Category: Tours

  • Pinche Gringo BBQ: The Silver Twinkie in Mexico City

    Pinche Gringo Colorful Sign
    In this mural around the corner from the restaurant, the silver Twinkie, icon of the Pinche Gringo BBQ joint, floats above Mexico City's Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of Fine Arts), offering a bilingual welcome to everyone in the Distrito Federal who wants Texas-style barbecue. You might be amazed to see how many people line up every day for a pile of smokey pork meat and a couple of sides or a mile-high beef brisket sandwich. In just seven months, this BBQ heaven has had to expand twice to accommodate the crowds. G'wan, line up.  We did. Photos by Mexico Cooks! unless otherwise noted.

    Another PGBBQ Menu
    Pinche Gringo BBQ menu.  Click on any photo to enlarge the image.  Photo courtesy Pinche Gringo.

    Mexico Cooks!, a person of a certain age, usually manages a fair degree of decorum when in public. "Pinche" is not a very nice word in Mexico, especially when attached to gringo, a word I certainly know but refuse to use either in writing or speaking.  It surprises me no end when foreigners who hail from north of the Mexican border identify themselves with the derogatory term gringos, but Dan Defossey, the pinche gringo himself and founder of the feast, brings it off with grace.

    Dan is a native New Yorker, transplanted to Austin, Texas and thence to Mexico City.  He's a righteous smoked barbecue fiend.  When he arrived in Mexico's capital, he had plenty of barbecue eating experience but no restaurant-running experience.  It was the barbecue-eating experience he missed during his first four years in Mexico. Until his Pinche Gringo BBQ joint hit the scene in Colonia Narvarte, having a taste of 'cue meant an 11-hour drive to the Texas border.

    Pinche Gringo Silver Twinkie
    Dan retrofitted the silver Twinkie, otherwise known as an Airstream travel trailer, for use as a cafeteria-style restaurant counter.  Line up, study the wall-mounted menu while you wait, grab a tray and tell the genial (and bilingual) staff inside the trailer what you want to eat. A plated meat order (using the term loosely, since the Pinche Gringo piles your meat not on a plate but on a big sheet of paper on your tray) comes with two sides; you can order sides separately if you choose a sandwich.  My order?  "Carne de cerdo deshebrado (de-seh-BRAH-doh, Texas-style pulled pork), macaroni and cheese, and barbecue beans, please."  My wife had ordered the pork ribs, with sides of potato salad and cole slaw; the plan was to share everything.

    Pinche Gringo Slow Day Cola
    The line forms at the rear.  The day Mexico Cooks! and a couple of boon companions went to eat BBQ, we purposely went quite early (1:00PM) to avoid a long wait. Mexico eats its main meal of the day at around three o'clock and we wanted to beat the rush.  It turned out to be a strangely slow day; when there's a crowd, the line can snake all the way to the front door, down a step, and around the corner to the end of the building.  Note the picnic table: at this very rustic restaurant, all seating is this type.

    Pinche Gringo Pay Options
    Pinche Gringo accepts cash payments and all credit cards.  You can also pay via the PG iPad at the cashier–using PayPal Check-In, which takes the cost of your meal directly out of your PayPal account.  It's a neat new wrinkle in payment processing.  From the top down, the sign translates to, "Really damn practical, really damn easy, really damn fast!"

    Pinche Gringo Ribs
    Time to cut to the chase: these are the pork ribs, a half-rack of smoked ribs, thickly drizzled with PG sauce and accommpanied by potato salad, cole slaw, a sesame-seeded roll, and Texas sweet tea.  The flavor of the ribs was soft and smokey, but our companions, who also ordered ribs, said they weren't as fall-off-the-bone tender as he has eaten them the other four times he's been to Pinche Gringo. "Why did I pick the ribs?  I love the pulled pork best," he regretted.

    My other companion's potato salad tasted just like Mom used to make: rich with mayonnaise, slightly mustard-y, and just the right combo of tang and potato. The texture was strange to me, almost like mashed potato with lumps.  I prefer my potato salad chunky, with the potatoes at a melt-in-the-mouth tenderness.  The cole slaw, made with purple cabbage and carrots, was perfect.

    Pinche Gringo Pulled Pork
    The big pile-on-the-tray of pulled pork, sauced and with a side of mac'n'cheese and another of barbecue style beans.  The fork-tender, slightly fatty pulled pork was the hands-down winner of the meal.  I was loathe to share this pile with a companion in exchange for some of her ribs, but a deal is a deal.

    The Texas-style beans were just right, sweet and smoky. The mac'n'cheese was slightly spicy, very cheesy, and creamy in the mouth.  Score!  

    Pinche Gringo Brisket Sandwich
    Smoked, tender beef brisket, chopped, stacked up six inches high and oozing out of the confines of its bun, served with onion and dill pickles and of course the standard PG sauce.  A generous customer let me take this picture of his meal–but I noticed that he didn't offer me a taste. Some people just want it all for themselves!

    Pinche Gringo Smoker
    Luis Urrutia Alonzo, one of the PGBB staff, let me sneak behind the scenes to photograph the four-door wood-fired gargantuan smoker.  At the bottom left corner you can see the little burner. Gauges indicate that the heat is kept at a slow, even temperature.  The meat is cooked for a while to seal in the juices, then wrapped in aluminum foil and smoked for ten hours–overnight. Dan Defossey brought the smoker from Texas, along with the elderly Airstream trailer. Sometime when you're at Pinche Gringo, ask him to tell you the tale of the trip.

    Pinche Gringo Limonada Té Helado
    Two of the several drink options: barrels of free-refill lemonade and Texas sweet tea. In addition, there's a good range of soft drinks and several kinds of beer. 

    Pinche Gringo 2 Pies
    Pie for dessert!  The pies change every month.  The pies for July, in this case: on the left, raspberry and cheese. On the right, real down-home apple pie.  Which to choose!  We all had the apple; it was as good as any I've ever had–really good.

    Pinche Gringo Silver Twinkie Butt
    So long for now, Pinche Gringo!  We'll see you again soon to try more of your smokey Texas menu.  You're a welcome addition to the Mexico City restaurant scene. Even though you don't offer tortillas or micheladas or Mexican salsas, everybody loves your style.

    Pinche Gringo BBQ
    Cumbres de Maltrata 360
    Colonia Narvarte 
    Del. Benito Juárez 03020
    Ciudad de México, Distrito Federal
    Tel. 55 6389 1129
    Hours: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday: 1PM – 7PM 
               Friday, Saturday, Sunday:        Noon – 7PM
               Monday and Tuesday:              Closed

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

  • Michoacán Mezcal Uasïsï, Brought to You By Mayahuel–The Goddess of Maguey

    Mezcal Camioncito
    When you read last week's article, Mexico Cooks! had just boarded a guajolotero (often called 'chicken bus', in English slang) to go with friends to meet a mezcal producer in Michoacán.  I also left you with homework, class: did you read the article linked here?  Give it a once-over, if you didn't already, and then let's get going down the road.  Click on any photo to enlarge it for a better look.  Photos by Mexico Cooks! unless otherwise noted.

    Mezcal Cupreata 3
    Close to the northern edge of the Tierra Caliente, outside Etúcuaro, Michoacán, there's a well-hidden vinata (mezcal-making setup)–it's just beyond this field of cupreata maguey.  To get there, you need to go with someone who knows how to find it.  The mezcal producer, Ignacio Pérez Scott, is the fourth generation of his family to dedicate himself to production of the liquor.  He produces traditional mezcal which he then sells to select bottlers for branding.  We're visiting the vinata with Maira Malo Hernández, owner of the mezcal brand Uasïsï (wah-SHEE-shee), and her daughters, Viridiana and Mayra Méndez Malo.  Sra. Malo's daughters and her sons, Juan, Carlos, and Jorge Méndez Malo are also part of the Uasïsï team.

    Mezcal Don Nacho con Maira
    In the shade of the vinata, mezcal producer Ignacio Pérez Scott shares an affectionate moment with Maira Malo Hernández.

    [youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gprCMwmaKKc&w=640&h=360]Uasïsï, the name Sra. Malo chose for her mezcal, is the Purépecha word for bat.  It's this bat that pollinates the cupreata maguey, among other magueys.

    Mezcal con Flor
    Don Nacho ("don" is an honorific title, used with great respect, and "Nacho" is the Mexican nickname for Ignacio) told me that his cupreata maguey (seen here with its spike of yellow quiote–the maguey flower) takes eight to ten years to mature. Once it matures and throws up the flower spike, the plant can be harvested.

    Mezcal Maira Partiendo Piñas
    When the producer harvests the maguey plant, the first task is to remove the quiote (flower stem); the pencas (leaves) are removed next. The pencas were removed from the places where you can see the diamond shapes on the outside of the hearts.  The pencas can be used in cooking, particularly in making traditional barbacoa and mixiote. The corazón (heart) also known as piña (pineapple) of each maguey plant is then chopped into smaller pieces for baking. In the photo above, Mezcal Uasïsï owner Maira Malo Hernández pitched in to chop some of the piñas. Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH (Maira Malo Hernández).

    Mezcal Tamaño de la Piña
    Here you can see the size of the chopped piñas de maguey.  Each piña can weigh as much as 80 to 100 pounds.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Uasïsï Pino al Horno
    Pine logs, stacked firmly into the fire pit.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Mezcal Horno
    Don Nacho is tamping the volcanic rock evenly into the pit, on top of the pine logs.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Uasïsï Horno Incendido
    The fire in the pit is red hot and smoking.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Uasïsï Piñas and Fire
    The fire is burning evenly now, and the piñas are ready to be placed in the baking pit.  The pit will be loaded with approximately 150 piñas weighing a total of about four tons.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Uasïsï Horno Tapado
    The burning pit is covered with petates (woven reed mats) and then with mounded earth.  The piñas need to bake for a full week.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Mezcal Piñas al Horno
    After a week, the piñas are thoroughly baked and are now uncovered.  At the bottom right-hand corner of the photo, you can see some petates (woven reed mats). Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Mezcal Chopping Trough
    The more than six foot long pine-lined trench where the baked piñas are hand-chopped and smashed with axes.

    Mezcal Machacando Piñas 2
    The vinata crew has moved some of the baked piñas to the trough and are hand-smashing them with axes so that they can be placed into the fermenting tanks. Don Nacho and his crew use no machinery during any stage of their mezcal production.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Mezcal Tinacos
    These are the tinacos (covered storage tanks) where the baked and smashed piñas are fermented.  The fermentation process takes a week.

    Mezcal Alambique
    Post-fermentation, the process of double-distillation begins.  This is the alambique (still), made of pine.  As the mezcal distills, the metal top allows condensation to drip back into the still.

    Mezcal Alambique 2
    The other side of the alambique.  Don Nacho explained that the wooden still will last for about one year; after that, the wood will be replaced.

    Mezcal Fire Hole
    This is the fire hole, where a pine wood fire actually cooks the fermented maguey piña mash to distill it.  Above the metal arch of this fire hole are several inches of concrete, the top of which you can see in the photo just before this one.  No fire actually touches the wooden still.

    Uasïsï Ad
    The finished product: Uasïsï Mezcal Joven.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Uasïsï Bottle with Labels
    Both sides of the bottle.  The front label, on the right, tells you that this is joven (young, unaged) mezcal with 48% alcohol content.  The back label, on the left, gives all the pertinent information about the mezcal: the number and lot of the bottle, the exact provenance (village or state) of the mezcal, as well as the type of maguey used.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Mexcal Uasïsï stand
    Tamarind or pear flavored mezcal Uasïsï: made slightly sweet with real fruit, it's perfect for dessert.  Photo courtesy Uasïsï MMH.

    Cata Mezcal UNLA
    This Uasïsï tasting was held at UNLA (Universidad Latina de América) in Morelia, Michoacán.  

    And what, you ask, does Uasïsï joven actually taste like? To start with, if you have tasted other mezcales, you probably and immediately think smokey. Uasïsï is not in any way smokey.  To my palate, Uasïsï joven tastes fresh, like the green of the maguey.  It has slight lingering tones of Michoacán pine.  It carries a hint of flowers.  Because the alcohol content is high, the first sip feels strong in the front of the mouth. As it moves to the back of the tongue, it mellows.  And the moment you swallow that first drop, filled with the flavors of Michoacán, you immediately want another.  Uasïsï is an extraordinary drink, destined to be a star in the world of mezcal.  

    Mexcalli Mezcalería
    Now that you know you want a bottle (or two or three–don't forget about the tamarind dessert mezcal) of Uasïsï mezcal, where can you get it?  The Uasïsï home base is Mex*Calli Mezcalería, Buenavista #5, Pátzcuaro, Michoacán.

    Cristina con Maira y Luis Robledo Morelia en Boca May 2014
    Otherwise, my good friend Maira Malo Hernández and I (pictured at Morelia en Boca 2014 with Mexico City chef and chocolatier Luis Robledo Richards) invite you to buy Uasïsï at:

    • Itacate Morelia
      Blvd. Juan Pablo II #315 
      Morelia, Michoacán
    • Agua y Sal Cebichería 
      Campos Elíseos #199-A 
      Col. Polanco, México D.F.
    • La Catrina Comedor & Mezcalería
      Av. 5 de Mayo #661 
      Zamora, Michoacán

    It's entirely possible that Uasïsï mezcal will be coming soon to a liquor store near you.  Check back with Mexico Cooks! from time to time and we'll keep you up to date on the possibility of export to countries outside Mexico.  And if you're planning to be in Mexico and would like to visit the vinata, Mexico Cooks! can make that dream come true.  The experience is magical.

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

  • A Mezcal Primer

    Mezcal Soldaduría
    Sign in front of a Mexican welding shop: "We weld everything except a broken heart. For that we have mezcal."

    In case it hasn't hit your town quite yet, a tsunami is on its way from Mexico to you. Get ready: mezcal is on the roll!  Here in Mexico City and in many other areas of the country, recently ho-hum tequila is being replaced by this high-powered delight of the hundreds-of-years-old wave of the future.  Many of you may already know mezcal as that bottle from Oaxaca with the worm in it, but Oaxaca is just one of the Mexican states where mezcal is produced. And just an aside: 99.999% of the time, that bottle with the worm in it is for tourists and other rank neophytes: it's usually rotgut.

    Agave atrovirens
    An agave atrovirens cactus–the same photo Mexico Cooks! published last week–that is used to make pulque. The maguey cactus is also the base for mezcal.  

    Mezcal Cupreata 1
    Although there are upwards of 200 varieties of maguey, relatively few of those make up the majority of mezcales.  Those few are: espadín (used for 90% of all mezcal production), tobala, tobasiche, tepeztate, arroqueño, and the maguey pictured above–the cupreata which grows in Michoacán and several other states. 

    Mezcal is produced for personal use and for sale in all of Mexico's 31 states, but only eight of those states have received the prized Denominación de Origen (abbreviated DO: certification of geographic origin).  The largest mezcal production in the country is in the state of Oaxaca, which in 1994 was the first Mexican state to receive its Denominación de Origen. Today, seven other states have the certification.  Most recently (in November 2012), the state of Michoacán received its DO status.

    Mezcal Flor
    Cupreata maguey cactus in flower, near Etúcuaro, Michoacán.  The flowering spike of the maguey is the quiote. A cupreata maguey plant needs eight to ten years to mature; like its cousin the common century plant, the entire plant begins to wither and die once the cupreata flowers.   By day, birds pollinate the maguey. By night, bats do the same. Once the flower dies, the plant produces runners that grow into baby plants–and the life cycle of the maguey begins again.

    [youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbQBbqjUyvE&w=420&h=236] 
    Rocío Díaz of Michoacán, creator of the acclaimed and prize-winning video Documezcal, has graciously given Mexico Cooks! permission to use her video as a learning tool in this article.  In a way that words cannot, the video gives you direct insight into artisan production of mezcal.

    Mezcal Camioncito Mejor
    Mexico Cooks!
     recently hopped on a guajolotero (what you might think of as a chicken bus) to meet some new friends who promised to take me to meet an artisanal mezcal producer in Michoacán (west-central Mexico), where mezcal and its production are a way of life.  

    Every small town has at least one mezcal producer and frequently more than one; some small producers have been distilling the drink for private use for 50 years or more.  Commercial production of mezcal is relatively recent; many connoisseurs consider commercial mezcales to be inferior.  The good news?  The best mezcal is the one you like, not the one someone–even if that someone is me–tells you to like. 

    Mezcalheader-filtercrop2-notxt2
    Among people who drink mezcal and study its history, origins, and traditions, there is a good bit of controversy regarding its production and destinations. Until next week, I leave you with your homework: read the linked article so that you will know what the controversies are. Whether or not these matter to you is entirely up to you. Remember that the article is strictly about the mezcales of Oaxaca. Photo and article (click the link here) courtesy MezcalPhD

    Next week, we will talk about a particular mezcal from Michoacán.

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

  • Pulque: Pre-Hispanic Drink, Gift of the Gods from the Maguey Cactus

    This Mexico Cooks! article was originally published on April 24, 2010. Today, read it again to begin a series of occasional reports on the remarkable products given to us from the heart of the maguey cactus. Aguamiel, pulque, and mezcal all come to us from the abundant hand of Mayahuel, goddess of the maguey.

    Agave atrovirens
    An agave atrovirens cactus.  This enormous blue-gray plant, native to the ancient land which became Mexico, continues to provide us with pulque (POOL-keh), a naturally fermented alcoholic beverage.  The maguey, with pencas (thick, succulent leaves) which can grow to a height of seven to eight feet, matures in ten to twelve years.  At maturity, the plant can begin to produce liquor.

    Pulque, native to Mexico, is suddenly all the rage in countries far from its origin.  Folks who have most likely never seen a maguey cactus 'on the hoof' argue the relative merits of natural versus flavored pulques, canned versus straight from the barrel, and so forth.  Mayahuel, the goddess of the maguey, is laughing up her sleeve at this current rash of pulque acficionados; pulque has been well-loved in what is now Mexico for longer than humankind can remember. 

    Mezcal tlacuache
    Legend has it that a thousand years ago and more, Sr. Tlacuache (Mr. Opossum, above) scraped his sharp claws through the heart of the maguey and slurped down the world's first taste of pulque–and then another, and another, until he had a snoot full.  His meandering drunken ramble allegedly traced the path of the rivers that flow through Mexico. Photo courtesy Juan Palomino.

    Codice Borbonico
    A drawing from the Codice Borbónico (1530s Spanish calendar and outline of life in the New World) shows Mayahuel, goddess of the maguey, with a mature cactus and a pot of fermented pulque.  The first liquid that pours into the heart of the maguey is called aguamiel (literally, honey water); legend says that aguamiel is Mayahuel's blood.

    Aguamiel actually comes from the pencas (leaves) of the cactus.  In order to start the flow of liquid into the heart of the plant, the yema (yolk) of the plant is removed from the heart and the heart's walls, connected to the leaves, are scraped until only a cavity remains.  Within a few days, the aguamiel begins to flow into the cavity in the heart of the plant.  The flow of aguamiel can last anywhere from three to six months.  Today, the men who work the maguey to produce pulque are still called tlaquicheros.  The word is derived from the same Nahuatl origin as the name for the original tlaquicheroSr. Tlacuache, Mr. Opossum. 

    Pulque y maguey
    An early tlaquichero removes aguamiel from the heart of the maguey by sucking it out with a long gourd.  Today, workers use a steel scoop to remove up to six liters of aguamiel per day from a single plant.  Aguamiel is not an alcoholic beverage.  Rather, it is a soft drink, sweet, transparent, and refreshing.  Once it ferments, however, it becomes the alcoholic drink pulque, also known as octli

    The fermentation of pulque can start in the plant itself. Aguamiel, left in the plant's heart to 'ripen' for a few days, begins to ferment.  For commercial production, which began in the 19th century, tlaquicheros remove aguamiel from the maguey and transfer it to huge steel tanks, where it ferments.

    Pulque dentro de maguey con popote
    The heart of the maguey, full of aguamiel.  The tool balanced in the liquid is the same type gourd that is pictured in the early drawing seen above.  Between extractions of aguamiel, the leaves of the maguey are folded over the cavity where the liquid collects to prevent insects and plant debris from falling into the heart.

    Pulque Postcard
    Mexican photographic postcard dating to the 1940s or 1950s.  The women and children pose in front of huge maguey plants.

    By the end of the 19th century, pulque was enormously popular among Mexico's very rich and very poor.  Weary travelers in the early 20th century could find stands selling pulque–just for a pickmeup–alongside rural byways.  Travelers riding Mexico's railroads bought pulque at booths along the tracks.  Pulquerías (bars specializing in pulque) were in every town, however small or large.  In Puebla and Mexico City, legendary pulquerías abounded.    

    La Palanca Tina Modotti 1926 Gelatin Silver Print
    Italian expatriate Tina Modotti, a member of the Diego Rivera/Frida Kahlo artists' circle, photographed Mexico City's pulquería La Palanca in 1926.

    Medidas de Pulque
    This common image hung in pulquerías all over Mexico.  Clients could order the amount of pulque they wanted according to the drawings–and be reminded of what they had ordered when the pulque had laid them low.  Image courtesy of La Voz de Michoacán

    PulqueGlasswareMAPDF
    In the foreground are the actual pitchers and glasses used in Mexico's pulquerías.  Compare them with the vessels in the drawing.  Image courtesy of Museo del Arte Popular (DF).

    Pulque lovers spent long evenings in their favorite pulquerías in an alcoholic haze of music, dancing, laughter and delight.  Far less expensive than other hard liquors, pulque carries with it the romance of ancient legend, the tradition of a nation, and the approbation of the gods. 

    Pulquería Charrito Edward Weston 1926
    Edward Weston, American photographer, immortalized Mexico City's pulquería El Charrito, also in 1926.

    Natural pulque is a pale white, semi-viscous, liquid with a slick, thick feel in the mouth; many people are put off by that feel, as well as by its slightly sour taste.  Even for those who dislike natural pulque, another kind of pulque–called curado (in this instance, flavored)–is delicious.  Natural pulque, combined with blended fresh fruit, vegetables, or ground nuts, becomes a completely different drink.   Bananas, guavas, strawberries, and the tuna (fruit of the nopal cactus) are particular favorites.   

    1.- Inicia la Expo-Feria del Pulque y la Salsa en La Magdalena Contreras
    Feria de Pulque 
    (Pulque Fair) in the State of Mexico.  Each of the jars holds pulque curado, each flavored with a different fresh fruit, vegetable, or type of nut.

    Mexico Cooks!
     first tasted pulque about 30 years ago, in Huixquilucan, in the State of Mexico.  Huixquilucan, once known to its inhabitants as Huixqui (pronounced whiskey), used to be a small town, and Mexican friends took me to its small-town fair where home-made pulque was for sale in what seemed like every booth offering food and drink.  "Try it, you'll like it a lot!" my friends giggled.  "Just a little taste!  C'mon!"  I was nervous: I'd heard about pulque and its slippery slimy-ness and its inebriating qualities.  Finally we stood in front of a booth offering pulque curado con fresas: pulque flavored with fresh strawberries.  "Okay, okay, I can try this."  And I liked it!  The first small cupful was a delicious, refreshing, slightly bubbly surprise.  The second small cupful went down even more easily than the first.  And then–well, let it be said that I had to sit down on the sidewalk for a bit.  I truly understood about pulque

    Try it, you'll like it a lot…c'mon, just a little taste!

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

  • 500 Years Over a Hot Mexican Stove

    Tzintzuntzan Frijolitos al Fogón
    Make-do old fashioned cooking technique in Tzintzuntzan, Michoacán. Frijoles boil in a clay pot on the fogón (an on-the-ground cooking fire).  The fire ring, in this case, is the wheel rim of a truck; the wood is what was available at the time of need.  The clay pot ensures old-fashioned flavor and Mexico Cooks!' interest in the cooking process ensured old-fashioned hospitality.  "Come back at 1:30," the cook told us.  "The beans will be ready and I'll make you some tortillas."

    I often talk about Mexico as a country full of contradictions and paradoxes. As a case in point, the Mexican kitchen of the 21st century lives cheek by jowl with the Mexican kitchen that predates the 16th century arrival of the Spanish, and we're all the richer for it. Ancient utensils and techniques are put to daily use in modern kitchens so beautiful they could be in any of today's slick kitchen design magazines. In today's Mexican kitchen, a molcajete and its tejolote (volcanic stone mortar and pestle) often sit on the counter next to a Kitchen-Aid mixer, and a wood-kiln fired olla de barro (clay bean pot) may well share cupboard space with a Le Creuset Dutch oven.

    Outdoor Kitchen
    Outdoor kitchen in San José de la Torre, Michoacán.  In a few very rural parts of Mexico, it is still possible to find these old-style kitchens, built apart from the main house to keep the rest of the house cool.  Just inside the kitchen, to the left in the photograph, you can see steam rising from a boiling pot.

    It was in the convents that many of the most wonderful Mexican foods were invented to take advantage of local products, mixing and matching them in old European recipes. Today, those recipes that consist of the mix of Europe and the New World are among the most traditional of the Mexican kitchen.

    The cooking utensils that were in daily use in Europe were almost nonexistent in the New World. Because metal utensils like those used in Spain were prohibitively expensive in the New World, they were replaced by utensils made of indigenous clay. Clay pots were gradually perfected, in large part due to the incorporation of new glazing techniques and new designs. Other utensils were made from native volcanic stone mined predominantly in Mexico's central highlands.  Prehispanic utensils such as the molcajete, the comal (clay griddle), and the metate (flat rectangular grinding stone) were common. Most home cooks in the days of the Spanish colonial period were indigenous women servants who brought their utensils with them into Spanish New World kitchens.

    Encuentro Maíz Azul con Metate
    Metate y metlapil (volcanic grinding stone with its volcanic stone mano), similar to a rolling pin. The cook has been grinding masa de maíz azul (blue corn dough).  She will use some of the water in the small pot to dampen the dough as needed.  The white cloth both shades the dough and protects it from insects.

    The volcanic stone metate, along with its metlapil de metate (similar to a rolling pin made of stone) was the principal cooking utensil in the prehispanic kitchen, and it's still used today in rural areas to grind nixtamal-ized corn for making tortilla masa (dough). Volcanic stone is porous and microscopic pieces of it break off into the corn as it is ground, becoming an essential part of the dough. It's so essential to the texture and flavor of the masa that even in enormous commercial processing plants, the corn-grinding stones are made of volcanic rock.

    The metate is also used to grind dried chiles and other grains used to prepare moles and other complex dishes, and to prepare highly prized chocolate de metate used for cooking and preparing hot chocolate.

    The second most important piece in the indigenous kitchen is the three-legged molcajete, a kind of volcanic stone grinding mortar. It's still widely used, especially for grinding soft ingredients such as tomatoes, green chiles, green onions, herbs, and other condiments. A well seasoned salsa de molcajete (sauce to be used at table, made in a molcajete) is the mark of a wonderful cook.

    Encuentro Salsa Ingredientes
    Ingredients for salsa, ready to prepare in a volcanic stone molcajete.  At the bottom and top of the photograph are comal (griddle)-roasted Roma tomatoes.  You can also see roasted tomates verdes (tomatillos) and dried, toasted chiles.

    Family-operated workshops in certain Mexican villages carve locally mined volcanic stone into the familiar shape of the molcajete and the less frequently seen metate.  It can be difficult to find molcajetes and metates at the source, unless you know where to look.  The first time I ventured to one of these small villages, I expected to see molcajetes and metates for sale in stores. I discovered that I had to knock on the doors at private homes in the towns and ask if anyone there made molcajetes.

    Fortunately there is an easier way for most of us to find a traditional molcajete or metate. Next time you're on a shopping expedition to one of Mexico's regional mercados, ask the merchants where to find a vendor who sells them.  They usually range in price from $65 pesos for a tiny molcajete just big enough to use for serving salsa at the table to the mother of all molcajetes priced at $125 pesos. The vendors may also sell even bigger ones carved with the head of a pig. Those are priced at approximately $600 pesos.

    Cocina Mexicana Clásica
    Classic Mexican kitchen from the 1920s.  Casa Zuno, Guadalajara.

    The basis and essence of the earliest and most current cuisines of Mexico is what is called the corn kitchen. Corn and corn masa have been used to prepare an infinite variety of staple foods in this country since before written history. The word masa comes from a Nauhatl word that means 'our flesh'. It's said that the Nauhatls believed that their gods created man and woman from corn dough. That equation of corn with the flesh of the human being is more telling than any long description of prehispanic, colonial, or present-day eating habits could be. Corn was all, and in many Mexican homes today, corn is still all.

    Encuentro Manos en la Masa
    For milennia, corn tortillas have traditionally been made by hand.  Small balls of corn masa (dough) are rhythmically patted into near-perfect rounds, then toasted on a comal (griddle) over wood fire.  The technique is passed from mother to daughter and mother to daughter in families everywhere in Mexico; girls start pat-pat-patting masa into tortillas almost from the time they start to walk.

    Tortillas de Maíz Azul
    Blue corn gorditas (thick tortillas) toasting over wood fire on a clay comal.  These gorditas are also hand-patted, but are left relatively thick so that after toasting, they can be split and stuffed with your choice of delicious fillings and salsas.

    The corn tortilla has always been the single most important staple food of Mexico. Tortillas with a serving of beans are a perfect protein. In many impoverished Mexican homes, corn tortillas and a pot of beans are even today the only daily fare. At all levels of society, a meal eaten at home is not complete without a large stack of tortillas, carefully wrapped in a special napkin. A family of five can easily eat a kilo of tortillas as many as eighteen tortillas per person or more along with the comida (main meal of the day). 

    From the time tortillas originated, women have patted balls of damp masa by hand to form it into perfect circles. It's still a mark of pride for a restaurant to offer tortillas "hechas a mano" (hand made). In some homes, especially in very rural areas, the rhythmic pat-pat-patting of hands making tortillas marks the dinner hour.

    In many cases 'hand made' now means tortillas prepared using a tortilla press made of either wood or metal. Masa can either be purchased ready-made at a nearby tortillerí­a or cooks can prepare it from dried corn. Either way, once the masa is ready the tortillas must be made quickly or the masa will be too dry to work. A piece of waxed paper or one half of a plastic storage bag is placed on the bottom half of the tortilla press. A ball of dough the size of a golf ball or slightly larger is pulled from the bulk of masa; then the dough is flattened slightly by hand and placed on the plastic. A second plastic or waxed paper sheet is placed on top of the dough and the press is squeezed shut.

    Tortilla Press My Home Cooking.Net
    Metal tortilla press in use.  Note the sheets of plastic; one sheet is on the base of the press and the second is placed on the ball of dough.  Photo courtesy My Home Cooking.

    Open the press and there's a perfectly round tortilla, ready to have the plastic peeled off. Now do it again. And again. And again, and remember, there are five of you in the family and at least some of you will eat eighteen tortillas each at this meal! Even using the modern convenience of a tortilla press, it's still backbreaking work to prepare enough tortillas for a family's mealtime needs.

    Of course Mexico is not only about rural tradition and the indigenous corn kitchen. I recently talked about recent trends in the Mexican kitchen with Licenciada Virginia Jurado Thierry, owner of  Arquitectura en Cocinas in Guadalajara. Walking into her design center in fashionable Colonia Providencia is like walking into a high end kitchen designer's showroom anywhere in the world.

    Sleekly modern wood cabinets are shown with stainless steel refrigerators and restaurant quality stoves; glass-front cupboards reflect top-of-the-line small appliances crouching on quartz polymer resin counters. When I explained the nature of this article, Lic. Jurado nodded and invited me into her private office to chat.

    Cocina Después de Remodelar 1
    This was Mexico Cooks!' home kitchen in Morelia, Michoacán.  The pottery, tile countertops and copper sink–and the wooden trastero (dish cupboard)–are traditional styles.  The over-and-under-the-counter cupboards and the stove, washer, and dryer are new-fangled modern conveniences.

    "So many people think the design of the Mexican kitchen is only done with talavera tiles. New kitchens are constantly evolving, and new design here is similar to new design everywhere. As you noticed as you walked through our showrooms, we offer nothing but the finest in kitchens. Everything is designed with convenience and efficiency and performance in mind." She paused to reach behind her and take down a thick notebook. "These are some of the products we offer to our clients."

    We flipped through the book. Familiar names in high-quality, high-price tag kitchen design jumped out at me: European lines like Miele and Smeg, United States manufacturers such as SubZero, Wolf, Viking, and Dacor, and the noteworthy Italian Valcucina line were just a few important manufacturers' names I noticed.  "We can offer the client a stove for $5000 pesos or we can offer the client a stove for $15,000 U.S. Usually we find a meeting place somewhere in between those figures," Lic. Jurado told me.

    Modern Kitchen
    Twenty-first century Mexicans have gone crazy for the minimalist look, even in their kitchens.  Sleek, modern design is most common in new construction.  Photo courtesy Dotavideo.

     Lic. Jurado smiled. "Our clients really want a bright, clean look. That translates into light woods such as oak for cabinets, lots of whites and tones of gray, stainless steel and glass. People also want aluminum accessories and opaque glass, especially for cupboard doors. Paint colors are light. For counter tops, we're getting many requests for melamine in new, stain-free colors, and polymer resin quartz in light colors. And some people want granite, or colored concrete. It's a whole range of effects, but with a very clean European look."

    We've traveled more than 500 years, from pre-colonial days to the 21st century, in the course of a brief article. The contradictions of Mexico, even in as small a detail as the utensils and design of a kitchen, still amaze me.

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

  • Restaurante Jing Teng: A Taste of Hong Kong in Mexico City

    Jing Seng Baby
    Even the littlest diners love Jing Teng!  This sweetheart, no more than 18 months old, is eating her vegetable steamed dumpling and taking it all very seriously.

    A few Sundays ago, a group of Mexico City friends gathered at Jing Teng, a fairly recent addition to the capital's handful of Chinese restaurants that truly "valen la pena"–are worth the trouble.  The restaurant specializes in serving dim sum every single day of the week from 10AM till 1PM.  We had been before, but this time was really special both for the congeniality of our group and for the selection and quality of the dim sum.

    Char Siu Bao
    Char siu bao, delicious steamed dumplings stuffed with sweet barbecued pork. 

    Jing Teng Dim Sum Cart
    Unlike service in most dim sum restaurants, where women push steam carts through cavernous dining rooms and each diner chooses what he/she wants, at Jing Teng you go up to the steam table and pick your dim sum, still in its bamboo steamer, from the stacks.  The Jing Teng space is far too small for carts! Photo courtesy Straight.com.

    Chiquihuites Chinos
    One small section of the steam table at Jing Teng, stacked high with bamboo steamers filled with goodies. Some of the steamers hold two, three, or four pieces of dim sum, while others hold plates filled with steamed meats or vegetables. Different dishes–vegetables, soups, rice dishes, and jook (soupy, savory rice)–are available from the menu; your wait person will bring those to you. 

    Tamales Chinos
    Chinese tamales, ready to be steamed.

    Jing Seng Sticky Rice in Lotus Leaf
    Steamed sticky rice, filled with pork, chicken, and seasoning and wrapped–like a Mexican tamal–in a leaf.  In this case, it's a dried and then reconstituted lotus leaf.

    Jing Teng Lotus Leaf
    Dried lotus leaves.  The lotus leaf is very large, approximately 18 inches at its widest; once reconstituted, cut it to the size you need for your sticky rice tamal, then tie it up with string and steam it.  Photo courtesy Google images.

    Jing Teng Vegetable Dumpling
    Steamed dumplings stuffed with vegetables.  The dim sum offerings are made with a variety of wrappings.  Our waiter told me that on weekends, the restaurant prepares 20 steamers of each of many kinds of dim sum–and sells out. During the week, four steamers of each variety are sold.

    Jing Teng Fried Scallion Dumplings
    Fried dumplings, stuffed with Chinese chives, ginger, and another ingredient I could not identify.  These were so wonderful–the filling was wrapped and fried in crisp, slightly flaky pastry–that the eight of us gobbled down several apiece.

    Jing Teng Scallion Dumpling Insides
    I broke one of the chive dumplings in half to show you the filling.

    Jing Teng Bao
    Beautifully coiled plain steamed buns.

    Jing Teng Sheng Juan Bao
    These are sheng juan bao.  They came out of the kitchen just as we were leaving, so we didn't get to try them–none of us was able to eat another thing!  They're made with a flour-based dough that's typically filled with a mixture of minced pork, scallions, dried mushrooms, and fresh water chestnuts. The dumplings are steamed first and then pan fried on both sides. Next time.

    Jing Teng Har Gow
    Beautiful and delicate har gow (shrimp dumplings).  The dumpling dough is made from wheat starch, then stuffed with shrimp and steamed.  The dumplings are translucent so the peachy-pink color of the cooked shrimp shows through.

    Jing Teng Custard Bao Yellow Dot
    Bao (steamed buns) filled with egg custard.  Enlarge the photo to get a closer look at the yellow dot that marks each of these–to clue the diner about the filling.

    Jing Teng Bao Sweet Bean Paste y Steamed Pork with Bones
    Foreground, steamed pork.  Rear, bao with a filling of sweet bean paste.

    Jing Teng Antony and Chicken Foot
    Our friend Antony ate two large plates of chicken feet, all by himself.  He said they're one of his favorite foods and he hadn't had any for quite a while.

    Jing Teng Bao Frambuesa
    Our waitress, the only staff person in the restaurant who spoke Spanish, told us these bao were made with raspberries. The raspberry filling was the consistency of a thick gruel. The buns were sweet, but minimally flavored with the fruit.

    Jing Teng Pastry Chef
    Toward the end of our meal, I sneaked a peek into the kitchen.  This yellow dough, rolled out with a dowel almost faster than I could track, would become the crust for custard tarts.

    Jing Teng Chef
    Our chef, in his unusually open jacket.

    Jing Teng Chef's Names
    Three cooks were on duty in the kitchen.  I asked if they would please write down their names so I could tell you.  Yes, they did, and giggled all the while.  Can someone tell me what they wrote?

    Jing Teng Cuenta
    Our bill.  Eight of us ate until we simply couldn't eat anything else.  The 680 peso charge is equivalent to approximately $52.00 USD–about $7.00 apiece, counting our generous tip.

    Will we go back?  Yes, yes, and YES, just name the date.  Jing Teng is marvelous.

    Jing Teng Sign
    Restaurante Jing Teng, Hong Kong style dim sum and other dishes a la carte.

    Jing Teng
    Sur 65-A 3256 corner Calle Santa Anita
    Colonia Viaducto La Piedad
    Del. Iztacalco
    México, Distrito Federal
    Tel: 5440-2732
    Dim Sum hours: 10:00AM – 1:00PM daily

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  • Mercado Roma: Hipster Foodie Heaven in Colonia Roma, Mexico City

    Mercado Roma Fachada
    The newest kid on the block is Mercado Roma: hyper-trendy, very upscale and muy de la moda (very much in style), and currently attracting hordes every weekend.  It's only a little less crowded during the week.  The building is the controversial but swinging hot spot at Calle Querétaro 225, Colonia Roma Norte, Mexico City. To coin a phrase, be there or be square.

    Mexico Cooks! was amazed to see that Mercado Roma, not officially open until June 25, was full to the brim a couple of Saturdays ago.  Several friends had told me you just have to go, and never wanting to be left behind in the rush for trendiness, we went. The cars you see in the photo above are actually double-parked, waiting for the valet parking guys to move them into the public parking lot directly across the street.  Valet parking is good news: when you go, it's easiest to walk, take a taxi, or plan to pay the valet, since on-street parking is all but nonexistent.

    Mercado Roma Suspención de Actividades
    At intervals on the front of the building, these official notices (ACTIVITIES SUSPENDED) plastered on the building's pillars are remnants of a still-undecided debate.  The sides to be taken are:
       
        1.  Did someone pay off the city to allow construction of the building's not-yet-completed third floor?  
        2.  Should commercial construction be allowed in this predominately  residential street?
        3.  Is the street actually predominately residential?
        4.  Faced with the joy of new and trendy gourmet shops and tiny eating spots (mostly branches of well-recognized, glitzy Mexico City restaurants), does anybody really care? 

    It appeared that the gazillion people snarfing down free samples, purchasing urban market food from Mexico City's high-end chefs or their minions, and eagerly checking one another out didn't give a fig (of which we saw quite a few) about the controversy.  We'll let the city and the architects figure it out.  Let's press on!

    Mercado Roma Gentío
    This tiny corner of Mercado Roma–just a barely representative corner of the whole mob scene–was filled with milling throngs of mainly young people, although we saw a few heads as gray as our own.  We were here on a midafternoon Saturday, and so was everyone else in the city!

    Mercado Roma Pan da Silva
    We were initially lured by the offerings of bread, both sweet and salt, from Panadería La Silva.  We bought a round pan rústico (a small rustic loaf, made with white flour and malt extract), the last two plain bagels (definitely not New York bagels, but tasty and chewy), and a couple of pretzel sticks. The bill for bread was just over $100 pesos (about $8.50 USD). 

    Mercado Roma Bakery Pan da Silva
    Some of the other bread offerings at Panadería La Silva: moños (ties, far left), cuernitos (croissants), biscochos (biscuits), roles de canela (cinnamon rolls, back center) conchas (shells, right foreground).

    Mercado Roma Germina
    The booth called Germina offers raw, roasted, or candied nuts and seeds, as well as other nuts, seeds, and cereals.  Here, in-the-shell pistachios.

    Mercado Roma Lactografía
    Cheeses–just one small section of the cheese case–at Carlos Yescas' Lactography.   The store specializes in Mexican cheeses and occasionally offers a wine-and-cheese tasting event.  Most recently, the event, priced at $350 pesos per person, was available as a Father's Day gift.

    Mercado Roma Porrua
    Librería Porrua's stand is well-stocked with food-oriented and other books. Prices seemed standard for these books.

    Mercado Roma Qué Bo!
    Chocolates Qué Bo!, by José Ramón Castillo, Mexico's premier chocolatier. These glorious bonbons–Qué Bo!'s signature dark or milk chocolate filled with everything from cajeta (thick burned milk) to mezcal or deeply flavored, rich café de olla (pot-style coffee flavored with cinnamon) and back again–are 19 pesos each and are simply wonderful.  Qué Bo! means, 'Whoa, give me another one! These are fantastic!'  Photo courtesy Mercado Roma.

    Mercado Roma Organic Veggies
    Huerto 'sobre ruedas' (Garden on Wheels) will take your order by phone or email and deliver your organic vegetables to your door.  

    Mercado Roma Arbanus Falafel
    One of the two falafel we ordered from Arbanus at Mercado Roma.  The spiel about the food says, "based on the traditional Arabic food that has been consumed in Mexico for many years."  Chef Daniel Frydman and his crew offer house-made kibe, baba ganoush, doner kabob, hummous, and a number of other items.  The pita bread was heavenly, the falafel was not.  It had almost no flavor, the individual balls of falafel were unnaturally green and completely mushy rather than crunchy on the outside and soft on the inside, and the vegetable topping was not what I know as appropriate.

    Mercado Roma Arbanus Cuenta
    We ordered two ordinary-sized falafel sandwiches and two bottles of water. The total cost: $250 pesos (approximately $20 USD).  We won't be doing this again.

    Mercado Roma Azul Antojo
    Ricardo Muñoz Zurita's Azul restaurant group (Azul y Oro, Azul/Condesa, and Azul/Histórico) is represented at Mercado Roma by Azul Antojo (antojo means ('whim'). These twenty-somethings were having a great time. Click the photo for a larger view of the menu.

    Mercado Roma Piso
    The tile floor at Mercado Roma.  I love it–it's just like the old 'tumbling blocks' quilt pattern.

    Mercado Roma Té Forte
    Tea forté, brought to Mercado Roma by Tendencia Gastronomía.

    Mercado Roma Waygu Beef
    Present at Mercado Roma and in San Ángel: Rancho Las Luisas Wagyu beef.

    Mercado Roma Dulce Corazón 2
    Dulce Corazón's charming booth near the rear of the first floor is filled with both traditional and unusual sweets.

    Mercado Roma Dulce Corazón
    In lieu of a business card, the Dulce Corazón shopkeeper gave me a house-made mazapán (peanut marzipan) with all the store's information on the label.  A sweet treat indeed!

    Mercado Roma Tazas y Plumas
    Pens and peltre (enameled metal) cups with Mercado Roma's logo.

    Mexico Cooks! thoroughly enjoyed seeing the latest wrinkle in gourmet shopping at the hip, cool, and groovy Mercado Roma.  Will we go back?  We'll let you know! We'd be interested to know your opinion, if YOU go.

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  • Heads Up! Heading for Mexico’s Markets: What You Might See

    Zaachila Guajolote
    If you've been reading Mexico Cooks! for long, you know that we photograph a lot of ripe and colorful fruits, vegetables, and other edibles in Mexico's markets. This gorgeous turkey, for example, was tethered with some others at the Thursday weekly market in Zaachila, Oaxaca.  He didn't know it, of course, but he would soon be purchased and…well, you can imagine. This is a food market, after all.

    In the interest of early and full disclosure, the rest of the photos in this article might just gross you out.  It turns out that for reasons unknown even to myself, I have, in addition to taking lots of market photos of benign and lovely fruits and vegetables, made lots of head shots. Disembodied heads of animals. Be warned.

    Hog Heaven Shaving the Pig
    This Mexico City butcher saw me approaching with the camera and obligingly sat the pig head up straight for a portrait.  He's shaving the head, which was to be sold either whole or in parts for making Jalisco-style pozole. Better he should shave it than you should have to do it!

    Mercado SJ Cabeza Cabrito con Gusanos Maguey
    That's a goat head at the left of the photo.  To the right is a container of chinicuiles (red maguey worms).  The goat head is for preparing birria, the chinicuiles are for roasting and eating as a snack.

    Carnicería Mercado Libertad Guadalajara
    I think this is the first pig head picture I took, years ago at Guadalajara's Mercado Libertad.  All the pigs' heads I've seen have had that same charming little smile.

    Amecameca Cabeza de Puerco con Morcilla
    See what I mean?  This fellow looks downright happy to have given his all for your bowl of Guerrero-style pozole.

    Mercado SJ Cabeza de Pescado copy
    Anyone for bouillabaise?  It's been a long time since I prepared this delicious French fish stew, but Mexican markets always have the ingredients.  Like pozole, bouillabaise starts its broth with heads–in this case, fish heads.

    Cabeza Cocida
    Doña Martha has taken the cooked pig head out of the broth to remove its bones and teeth.  At this point, the pozole is almost-but-not-quite ready to serve.

    Hog Heaven Bouquet de Cabezas
    Admit it, you would have taken this picture, too.  How could I resist?

    Cabeza de Res en Penca
    You might want to click on this photo to enlarge it, for a better view.  It's barbacoa de res (beef barbecue, Mexican style), wrapped in penca de maguey (cactus leaves) and cooked for hours in a pit.  You can still see the teeth in the jaw.

    Mercado Cabeza de Vaca
    A raw beef head, hung upside down in the butcher shop.

    Cachete
    Here's another beef head with the skin and fur removed from the top of the head.  The butcher's gloved thumb is just about to pull the skin off the nose.

    Chicken Heads
    Chicken heads.  I don't have a recipe nor do I know of a recipe.  If you do, please let me know!

    Big Pink Pig Head Mercado San Juan Morelia
    You'll be glad to know that this is the last pig head for this article.  This one, thoroughly cleaned, shaven, and ready for the pot, is merely waiting for a customer. The ears, snout, and tongue are delicacies in Mexico.

    Head of Cabbage
    Has this photo essay driven any of you into the vegetarian camp?  Here's a vegetarian head: cabbage, of course.  

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  • Mexico’s Love Affair with Pork: Hog Heaven South of the Border

    Azul Cochinita
    Cochinita pibil from the Yucatán (seasoned pork, slow-cooked and then shredded), a specialty of Ricardo Muñoz Zurita's Restaurante Azul/Condesa.  Served in a banana leaf with a topping of pickled red onion, it's delicious.

    Mexico is one of the largest producers and consumers of pork in the world, second only to China.  In spite of the 'swine flu' crisis several years ago, Mexico continues to eat pork at a record-breaking pace and, every year, to export millions of tons of pork to other countries.  (FIRA

    Puercos en Camión
    From the growers' farms to a rastro (slaughterhouse) is a speedy ride along one of Mexico's super-highways.  A truck like this one, loaded with pigs, is an everyday sight throughout Mexico.  Photo courtesy ROTOV.

    Mexico is not nearly as squeamish as the United States in seeing where its carne de cerdo (pork meat) comes from.  In fact, a stroll through just about any city market or tianguis (street market) will give ample evidence that meat–including pork meat–comes from an animal, not from a sterile, platic-wrapped styrofoam meat tray at a supermarket.  

    Pig Head
    Every part of the pig is used in Mexico's kitchens.  The head is ordinarily used to make pozole, a rich stew of pork meat, reconstituted dried corn, spices, and condiments.  

    No pork existed in Mexico until after the Spanish conquest; in fact, no domestic animals other than the xoloitzcuintle dog were used for food.  The only sources of animal protein were fish, frogs, and other water creatures, wild Muscovy-type ducks, the javalí (wild boar), about 200 varieties of edible insects, doves and the turkey, all native to what is now Mexico.  

    Hog Heaven Pig Tails
    Mexico has been cooking head-to-tail since long before that notion came into international vogue.  Pig tails are used here for roasting–look for recipes for rabo de cerdo asado (roast pig tail).|

    Pig Mariachi Mercado de Jamaica August 2013
    No matter that just below these jolly mariachi pigs at Mexico City's Mercado de Jamaica, their once-live counterparts lie ready for the butcher's knife.  These fellows play on!

    Chicharrón 3
    Chicharrón (fried pig skin) is prepared fresh every day by butchers whose specialty is pork.  Nothing goes to waste.

    Just about any Mexican butcher worth his stripes can custom-cut whatever portion of the pig you need for meal preparation.  In case you're not 100% familiar with the names of Mexican cuts, here are two pork cut charts, first in English and then in Spanish for comparison.

    Pork Cuts English
    Pork cuts chart in English.  Click to enlarge the image for better viewing.

    Pork Cuts Chart Spanish
    Pork cuts chart in Spanish (for Mexican users).  Even in Spanish, many cuts have different names depending on which country names them.  Again, click to enlarge the image for a better view.

    Mercado SJ Lechón
    These suckling pigs were butchered at 6 weeks to 3 months old.  Known in Mexico as lechón, roast suckling pig is a delicacy by any name.  Many restaurants specialize in its preparation.

    Tacos al Pastor Calle Uruguay DF
    One of the most common and popular (and really delicious) kinds of street tacos is tacos al pastor (shepherd style tacos).  Marinate thinly sliced pork meat in a sauce made of chiles guajillo, vinegar, and tomato. Next, layer the slices on a vertical spit so that they form the shape of a spinning top.  At the top of the meat, place a pineapple without skin.  Light the fire in the grate behind the spit and allow a portion of the meat to cook until slightly caramelized on the edges and tender within.  Slice into very thin pieces, using them to fill a tortilla warmed on the flattop.  With your sharp knife, flick a small section of the pineapple into the taco.  Add the salsa you prefer, some minced onion and cilantro, and ahhhhh…the taste of Mexico!

    Titita Manitas de Cerdo
    Manitas de cerdo: pickled pigs' feet.  The well-scrubbed feet are cooked in salted water, then added to vegetables cooked in a pickling solution of vinegar, chile, vegetables, and herbs.  In Mexico, manitas de cerdo can be eaten as either a botana (snack) or a main dish.

    Pátzcuaro Carnitas
    One of my personal favorite pork dishes: carnitas from Michoacán!  These carnitas in particular are the best I've ever eaten: large hunks of pork are boiled in lard until crispy on the outside, succulent and juicy on the inside.  Chopped roughly and served with various salsas, they're the best tacos I know.  Find them at Carnitas Aeropuerto, in Zamora, Michoacán.

    Adobo en el Plato
    Adobo huasteco, another deliciously spicy pork dish.  It's been a while since this last appeared on our table–and it's high time we prepared it again.  Click on the link for the recipe.

    Hog Heaven Bouquet de Cabezas
    Last but not least, here's a rosy bouquet of pig heads for sale at the Mercado de Jamaica in Mexico City.

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  • Mexico City’s Wholesale Flower Market: Mercado de Jamaica

    Bellas Artes con Jacaranda 11-03-2014
    Spring arrives in Mexico City in February, with the purple-blossoming jacaranda trees you see in the foreground. Behind the trees, our Centro Histórico's (historic center) iconic dome of the Palacio de Bellas Artes and behind that, the emblematic Torre Latinoamericana.  All photos copywrite Mexico Cooks! unless noted otherwise.

    Árbol de la Primavera
    Spring comes early to central Mexico.  The sun's new strength brings sweater-shedding warmth, gusty breezes, and flowers by the millions.  Bougainvillea, jacaranda, and primavera (Tabebuia chrysotricha, above photo) trees riot into bloom. We sigh over our streets, temporary rainbows of fallen blossoms. Photo courtesy Javier Palafox.

    Metro DF Linea 9
    For indoor flowers–arrangements for any occasion from birth to the tomb, or for fresh cut flowers to arrange yourself, for corsages, and even for big plastic bags of rose petals–your first stop in Mexico City is the Mercado de Jamaica: our wholesale flower market.  It's a snap for Mexico Cooks! to hop on the Metro closest to our home (the Chilpancingo stop along Metro Line 9, third from left in the photo), ride four stops, and hop off at Metro Jamaica.  Yes, the market has its own Metro stop!  Its symbol is an ear of corn.  Click on any photo to enlarge the image for a better look.  Photo courtesy Metro DF.

    Recorrido Dulces Chiquitos Surtidos
    On the Saturday before Palm Sunday, I took a friend on his first visit to this magical market.  When you exit the Metro and enter the shopping area, the Mercado de Jamaica looks like most Mexico City markets: as far as the eye can see, it's stalls of vendors selling everything from pet supplies to piñatas and from pirate CDs to plastic gewgaws, doodads, and thingamajigs.  Above, small candies for sale by the gram or the kilo.

    Huitlacoche 3
    Still in the produce section of the market, we found a basket of huitlacoche (corn fungus).  To the left and at bottom, you see fungus that has been cut off the cob.  At the top and right are ears of corn fungus, still in the fresh green husks.  It just doesn't get any fresher than this.

    Unlaid Eggs Mercado Jamaica
    If you keep walking toward what you might think is the back of the market, you will pass through a section devoted to meat vendors and chicken vendors. The photo above is a tub of unlaid egg yolks, taken from recently-butchered hens.

    Rosas Rojas y Blancas 30 pesos 6 docenas
    Pass through a slightly damp passageway and you reach your reward: the enormous market section of wholesale flower vendors.  It's a revelation, I promise you, and one that will leave you delighted.  For example, several vendors were selling these roses and others of all colors in bundles of six dozen–for 30 pesos (about $2.00 USD). One of the vendors told me that at special flower-oriented times of year like Valentine's Day and Mother's Day, the same bundles sell for 120 pesos (just over $9.00 USD).  At either price, they're a bargain.

    Lirios Multicolores
    At this season of the year, lilies are what's in order. From casablanca to stargazer to standard-issue day lilies, you'll find what you want for an Easter bouquet.

    Alstromeria in Cages
    These alstromeria-filled small bird cages hung from bare-branched tree limbs. The cages also held rose buds, daisies, and baby's breath.  They'd be just the ticket to decorate for a bridal shower or quinceañera (girl's 15th birthday).  With so wide a range of colors available in both alstromerias and roses, you could match any dress tones.

    Woven Palms with Statice
    Many vendors offered woven palms for sale, especially for Palm Sunday. These included purple statice and fresh rosemary.

    Cristitos Cargando la Cruz
    These figures, about six inches high, depict Christ carrying the cross.  The heads, hands, and arms are made of straw.  Again, these are special for Palm Sunday and Good Friday.

    Cruces Blancas
    In this part of Mexico, funeral flowers are always white. These crosses are designed to be sent to a funeral home or to the home of the person who has passed away. Many deceased are still 'waked' at home.  In addition, for Catholics, the rosary is usually said at home for nine days after a death. Flowers and candles are pure white.  The many-colored bouquets behind and to the side of the crosses are for wedding or other party decor.

    Flores Mixtas
    Spring has sprung!  Some of the vendors at the Mercado de Jamaica specialize in exotic flowers, like the ones at the far right center of the photo. Many vendors call their blooms by really colloquial and/or regional names. My friend asked the name of the grayish-green leaves in the center of the photo; the vendor said, "dólar" (dollar). You probably know the plant as silver dollar eucalyptus.

    Yo No Soy La Novia
    This delightful young man sat talking with a friend while he held a charmingly feminine bouquet.  We joked about whether he was to be the bride, which tickled him no end.  He turned the same pink as the roses!

    Alcatraces Calla Lilies
    Alcatraces (calla lilies) sold in bud, like these, will open up little by little in your home.  Did you know that Alcatraz, the prison near San Francisco, California, is named for this flower?

    Nube
    Believe it or not, this is just one small corner of the baby's breath for sale by one vendor.  In Spanish, baby's breath is called nube (cloud).  Almost every arrangement has some, filling in any available space.

    Hortensias April 2014
    Hortensias (hydrangeas), in shades ranging from white to purple.  Similar plants, in full flower and with the pots gussied up with ivy, moss, and ribbons, graced the tables at a party at our former home in Morelia.  They made perfect and very inexpensive centerpieces.

    Garden 1
    One corner of our Morelia garden, dressed to the nines for the party.  When the festivities were over, we planted the hydrangeas in our borders.

    Arreglo con Rosas
    These bouquets of roses, bells of Ireland, and baby's breath from the Mercado de Jamaica were arranged on porcelain plates.  Aren't they gorgeous?  Let's have a party!  Better yet, let's take a market tour.  You will love a day at the market.

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