MEXICAN CUISINE

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:''This topic should not be confused with Tex-Mex, which is often referred to as "Mexican food" in the U.S.''
'Mexican food' is a style of food that originated in Mexico.
Mexican cuisine is known for its intense and varied flavors, colorful decoration, and variety of spices. Mexican culture and food is one of the richest in the world, both with respect to diverse and appealing tastes and textures; and in terms of proteins, vitamins, and minerals. Though not a verfied claim, some people consider Mexican cuisine to be the second most varied and vast in the world (after Chinese cuisine).
When Spanish ''conquistadores'' arrived in the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan (the ancient city on which Mexico City was built), they found that the people's diet consisted largely of corn-based dishes with chiles and herbs, usually complemented with beans and squash. The ''conquistadores'' eventually combined their imported diet of rice, beef, pork, chicken, wine, garlic and onions with the indigenous foods of pre-Columbian Mexico, including chocolate, maize, tomato, vanilla, avocado, papaya, pineapple, chile pepper, beans, squash, sweet potato, peanut and turkey. The totopo (a salted corn tortilla cooked in a fire oven) may have been created as part of this cuisine.
Most of today's Mexican food is based on pre-hispanic traditions, including the Aztecs and Maya, combined with culinary trends introduced by Spanish colonists. ''Quesadillas'', for example, are a flour or corn tortilla with cheese (often a Mexican-style soft farmer's cheese such as Queso Fresco), beef, chicken, pork, and so on. The indigenous part of this and many other traditional foods is the chile pepper. Foods like these tend to be very colorful because of the rich variety of vegetables (among them are the chili peppers, green peppers, chilies, broccoli, cauliflower, and radishes) and meats in Mexican food. There is also a sprinkling of Caribbean influence in Mexican cuisine, particularly in some regional dishes from the states of Veracruz and Yucatán. The French occupation of Mexico also yielded some influences as well: the bolillo (pronounced bo-lee-yo, with the "o" as in "bore"), a Mexican take on the French roll, certainly seems to reflect this.
Mexican food varies by region, because of local climate and geography and ethnic differences among the indigenous inhabitants and because these different populations were influenced by the Spaniards in varying degrees. The north of Mexico is known for its beef production and meat dishes. Southeastern Mexico, on the other hand, is known for its spicy vegetable and chicken-based dishes. Seafood is commonly prepared in the state of Veracruz.
There are also more exotic dishes, cooked in the Aztec or Mayan style, with ingredients ranging from iguana to rattlesnake, deer, spider monkey, and even some kinds of insects. This is usually known as ''comida prehispánica'' (or prehispanic food), and although not very common, is relatively well known.
A distinction must be made between truly authentic Mexican food, and "Tex Mex" (Texan-Mexican) cuisines. Mexican cuisine combines with the cuisine of the southwest United States (which itself has a number of Mexican influences) to form Cal-Mex and Tex-Mex cuisine. Another style of cuisine that is commonly mistaken for Mexican food is New Mexican cuisine, which is, of course, found in New Mexico, USA.
Enchilada with mole sauce

Salsa verde, salsa roja

Pico de gallo ("salsa mexicana")

Assorted tacos

Guacamole

Ensalada de nopales

Foods that are part of the Mexican culinary tradition include:

Contents
Appetizers (''botanas'') and side dishes
Main Courses
Drinks
Desserts and sweets
See also
External links
Appetizers (''botanas'') and side dishes


Arroz amarillo

Arroz con lima

Arroz Español (Spanish rice)

Arroz verde

Bolillos

Calabaza (squash)

Camote, Mexican sweet potato

★ Dry soup, sopa, typically pasta with flavoring of meat or tomato consomme

Consomme, broth, either made from drippings of meat roasted for barbacoa, or dry bouillon cubes and powder (usually known by its most common brand name, (Knorr-Suiza)

Curtido

Elote

Ensalada de fruta, fruit salad

Fideos, noodles

Frijoles pintos, pinto beans

Frijoles negros, black beans

Frijoles charros

★ Frijoles

Guacamole

Jicama

Lentejas, lentil beans

Refried beans (''frijoles refritos'')

Nachos

Nopalitos

Pambazos

★ Papas (potatoes)

Pico de gallo

Salsa

Yuca Cassava

★ Iris
Main Courses


Albóndigas

Arroz con camarones

Arroz con pollo

Bacanora

barbacoa

birria

bistec picado

burrito

★ ''caldo'', soup, (generally considered an entree rather than an appetizer) which has many variations, such as


★ ''caldo de pollo'', chicken soup


★ ''caldo de res'', beef soup


★ ''caldo de queso'', cheese soup


★ ''caldo de camaron'' shrimp soup, typically made from dried shrimp


★ ''carne en su jugo'', meat and beans in a meat broth


★ ''caldo de mariscos'', seafood soup, similar to the Italian dish ''zuppa di pesce''. Popularly supposed to be an aphrodisiac.



★ Also see Menudo and pozole

carne asada

carnitas

cecina

cemitas sandwiches

chapulines and escamoles

charales, small fish, basically a type of smelt

chicharrón and chicharrones

chilaquiles

chiles en nogada

chiles rellenos

chilorio

chilli con carne

chilpachole de jaiva

chimichangas

choriqueso

chorizo

churipo

cochinita pibil

cocido

cóctel de camarón and other seafood cocktails

coyotas

empanadas

enchilada (red or green)

flautas

fritadas de camaron

gorditas

glorias

gringas

huevos divorciados

huevos motuleños

huevos rancheros

lengua

longaniza

machaca

mancha manteles

mariscos

menudo

milanesa

mixiotes

mole

molletes

moronga

parilladas

pasties, a speciality of Cornwall, adopted as ''comida typical'' of Pachuca

Pejelagarto asado

picadillo

Poc chuc

pollo asado

pollo picado

pollo rostizado

polvorones

pozole

★ ''pulpo'', octopus

quesadillas

rajas con crema

romeritos

sopes

sopa azteca

sopa de pollo

sopa de tortilla

sopa tarasca

tacos

tamales

taquitos

Tortillas

Tortas (sandwiches)

★ "Tortas de...." Small omelettes similar to egg foo yung patties. See also romeritos.

tostadas

tlacoyos

tlayudas

tripas

venado, particularly in the Yucatan.
Drinks


Tejate

Chocolate Generally known better as a drink rather than a candy or sweet

Atole or champurrado

Horchata

Mexican beer and soft drinks are very popular and are major export products.

Aguas frescas

Mezcal

Michelada

Tepache

Tequila

Pulque, a popular drink of the Aztecs

Jarritos

Agua De Horchata

Jugos de Fruta
Desserts and sweets

Mexico's candy and bakery sweets industry, centered in Michoacan and Mexico City, produces a wide array of products.

Arroz con leche, rice with milk and sugar

★ Pastel de queso, cheesecake

Jamoncillos

Cajeta

Capirotada

★ Carlota de limón

Coyotas

Empanadas

Flan

Pastel de tres leches (Three Milk Cake)

Platano

★ Alegrías

★ Ate

Churros

Dulce de leche

★ Chongos zamoranos, a milk candy named for its place of origin, Zamora, Michoacán.

★ Jarritos (spicy tamarindo candy in a tiny pot), as well as a brand of soda

★ ''Pan dulce'', sweet pastries, like American doughnuts, very popular for breakfast. Nearly every Mexican town has a bakery (''panaderia'') where these can purchased.

★ Pepitorias

★ Obleas

★ Glorias

★ ''Pan de Acambaro'' (Acambaro bread), named for its town of origin, Acambaro, Guanajuato. Very similar to Jewish Challah bread, which may have inspired its creation.

Ice cream. Pancho Villa was noted as a devotee of ice cream. The Mexican ice cream industry is centered in the state of Michoacan; most ice cream stands in Mexico are dubbed ''La Michoacana'' as a tribute to Michoacan's acknowledged leadership in the production of this product.

★ ''Paletas'', popsicles (or ''ice lollies''), the street popsicle vendor is a noted fixture of Mexico's urban landscape.

See also



Aztec cuisine

External links



Food and Recipes in Mexico

LasRecetasdelaAbuela.com

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