chiles en nogada.  It is also used for making rajas de chile poblano con crema (strips of chile poblano with cream), a marvelously flavorful vegetable side dish.  All photos by Mexico Cooks! unless otherwise noted.

    Chile Poblano Asado 1
    Chiles poblano roasted with skin removed, showing the interior of the opened chile (left) and the exterior (right).  These are two of the four chiles I used to prepare this dish. To prepare chiles poblanos for use in any recipe, wash and roast them.  Don't try to use them with the peel on; the peels will be as tough as trying to chew through plastic.  Mexico Cooks! uses a cast iron comal (griddle) placed over a high flame to roast as many as four to six chiles at a time.  Other cooks prefer to roast these chiles one or two at a time over an open flame, or on a broiler pan in a slightly open oven. No matter which roasting method you use, the roasted chiles should look like the ones in the above photo.

    Once the chiles are roasted, put them in a plastic bag, twist it shut, and allow the chiles to 'sweat' for 10 to 15 minutes.  You'll easily be able to remove the blackened peels.  It's best not to rinse them–or rinse them only a little–as rinsing removes a good bit of the delicious chile poblano flavor.  

    Chile Poblano Asados Abiertos con Semillas
    The slit-open chiles with the seeds still inside.  At the foreground of the photo, you can see that I removed the stem with the bulk of the seeds.  Simply cut around the stem and pull it and the seeds out of the chile.

    Chile Poblanos con Cuchillo 1
    Two of the chiles still on the cutting board, with one of my 60+-year-old Sabatier carbon steel knives.  

    Chile Poblano ya Rajas 1
    All four chiles, seeded and cut into rajas (strips about 3" long and less than 1/2" wide).

    Chile Poblano Cebolla Cortada 1
    Half of a large white onion, thinly sliced and ready to sauté. The ingredients include half a white onion, sliced very thin, and about half a cup of fresh (or canned) white or yellow corn kernels.

    Chile Poblano Cebolla Cocinando 1
    Sauté the onions in oil first, until they are soft and translucent.  Then add the rajas and continue to sauté until they are soft, but still have a bit of crispness.

    Chile Poblano Sin Crema 1
    Add the corn and continue to sauté briefly.

    Crema Aguascalientes
    Add Mexican crema de mesa (table cream, not sour cream) if you can find it.  Crema Aguascalientes is the one I prefer to use.  If Mexican table cream isn't available, use sour cream instead. 

    Chile Poblano con Elotes y Crema 1
    Salt to taste and let the cream and vegetables simmer briefly. The cream will become a thick sauce for the vegetables.  The chile poblano is generally quite mild and flavorful, but once in a while you will come across one that is surprisingly spicy.  There's no way to tell by looking at them whether they are mild or hot, and either way they're delicious and not overly 'hot'.

    The recipe as you see it written here, using four large chiles, will serve 3 to 4 people as a side dish.  It's excellent served hot or at room temperature.  I've never met anyone who doesn't love rajas de chile poblano served this way!

    Provecho! (Good eating!)

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