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MEXICO
- EATING AND
DRINKING |
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Whatever your preconceptions
about Mexican food, if
you've never eaten in Mexico
they will almost certainly
be wrong. It bears very
little resemblance to the
concoctions served in
"Mexican"
restaurants or fast-food
joints in other parts of the
world - certainly you won't
find chile con carne outside
the tourist spots of
Acapulco. Nor, as a rule, is
it especially spicy; indeed,
a more common complaint from
visitors is that after a
while it all seems rather
bland.
Where to eat
Basic meals are served at restaurantes
, but you can get
breakfast, snacks and
often full meals at cafés
too; there are take-out
and fast-food
places serving sandwiches,
tortas (filled rolls) and
tacos (tortillas folded
over with a filling), as
well as more
international-style food;
there are establishments
called jugerías
(look for signs saying
"Jugos y Licuados")
serving nothing but
wonderful juices ( jugos
), licuados (fruit
blended with water or
milk) and fruit salads;
and there are street
stalls dishing out
everything from tacos to
orange juice to ready-made
crisp vegetable salads
sprinkled with chile-salt
and lime. Just about every
market in the
country has a cooked-food
section, too, and these
are invariably the
cheapest places to eat, if
not always in the most
enticing surroundings. In
the big cities and
resorts, of course, there
are international
restaurants too - pizza
and Chinese food
are ubiquitous. Argentinian
restaurants are the places
to go for well-cooked,
good-quality steaks.
When you're travelling,
as often as not the food
will come to you; at every
stop people clamber onto
buses and trains
(especially second-class
ones) with baskets of
home-made foods, local
specialities, cold drinks
or jugs of coffee. You'll
find wonderful things this
way that you won't come
across in restaurants, but
they should be treated
with caution, and with an
eye to hygiene.
What to eat
The basic Mexican diet is
essentially one of corn
( maíz ) and its
products, supplemented by beans
and chiles. These
three things appear in an
almost infinite variety of
guises. Some dishes are
hot (ask ¿es picante?
), but on the whole you
add your own seasoning
from the bowls of
home-made chile sauce on
the table - these are
often surprisingly mild,
but they can be fiery and
should always be
approached with caution.
There are at least a
hundred different types of
chile, fresh or
dried, in colours ranging
from pale green to almost
black, and all sorts of
different sizes (large,
mild ones are often
stuffed with meat or
cheese and rice to make chiles
rellenos ). Each has a
distinct flavour and by no
means all are hot (which
is why we don't use the
English term "chilli"
for them), although the
most common, chiles jalapeños,
small and either green or
red, certainly are. You'll
always find a chile sauce
( salsa ) on the
table when you eat, and in
any decent restaurant it
will be home-made; no two
are quite alike. Chile is
also the basic ingredient
of more complex cooked
sauces, notably mole, an
extraordinary mixture of
chocolate, chile, and
fifty or so other
ingredients traditionally
served with turkey or
chicken (the classic mole
poblano ), but also
sometimes with enchiladas
(rolled, filled tortillas
baked in sauce). Another
speciality to look out for
is chiles en nogada
, a bizarre combination of
stuffed green peppers
covered in a white sauce
made of walnuts and cream
cheese or sour cream,
topped with red
pomegranate: the colours
reflect the national flag
and it's served especially
in September around
Independence Day, which is
also when the walnuts are
fresh.
Beans ( frijoles
), an invariable
accompaniment to egg
dishes - and with almost
everything else too - are
of the pinto or kidney
variety and are almost
always served refritos
, ie boiled up, mashed,
and "refried"
(though actually this is
the first time they're
fried). They're even
better if you can get them
whole in some kind of
country-style soup or
stew, often with pork or
bacon, for example frijoles
charros .
Corn, in some form or
another, features in
virtually everything. In
its natural state it is
known as elote and
you can find it roasted on
the cob at street stalls
or in soups and stews such
as pozole (with
meat). Far more often,
though, it is ground into
flour for tortillas
, flat maize pancakes of
which you will get a stack
to accompany your meal in
any cheap Mexican
restaurant (in more
expensive or touristy
places you'll get bread
rolls, bolillos).
Tortillas can also be made
of wheatflour ( de
harina ), which may be
preferable to outsiders'
tastes, but these are rare
except in the north.
Tortillas form the
basis of many specifically
Mexican dishes, often
described as antojitos
(appetizers, light
courses) on menus.
Simplest of these are tacos
, tortillas filled with
almost anything, from beef
and chicken to green
vegetables, and then fried
(they're usually still
soft, not at all like the
baked taco shells you may
have had at home). With
cheese, either or alone or
in addition to other
fillings, they are called quesadillas
. Enchiladas are
rolled, filled tortillas
covered in chile sauce and
baked; enchiladas
suizas are filled with
chicken and have sour
cream over them. Tostadas
are flat tortillas toasted
crisp and piled with
ingredients - usually
meat, salad vegetables and
cheese (smaller bite-size
versions are known as
sopes). Tortillas torn up
and cooked together with
meat and (usually hot)
sauce are called chilaquiles
: this is a traditional
way of using up leftovers.
Especially in the north,
you'll also come across burritos
(large wheatflour
tortillas, stuffed with
anything, but usually beef
and potatoes or beans) and
gorditas (delicious
small, fat, corn
tortillas, sliced open,
stuffed and baked or
fried). Also short and fat
are tlacoyos ,
tortillas made with a
stuffing of mashed beans,
often using blue cornflour,
which gives them a rather
bizarre colour.
Cornflour, too, is the
basis of tamales -
found predominantly in
central and southern
Mexico - which are a sort
of cornmeal pudding,
stuffed, flavoured, and
steamed in corn or banana
leaves. They can be either
savoury, with additions
like prawn or elote, or
sweet when made with
something like coconut.
Except in the north, meat
is not especially good -
beef in particular is
usually thin and tough;
pork, kid and occasionally
lamb are better. If the
menu doesn't specify what
kind of meat it is, it's
usually pork - even bistec
can be pork unless it
specifies bistec de res
. For thick American-style
steaks, look for a sign
saying "Carnes
Hereford" or for a
"New York Cut"
description (only in
expensive places or in the
north). Seafood is
almost always fresh and
delicious, especially the
spicy prawn or octopus
cocktails which you find
in most coastal areas ( coctel
or campechana de camaron/pulpo
), but beware of eating
uncooked shellfish. Eggs
- in country areas
genuinely free-range and
flavoursome - feature on
every menu as the most
basic of meals, and at
some time you must try the
classic Mexican
combinations of huevos
rancheros or huevos
a la mexicana.
Vegetarian food in Mexico
Vegetarians can eat
well in Mexico, although
it does take caution to
avoid meat altogether.
Many Mexican dishes are
naturally meat-free and
there are always fabulous
fruits and vegetables
available. Most
restaurants serve
vegetable soups and rice,
and items like quesadillas,
chiles rellenos, and even
tacos and enchiladas often
come with non-meat
fillings. Another
possibility is queso
fundido , simply (and
literally) melted cheese,
served with tortillas and
salsa. Eggs, too, are
served anywhere at any
time, and many jugerías
serve huge mixed salads
to which grains and nuts
can be added.
However, do bear in
mind that vegetarianism,
though growing, is not
particularly common, and a
simple cheese and chile
dish may have some meat
added to
"improve" it.
Worse, most of the fat
used for frying is animal
fat (usually lard), so
that even something as
unadorned as refried beans
may not be strictly
vegetarian (especially as
a bone or some stock may
have been added to the
water the beans were
originally boiled in).
Even so-called vegetarian
restaurants, which are
increasingly common and
can be found in all the
big cities, often include
chicken on the menu. You
may well have better luck
in pizza places and
Chinese or other ethnic
restaurants.
Salsa
Since so much Mexican food
is simple, and endlessly
repeated in restaurant
after restaurant, one way
to tell the places apart -
and a vital guide to the
quality of the
establishment - is by
their salsa .
You'll always get at least
one bowl or bottle per
table, and sometimes as
many as four to choose
from. A couple of these
will be proprietary brands
(Tabasco-like, usually
with great, exotic labels
and invariably muy picante)
but there should always be
at least one home-made
concoction. Increasingly
this is raw ,
California-style salsa:
tomato, onion, chile and
cilantro (coriander
leaves) finely chopped
together. More common,
though, are the
traditional cooked
salsas, either green or
red, and almost always
relatively mild (though
start eating with
caution). The recipes are
- of course - closely
guarded secrets, but again
the basic ingredients are
tomato (the green Mexican
tomato in green versions),
onion and one or more of
the hundreds of varieties
of chile.
Meals
Traditionally, Mexicans
eat a light breakfast very
early, a snack of tacos or
eggs in mid-morning, lunch
(the main meal of the day)
around two o'clock or
later - in theory followed
by a siesta, but
decreasingly so, it seems
- and a late, light
supper. Eating a large
meal at lunchtime can be a
great moneysaver - almost
every restaurant serves a
cut-price comida corrida.
Breakfast ( desayuno
) in Mexico can consist
simply of coffee (see
"Drinking") and
pan dulce - sweet rolls
and pastries that usually
come in a basket; you pay
for as many as you eat.
More substantial
breakfasts consist of eggs
in any number of forms
(many set breakfasts
include huevos al gusto
: eggs any way you like
them), and at fruit juice
places you can have a
simple licuado (see
"Drinking")
fortified with raw egg (blanquillo).
Freshly squeezed orange
juice ( jugo de naranja
) is always available from
street stalls in the early
morning.
Snack meals
mostly consist of some
variation on the
taco/enchilada theme
(stalls selling them are
called taquerías), but
tortas - rolls heavily
filled with meat or cheese
or both, garnished with
avocado and chile and
toasted on request - are
also wonderful, and you'll
see take-out torta stands
everywhere. Failing that,
you can of course always
make your own snacks with
bread or tortillas, along
with fillings such as
avocado or cheese, from
shops or markets.
Sandwiches - on soft,
tasteless bread, and
meanly filled - and hamburguesas
are almost always awful.
You can of course eat a
full meal in a restaurant
at any time of day, but
you'd do well to adopt the
local habit of taking your
main meal at lunchtime
, since this is when
comidas corridas (set
meals, varied daily) are
served, from around 1 to
5pm: in more expensive
places the same thing may
be known as the menu del día
or menu turístico. Price
is one good reason: often
you'll get four courses
for US$5/£3 or less,
which can't be bad. More
importantly, though, the
comida will include food
that doesn't normally
appear on menus -
home-made soups and stews,
local specialities,
puddings, and above all
vegetables that are
otherwise a rarity - a
welcome chance to escape
from the budget
traveller's staples of
eggs, tacos and beans.
A typical comida will
consist of "wet"
soup, probably vegetable,
followed by
"dry" soup -
most commonly sopa de
arroz (simply rice
seasoned with tomato or
chile), or perhaps a plate
of vegetables, pasta,
beans or guacamole
(avocado mashed with
onion, and maybe tomato,
lime juice and chile).
Then comes the main
course, followed by
pudding, usually fruit,
flan or pudin (crème
caramel-like concoctions),
or rice pudding. The
courses are brought at
great speed, sometimes all
at once, and in the
cheaper places you may
have no idea what you're
going to get until it
arrives, since there'll
simply be a sign saying
comida corrida and the
price.
Some places also offer
set meals in the evening,
but this is rare, and on
the whole going out to eat
at night is much more
expensive.
Drinking
The basic drinks to
accompany food are water
or beer. If you're
drinking water ,
stick to bottled stuff (agua
mineral or agua de Tehuacán)
- it comes either plain
(sin gas) or carbonated
(con gas).
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