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Mexico Diaries: Cuisine of Jalisco

by: Jill Richardson

Tue Jul 20, 2010 at 06:00:00 AM PDT


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In advance of my Mexico trip, I looked up a few dishes and recipes typical of the state I am visiting, Jalisco. The dish I've already heard we will eat is pozole (recipe at the link).

Traditional Dishes of Jalisco:

TRADITIONAL DISHES TO LOOK FOR
  • Birria -- stewed goat or pork in thick, spicy tomato broth
  • Pozole -- thick, hominy-based soup with hunks of pork, tomato, cilantro and garbanzos
  • Sopa de Elote -- sweetcorn soup
  • Caviar de Carpa (Lago de Chapala) -- carp caviar
  • Ancas de Rana al Mojo de Ajo (Lago de Chapala) -- frog legs in garlic sauce
  • Pico de Gallo -- appetizer accompanying tequila, consisting of small squares of jícama (turnip-like tuber from Bean Family member Pachyrhizus erosus), orange sections, lemon juice, all sprinkled with flakes of chili piquín

NON-ALCOHOLIC DRINKS

  • Sangrita -- sweetened orange juice with ground onion, chili pepper, salt and vegetable coloring

ALCOHOLIC DRINKS

  • Tejuino --fermented from corn (maize), with alcohol added

Also listed in a quick Google search are recipes for Tortas Ahogadas and Rollos Del Mar. And, below, I've included a recipe for Jalisco Style Enchiladas. Last, thank goodness, apparently Jalisco is known for a dessert - jericalla.

Jill Richardson :: Mexico Diaries: Cuisine of Jalisco
I am going to eat this:

Jalisco Style Enchiladas: Enchiladas Tapatias

Popular at fairs and fiestas, these enchiladas are flavored with a creamy poblano chile and tomato sauce. They contain no meat in the filling, and this recipe uses vegetable oil instead of lard, making them a good choice for a vegetarian meal.

Ingredients:

For the sauce:

   * 6 poblano chiles, roasted, seeded and peeled
   * 3 tomatoes, roasted and peeled
   * 1 small white onion, chopped
   * 2 cloves garlic, chopped
   * 1 tablespoon vegetable oil, plus enough to soft-fry the tortillas
   * ½ cup milk
   * ½ cup cream
   * 1 tablespoon white tequila (optional)
   * salt to taste

For the enchiladas:

   * 12 corn tortillas
   * 3 avocados, peeled and sliced
   * ¼ pound queso fresco or farmer cheese, crumbled
   * reserved chile strips (rajas)
   * shredded lettuce
   * sliced radishes

Preparation:

Tear 3 of the roasted poblano chiles into strips and reserve them for the enchilada filling. Place remaining chiles, tomato, onion and garlic in a blender and puree. (Add a bit of water if necessary to move the blades.)

Heat the oil in a saucepan, add the tomato-chile puree and cook over medium heat for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the milk, cream, tequila if using, and salt to taste. Cook until the sauce thickens. It should coat the back of a spoon.

In a skillet, heat just enough oil to soft-fry the tortillas. This means that they soften a bit in the oil without getting crisp. Place them on paper towels to blot any excess oil.

Dip each tortilla in the sauce, place it on a plate and place on each one a few avocado slices, some crumbled cheese and a few reserved chile strips. Roll tortilla to contain the filling.

When enchiladas are all rolled, place them on serving dishes, top with any remaining sauce and some shredded lettuce and sliced radishes. Serves 6.

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Those dishes sound great (4.00 / 2)
being as how I'm a goat farmer and all, I'll be real interested in any goat recipes or uses for goat meat you might come across.

There's an hispanic family who buys roosters from me, in fact they are the reason I only have two roos right now. They're also buying the one buckling I was going to slaughter for myself. Little scooter, got a name now that he's not dinner, and gets to be the breeding buck at their farm. Lucky buckling.

Anyway, last time they were over Gabriel, the dad, was telling me how they did up goats and lamb. They dig a trench and roast them low and slow like a luau pig. Goat and lamb would be excellent done up that way.

Reminds me, I've got to get some roo recipes from Gabriel's wife.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


Ever tried birria? (4.00 / 2)
I had birrias tacos the other day, the goat version (I didn't know there was a pork, too?), from Tacos y Tortas Morelia, the taco truck on SE Foster at 52nd.

Spicy and cooked in a red sauce, I'm proud of myself for finishing them off right there with no water or anything to drink.  :)

"The essence of the independent mind lies not in what it thinks, but in how it thinks." - Christopher Hitchens


[ Parent ]
I'll have to check that out (4.00 / 2)
other than old billy goat, I don't think there's a bad way to do up goat. I've wondered how much goat picks up the flavors from what the animals are eating. A friend of mine from Iran once cautioned me with regard to raising lamb, to be very careful what I let the lamb eat because it would taint the meat (probably mostly it would taint the fat). He ate a lot of lamb and was very knowleagable about it. The lamb I'm raising right now is on pasture and gets an all purpose livestock feed with molassas twice a day as a treat. I have to bribe the goats twice a day to keep them out of the emus' buckets when I feed them.....

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.

[ Parent ]
Tortas Ahogadas... (4.00 / 2)
This ole' Jersey gringo never knew what a torta was until I came to Oregon.  There was / is great Mexican food back in Jersey (mostly in New Brunswick, South River and the rural farming towns down South Jersey, type of places where you're lucky if there's a bare bones English translation on the menu, and only Spanish is spoken inside; Mexican food in Jersey and NYC tends to come from the Mexico City area), but unfortunately I never took advantage of it.

Anyways.

Love tortas!  Where have they been all my life?  Heh...

Never heard of drowned / wet tortas until now, though.  I'm having all kinds of visions of evil hybrid sandwiches based upon this new knowledge.

;)

"The essence of the independent mind lies not in what it thinks, but in how it thinks." - Christopher Hitchens


Pozole... (4.00 / 2)
Never tried that before.  Can't recall seeing it at any Mexican food carts here, but it's on the menu at at least two restaurants around town - La Bonita on NE Alberta has the red, and Autentica up on NE 30th at Killingsworth does a pozole blanco.

"The essence of the independent mind lies not in what it thinks, but in how it thinks." - Christopher Hitchens

Pozole Blanco... (4.00 / 2)
Ah, here's the recipe, based on Autentica's.

"The essence of the independent mind lies not in what it thinks, but in how it thinks." - Christopher Hitchens

[ Parent ]
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