Cinco de Mayo cookery class at Central Street Cookery School in London

I am very excited because I will be doing a Cinco de Mayo cookery class at our new cookery school.  Click HERE for more information.

Although in Mexico we understand Cinco de Mayo as the day of the Battle of Puebla, which is one battle that Mexicans won against the French.  However for those ex-pats as in Mexicans living in the US, this day is a day of pride on Mexican heritage abroad and huge celebrations take place all over.

Americans have adopted this celebration and I usually find that people from the US in London, ask me if I will be doing something.  My answer this year is an absolute yes, we will be making Sopes and Tostadas plus I will teach you how to make good old fashioned festive favourites like Tinga Poblana served with Lime and Coriander Rice and will finish with  Flan de Cafe or Coffee Creme Caramel.

Come and join the fun and celebrate with me!

Central Street Cookery School in Old Street, London EC1

It has been a long time since I wrote anything because I got the best job in the world!

I am the manager of Central Street Cookery School, a new and unique cooking venue with the community in mind.

We are part of  St Luke’s Trust a charity that looks after the local community.

And the idea is to have a place where people learn, teach, cook and eat.

We will be offering affordable courses for those who can pay and the money goes to good causes:   YOUR MONEY GOES TOWARDS FUNDING COMMUNITY BASED CLASSES FOR THOSE WHO ARE LESS FORTUNATE.

Let me explain, the area where we are, which is in Old Street in London, although it is peppered with trendy businesses, and is next to expensive areas like the City of London, Clerkenwell and Islington, contains pockets of deep poverty where families live on a combined income of £12 000 per year!  This translates to people having to look for ‘cheap’ food that in many cases is not very healthy.  At Central Street, we want to contribute to reverse that trend by doing classes that focus on healthy eating within a budget, these classes will be offered at an extremely low cost and they will be funded by paying customers.

We are running projects for mothers and toddlers to cook healthy food together, we are teaching older people how to cook for one and we are doing lots of festival and events.  Come and see the kitchen in action at the Finsbury Arts Festival  on 21st April, we are here

I will be running Mexican classes from here.

Any foodie, chef, teacher, anybody who wants to rent our kitchen can do so for £150 + VAT from now until mid June!  The price includes use of the kitchen for half a day.  We have a fully fitted cookery space where 20 people can cook and then eat.  Perfect for people who run their own classes or those who want to do supper clubs.   For more info get in touch with sofiaatcentralstreetdotorg

Our schedule of classes is available from our website www.centralstreet.org

This is the kitchen:

enchiladas de mole

 This dish has some yummy elements that I am sure if we look at the chemical composition of the flavour molecules of certain ingredients, they must look alike or lock well together; whatever it is, Mole Enchiladas do taste delicious, and I think that this is to do with the combination of ingredients.  Simple ingredients like corn tortillas, a well poached juicy chicken, mole, raw onions and sesame seeds and of course a little crumbled cheese.  These ingredients combine so well that a good dish of enchiladas de mole is memorable.

To start your very own memorable experience of making enchiladas de mole -like with ALL cooking you will need to have good ingredients, so I would suggest a good bird, yes an expensive one that has had a good life, one that has been able to see the sun, to walk about and that has been properly fed, a good organic chicken that is going to produce superb stock and most important juicy meat for the enchiladas.  Poach the chicken in plenty of water with half an onion, a couple of peeled cloves of garlic, some bay leaves and a little salt.  To poach a chicken perfectly, it is important that you never allow your liquid to come to the boil, otherwise horrible scum will form.  If you keep your bird in its water just below boiling point, the stock will be clear as water and keep its flavour.  Pass the stock through a colander or sieve and reserve to make the mole sauce later on.

I think the best parts of the chicken for enchiladas are the legs, just for the reason that they are more juicy.  Once the chicken is poached, cool down and then shred it with your fingers, reserve, always submerged in some of the chicken stock, this is so that the chicken does not dry.

Make your mole sauce… I am not suggesting here that you go and grind 40 ingredients on your knees on your metate as you would make a cup of coffee; the whole process is quite complicated.  These days you can get good brands of mole: Dona Maria and Xiqueno are good brands, the former being a commercial brand available in many parts of the world and the latter one, an obscure brand from Veracruz that is just delicious.  Make your mole sauce by sauteing the mole paste in a little sesame oil and then add a little chicken stock, whisking and stirring all the time to avoid lumps.  Add a little stock and stir constantly, add a little more and so on, until you have a good thick sauce, with a similar consistency to that of creme anglaise, custard, double cream or heavy cream.

Proceed with your tortillas.  You can make your own, or you can buy them… always corn ones -flour tortillas work for other things, but not for enchiladas de mole.  Sautee the tortillas in a little hot oil for a couple of seconds, literally pass them on hot oil and then dip them in the mole sauce, put on a plate and put some of the shredded chicken on one half, fold the tortilla in half; this is one enchilada.  Repeat the process so that you have three enchiladas on one plate.  Pour some mole sauce over the enchiladas, sprinkle some crumbled cheese like fetta, decorate with chopped onion or some onion rings and scatter plenty of sesame seeds on top.  Some people pour some soured cream on top as well.

Put a napkin on and never wear white -mole sauce stains clothes forever! and sit down and enjoy every mouthful of Enchiladas de Mole!!!

Thank you for the comments on my blog, thank you February for being here, promising more light and better weather and thank you customers and people that employ me, I shall not get so discouraged, work always comes to me and January lasts for 31 days and I will try to keep this blog more up to date more often!

… some thoughts on Mole

My blogger chum Chad asked me recently to write something on Mole.  At the time I was a bit busy and I think this was also a subconscious excuse not to write on the subject… The reason is that for a Mexican to write on Mole is getting into sticky ground; every Mexican has his/her views on the matter and they are the best, full stop!

In the UK people relate the word to little creatures that live underground, to The Wind in the Willows, to that ‘Mexican chocolate sauce’, or worse still to eating little animals that live underground covered with a chocolate sauce!  Nothing could be further from the truth; to write about Mole is to write about our identity as Mexicans, to write about our history, to touch on many aspects of our folcklore, it is to write about flavour combinations and even to write about food science, it is to challenge families and to create rivalries through recipes…. it can become a telenovela… yes we Mexicans are a complicated lot.

In fact I did think to write my dissertation on Mole… but since this is just a blog, I am going to say just a few simple things.  For instance, did you know that it is believed the word ‘mole’ is derived from an indigenous word, possibly nahuatl: ‘molli’ or ‘mulli’ which means sauce? I have also heard it is derived from the Spanish verb ‘moler’ which is to grind… see? it is not that easy with this sauce.

The origins of mole are also unclear, some say that it existed well before the arrival of the Spaniards and yes many of the ingredients are original to Mexico and the american continent.  There are tales of Spanish and creole nuns, like Sor Andrea de la Asuncion, who was famed for her ability to create perfect food -a kind of 17th century Heston Blumenthal, who concocted this divine dish for the viceroy in turn and other celebrities of the time.  This story might well be true; it could also be related to an appropriation of the indigenous by the colonials… The story that I like best, because is full of folklore, it touches on the kitsch and again it is similar to a telenovela (soap opera) involves a nun, a saint, a draw full of spices and a bit of magic of course… The nun might well have been Sor Andrea de la Asuncion, and how she was completely burnt out from so much cooking and therefore felt uninspired; the guests were coming to eat her latest delicacy and she just did not know what to cook that day.  As it was the norm, she asked San Pascualito-the patron saint of cooks and of the kitchen to help her. Then she turned, stumbled against a draw that was full of spices that went on the pot and hey presto: Mole anyone?  I wonder what do they do on a stressful day at The Fat Duck? maybe we should tell them about San Pascualito.

Whatever story you go for, the truth is that Mole is a kind of national dish to Mexico, the state of Puebla is famed for its Mole and the state of Oaxaca is called the land of 7 moles.  If you go to any Mexican market you will find mole sold by the kilo and of course families pride themselves in making their own family recipe which is usually a secret.

A good Mole can have up to 40 different ingredients, but the basic ones are: chillies, usually ancho, pasilla and mulato, garlic, onion, sesame oil, sesame seeds, oregano, marjoram, some day old tortillas, bananas, raisins, almonds, possibly a little stale bread and many more.  Traditionally all these ingredients are ground on a metate, by hand and then fried with lard.  The final ingredient is a little bit of bitter chocolate, which is essential to add flavour and a velvety texture.  This will resemble a heavy paste and to make the sauce, we add stock from a poached bird; turkey being the traditonal one to use -although these days more eclectic birds like duck and even other kinds of game are used.  The poached bird is covered with this sauce and served decorated with sesame seeds; this is a far cry to some people’s ideas of eating a chicken mixed with hot fudge sauce!

Being someone that really goes more for the sensation that food has on my tastebuds rather than for the looks of the restaurant or who is sitting at the next table; I’ll have to say that poached turkey topped with a heavy Mole sauce scattered with some sesame seeds in some busy convent like restaurant is not my favourite way of eating this… to me Mole can be one of those memorable food moments that I would take to a desert island…in fact Mole is included in my funeral!   At least to me the best way is to eat it is in the shape of Enchiladas de Mole.

In my next post I will write on Enchiladas de Mole and why I like them.  This might not be the aristocratic or trendy way of eating mole… but it is so very good!

Caldo de Camaron

I am a guest chef at Cool Chile Co.  My contribution is my late father’s signature dish “Caldo de Camaron”, a heartwarming soup eaten at Mexican cantinas.

Try this on a cold day, it will warm your soul up.

For really good quality Mexican ingredients click here

For the recipe click here

Enjoy and have a wonderful warm Christmas.

Recuerdos de Mocedad, la navidad con mi papa

2011 sera la primera navidad en que mi papa lo va a pasar en el cielo y me pregunto como lo pasara? Que va a hacer?  Con quien lo celebrara? Imagino que lo pasara bien; espero no haga frio en el cielo y haria las cosas como cuando era joven.

Lejanos recuerdos tengo de las cosas que le gustaban en esta epoca, pero a pesar de ya estar empolvados por el tiempo que ha pasado, estos  siguen frescos como cuando sucedieron.

Dado que mi papa era una persona que disfrutaba muchisimo del buen comer, la navidad venia cargada de platillos que se comian solamente en esta temporada como era el ponche, el bacalao, el pavo, ademas de pequenas cosas que se compraban para estar ‘dandole gusto’ al paladar; turrones, orejones y ‘peladillas’ o almendras cubiertas de azucar.  Todos estos manjares de temporada empezaban a aparecer por ahi de noviembre.  Cuando el frio en la ciudad se empezaba a sentir y a mi me vestian con abrigo, era la temporada cuando sabia que ciertos sabores iban a empezar a aparecer.  Asi alguna vez acompane a mi papa al centro a comprar el bacalao.  En aquella epoca, era dificil encontrar buen bacalao, este venia de noruega y no lo habia abundantemente, asi que uno tenia que buscar alguna tienda de ultramarinos, generalmente administrada por un inmigrante espanol, que tenia en trastienda aquellos lomos salados en cajas de madera y que trataban como si fuesen antiguedades u obras de arte.  Ahi se hacia la transaccion, el bacalao era muy caro y mi papa compraba lo suficiente para que alcanzara para la cena de navidad y para dias y dias de tortas de bacalao.  Aprovechando la visita a la tienda de ultramarinos, mi papa tambien se abastecia de lo que le gustaba de temporada, entonces compraba bolsas de orejones, manzanas secas cuyo sabor hace mucho no pruebo, pero que me hace agua la boca al solo recordarlas.  Tambien compraba turron, de Gijona, suave y suculento y de Alicante que era muy duro y tenia una costra como de hostia.  No podian faltar las almendras endulzadas llamadas peladillas. Ahi tambien compraba un litro de aceite de oliva, para hacer el bacalao, ademas de los chilitos gueros para acompaniar.  De la tienda de ultramarinos finos, nos ibamos al mercado a comprar todos los ingredientes para el ponche y tambien comprabamos colacion, ademas de unos jitomates maravillosos, perejil, mucho ajo y cebolla.

La receta del bacalao a la Viscaina, viene de mi abuela materna quien era un genio en la cocina y su bacalao era legendario.  Mi papa aprendio la receta de mi mama; cuando yo era muy pequena era mi mama quien hacia el bacalao, pero poco a poco mi papa se empezo a interesar en el proceso de elaboracion de dicho platillo, asi recuerdo que ambos se juntaban a picar todos los ingredientes perfectamente para que el bacalao quedara de lo mejor.   La preparacion del dichoso bacalao era un proceso que duraba todo un dia, si no es que dos!  Mi papa se ponia sus lentes de leer y muy diligentemente –como todo lo que hacia-, se ponia a picar las cebollas, los dientes de ajo, el jitomate, el perejil, cada ingrediente se preparaba con el mismo cuidado que se le da a un bebe, con ternura, atencion y mucho amor.  Agustin era un hombre muy ordenado y todo lo que hacia, lo hacia de una manera muy metodica, asi, poco a poco los ingredientes se iban convirtiendo en pequenas montanas de cuadritos de diferentes colores y el departamento empezaba a oler a navidad, es decir a bacalao!

Despues de hacer la larga labor de preparacion, procedian a cocer el pescado y a freir todos los ingredientes; recuerdo como con la tipica ansia infantil que exige satisfaccion inmediata a los deseos, yo queria bacalao en el momento en que veia a mis padres empezar a preparar el platillo y desde medio dia, empezaba a molestarles preguntando si ya estaba listo… asi pasaban las horas y ya al final, cuando ya el sol se habia metido y estabamos en oscuridad invernal, y yo moria de tedio, ya mi mama le daba el visto bueno y el bacalao estaba listo.

Este se preparaba antes de nochebuena y generalmente lo llevabamos a casa de los tios, pero solo llevabamos una parte, lo demas se quedaba en casa y lo comiamos como tortas en bolillos, para desayuno, comida y cena, como un recalentado eternamente delicioso.  Recuerdo mucho ver a papa cortando el pan a la mitad, sacando un poco de migajon y rellenando de aceitoso bacalao el pan, lo veo con su sonrisa golosa, morder una torta y su cara de gozo al saborear tan rico platillo, le gustaba acompanar estas tortas con un tequilita.

Lo mismo con el ponche, este era su territorio y mi mama no tomaba parte, pero mi papa preparaba el ponche con piloncillo y todas las frutas que se ponen, guayabas, canias, tejocotes, orejones.  El caracteristico aroma del ponche se confundia con el del bacalao; esto para mi es sinonimo de navidad.  El ponche lo hacia en la tarde/noche y recuerdo tomarlo como a las 7.30 pm, de vez en cuando le ponian ‘piquete’, y siempre habia ponche para quien viniera de visita.

A pesar de que viviamos en un departamento muy pequeno, mi papa siempre gustó de comprar el arbol de navidad mas grande que encontraba y asi llegaba con un arbol de piso a techo que ocupaba una gran parte en un rincon de la salita… osea como una tercera parte del cuarto!  La tarea de poner el arbol era exclusiva de Agustin; con el mismo cuidado con el que hacia el bacalao, mi papa se daba a la ardua y para mi extremadamente aburrida tarea de checar cada foquito que iba en el arbol, esto tomaba horas y yo moria de angusta de querer poner el arbol en 10 minutos.  Es hasta hoy que me doy cuenta del valor de hacer las cosas lentamente y bien.  Recuerdo que mi papa sacaba un aparato negro con manecillas que conectaba y de algun modo magico, checaba cada uno de los focos y a los fundidos les ponia un repuesto y asi pasaba el tiempo con sus dichosas luces.  En este tiempo mi mama y yo sacabamos todas las decoraciones, pero yo no podia poner nada, primero habia que esperar que las luces estuvieran bien y luego el tenia que ponerlas.  Mi frustracion crecia cuando una vez que las luces estaban en su lugar, mi papa decidia que él era quien iba a poner esferas y diversos adornos y yo quedaba como vil espectador.  Cada anio se repetia el ritual de poner un Mickey Mouse que yo hice de una ‘costurita’… de un patron impreso, y este iba casi hasta arriba, luego las mismas esferas y las mismas decoraciones salian de sus cajas e iban a sus acostumbrados lugares en el arbol. …y yo mirando…

Al final era muy lindo sentarse en el sofa junto al iluminado arbol, me gustaba ver mi cara desfigurada en las redondas bolas de colores.

Mi mama ponia el nacimiento y ella si me dejaba ayudarla y me acuerdo que siempre poniamos un laguito de espejo, ahi depositabamos un pez enorme que era mas grande que los borreguitos que pastaban sobre heno fresco.  El San José no tenia cara y cargaba un como mazo y los reyes magos dia con dia, se acercaban mas al pesebre.

Cuando habian posadas, Agustin se aventaba a la pinata con los chiquillos y sacaba muchos dulces que siempre ponia en algun pedazo de pinata que recogia, siempre me llamo la atencion que de los grandes, solo mi papa hacia eso y disfrutaba mucho comer sus dulcecitos de pinata…

Las cenas de navidad eran en casa de mi prima Mimi, mas bien en casa de mis tios.  Ahi nos vestiamos todos con lo mejor que teniamos y nos ibamos como a las 9 pm, oiamos misa y luego ibamos a la casa de los tios en la colonia Condesa, ahi los grandes [totalmente Palacio] tomaban un trago y los chicos jugabamos con el Scalextric de mis primos o al turista; a las 11pm ibamos a la mesa y el festin empezaba con la sopa de ostiones que hacia mi tio Fernando, seguido de el bacalao de mi mis papas, seguido de pavo con salsa gravy, papas al horno, verduras, relleno y una jalea de estados unidos que era de algo rojo y suculento que mi tio Fernando compraba en alguna tienda de ultramarinos.  Mi papa y mi tio Fernando siempre se servian la pierna del pavo y al principio la comian con cubiertos, para terminar con la esquina de la servilleta metida en el cuello, tapando la corbata y comiendo sus piernas de pavo como si fueran hombres medievales.  No recuerdo el postre, pero imagino que comiamos turrones o castanias.   La platica era muy amena y siempre mi papa acababa acaparando la atencion, haciendo reir a todos mucho, hasta que nos dolia el estomago.  De ahi ya dormida y llena de ilusion por la visita del Nino Dios, nos ibamos a casa.

Flavours of Yucatan at Marylebone!

The food from the Yucatán area of Mexico is a cuisine in itself. Drawing from Mayan styles of cooking, combined with Caribbean ingredients and Spanish techniques, the result is food packed with flavours that explode in the mouth. For this class Sofia brings you traditional favourites that have made this cuisine famous for its delicate and exotic flavours. You’ll learn how to prepare Chicken & Lime Soup, Slow Cooked Pork with Pibil spices, Panuchos or hand-made Tortillas filled with Beans and topped with Chicken, served with Soured Orange Salad and Habanero Relish, Yucatán style Fried Plantains and Eggs Motul style (the Yucatán version of Huevos Rancheros). The flavours you’ll discover will brighten up even the darkest winter day!

Where: Divertimenti Cookery School, Marylebone High Street

When: Saturday 19th November 2011

Time:  11 am – 14.30 pm

Price £105 for a cookery demo followed by a hands-on class.

To book click here

Pan de Muerto / Bread of the Dead

Pan de muerto / Bread of the dead

It is that ime of the year again, the one where evenings get longer and when spooky ghosts will knock on our doors.  In the area where we live, it seems that the number of ghosts grow exponentially each year, we started with 10 and now there seem to be hundreds of kids knocking for tricks or treats.  This is a nice thing and I like to see our road full of little witches, ghosts and vampires, I like to see carved lanterns and it is all quite picturesque.

What I also like is to put a small altar with flowers to my ‘abuela’ Enriqueta, to my second  mother Alisi and to my ’muertitos’ to our dead ones, to remember them with a small and colourful offering which will include pan de muerto, this bread is typical of Mexico and it has lots of symbolism, it made in a round shape to signify the world, it has small pieces of dough attached and these signify bones, and it is always made only at this time of year.  It is very nice served with Mexican Hot Chocolate or Cafe de Olla here is a recipe:

Pan de Muerto  (Bread of the Dead)

Makes 1 large bread

1 x 7g sachet ‘fast action’ dried yeast

100 ml warm milk

500 g flour

150 g plus 2 Tbsp caster sugar

4 eggs, beaten

the juice and zest of 1 small orange, about 35 ml juice

1 tsp vanilla essence

50 g soft butter

½ tsp crushed caraway seeds (optional)

Put the oven to 180 C conventional /  160 C fan / Gas Mark 4

Activate the yeast by dissolving it in the warm milk and add 2 teaspoons of the sugar.

Sieve the flour into the bowl of an electric mixer such as a Kitchen Aid or Kenwood, add the sugar and salt plus the optional caraway seeds and the orange zest.  Add the yeast mixture and mix well.  Add the liquid ingredients except for the butter and using the flat paddle or the attachment for bread, mix at a medium speed for 5 minutes. Add the softened butter and continue mixing for 10 more minutes.  The dough should look very elastic and translucent.  Cover the bowl with cling film or a moist tea towel and leave to rise for a couple of hours in a draught free place or overnight in the fridge.  Punch the dough and put on a floured surface.

Cut ¼ of the dough and with the rest form a ball and flatten on the edge.

Separately make ‘bone’ shapes, you will need 4 long bones plus one ball that represents a skull.

Put the bread on a non-stick, floured baking tray or on some baking parchment.

Leave the bread and bones to rise for another ½ hr and when ready, decorate with the bones making a cross pattern and putting the ball on top.  Brush the whole of the bread with beaten egg and sprinkle with 2 Tbsp of caster sugar.

Bake in the middle of the oven for 20 minutes at the indicated temperature, then lower the temperature by 20 C and leave for 20 minutes, then lower the temperature again by 20 C and leave for a further 20 minutes.

To see if the bread is cooked, it should sound hollow when tapped on the bottom, and should look golden brown and it should have risen quite a bit too!

Note.  This recipe makes a rustic version of bread of the dead which is more dense than commercial varieties.

It is a funny thing that whilst outside the street is a vampire party with everyone dressed mainly in black, inside the house the place is full of vibrant colours with a more solemn atmosphere, a funny contrast which seems go to well in our diverse society.

How to eat a taco and the best taquerias in Mexico City.

Like mole, the subject of tacos is enormous, there are tacos for all occasions, and for all types of people.  Small children in Mexico begin their taco-eating journey from an early age, most likely with ‘flautas de pollo’ which translates as chicken flutes the name being related to the similarity of these crispy tacos to a small flute or piccolo.  Some kids are brave enough to pour salsa on theirs, but many people, little or large enjoy eating these with guacamole, topped with lettuce a dollop of ‘crema agria’ and some crumbled ‘queso fresco’ and of course the ubiquitous optional salsa.  As we continue on our life journey, the palate matures -or in the case of many, it toughens; so more chilli, complex textures and flavours are required and here is where the taco subject extends massively.

To complicate things further, tacos are also associated to different occasions and they can be eaten at christenings, at private parties called ‘taquizas’, for lunch, as a snack just before going out, or as a perfect accompaniment to a long night on the tiles and of course as a good cure for the hangover that develops afterwards.

To attempt to classify tacos according to class, gender, race and festive occasion, would go beyond the scope of my simple blog, so I am not going to do that, not yet.  In fact I think that those outside Mexico who are interested in eating tacos, could perhaps start their own taco-journey by going to places like Taqueria -see my entry below, or its equivalent in whatever city you are.  If you are either in Mexico or are planning to visit and eat like the real Mc Coy, then you can follow these bits of advise:

1.  If you have Mexican friends join them, ask them to take you to their favourite taqueria, do ask what are you going to be eating, we tend to eat everything and although everything is delicious, it might not appeal to all, so ask first.  Then copy your friends add salsa, lime, coriander, onion, whatever takes your fancy, but remember that there is a code here and your friends will guide you, for instance a taco al pastor has to be eaten with onion, coriander and ‘salsa borracha’.  A taco de bistec should have lots of lime and perhaps a tomatillo or pico de gallo salsa. One taco topped with different salsas is a no, no, and don’t dip your tortilla chips (totopos) on salsa it is not quite the done thing… follow your friends or those sitting next to you.

2.  If you are a just a tourist and don’t know of anybody, then this guide might help you.

First of all go to a reputable place, don’t be mislead by the tourist thinking: if I am going to a stall that is full of people, food is being sold quickly so I might not get sick, well this might not be the case, also you might be eating things that are not necessarily of your fancy, so I would recommend going to a proper taco restaurant, or taqueria.  I will give some suggestions below.

Your taqueria should be clean, busy and it should have a ‘maestro taquero’, a master of the art of making tacos: this is a man (apologies for stereotyping people), he is usually in his thirties/forties, generally with a rounded belly and the proud owner of a bushy-black moustache.  He usually wears a white shirt, a white cap or paper hat and and apron and is extremely skillful in the art of taking orders, preparing meat, slicing, grilling, chopping, serving, making a mental account of how much each person is consuming, and then telling you exactly how much you need to pay.  Unlike sushi chefs, a ‘maestro taquero’ does not train for sixteen years before he can make his first taco, this trade is a ‘learn as you go’ job, but an advanced skill it is indeed! So much so that when I see them working so hard, so accurately, and always with a smile, I feel like giving them a round of applause -I won’t do that, I am not that ridiculous!

If you are a novice, go for simple tacos, things like bistec, chuleta, costilla, choriqueso (mexican chorizo and cheese), al pastor (pork in guajillo salsa and grilled pineapple), nopales (cactus), rajas (poblano strips, onion and cream) and alambre (poblano strips, char-grilled onions, bacon and steak). These should come on two tortillas piled with fillings and you need to divide these to make two tacos.  Then you add lots of lime and the salsa of your choice.  Fold the tortilla in half and in half again… if you want to look like a pro, then follow these simple steps:

  • Eat the taco with your hand, placing fingers like this: thumb and fourth fingers underneath the taco, index and middle fingers on top of the taco and little finger sticks out like when you drink a posh cup of tea.
  • Body position is very important.  Gentlemen, remove your ties! Tacos are better eaten while standing up.  To avoid spillages, chest sticks out a little and so does the bottom, this is in order to keep balance!  Tilt your head to face the taco and then you are ready to go.  Remember, practice makes perfect!

Most important is to enjoy the taco and for that you could go to:

El Califa.  Altata 22, corner with Alfonso Reyes in Condesa. Tel. 5271 7666.  London prices but the ‘Gaonera’ is delicious, go for the simple ‘taco de bistec’ which is very good, this is a post-modern establishment with videos, music, fancy deco and exhorbitant prices.  If you are in the area, go and mix with the in crowd, with luck you might spot Gael Garcia Bernal or Diego Luna

Los Panchos -since 1945.  Tolstoi 9, Anzures between Leibinitz and Dante, round the corner from Camino Real Hotel Tel: 5254 2082.  This is a traditional place which is always busy and where you can eat standing up, go for the carnitas, which are yum.  This is great to watch working Mexicans at lunch.

El Rincon de la Lechuza -since 1971.  Located in Miguel Angel de Quevedo almost corner with Insurgentes Avenue, very near Coyoacan district.  Tel: 5661 0050.  My parents used to bring me here when I was little and yes it is a family place, take mum, dad, cousins, brothers, sisters and granny.  Visit on a Sunday for lunch so that you can watch the other families; the grilled meats are very nice and so it was the chicken soup.

El Charco de las Ranas, in Rio Mixcoac 209 Tel 5598 6597.  In the middle of nowhere touristy, yet slightly close to Condesa, this place is a must, their pastor tacos are generous and delicious. In fact all their tacos are very generous.  This is a sui-generis place with slides for the kids, noisy, full of families and it looks like Mc Donald’s goes to Disneyland, but forget all that and enjoy the food, which is not only delicious but generous with fantastic salsas.   Also drink the rice drink (horchata) which is a favourite.

El Tizoncito in Tamaulipas 122, Condesa.  Tel. 5286 7321.  A beloved place that is full of memories, when I used to visit with my friends, where they used to have an ad hoc ‘park in’: people would park all over the place and someone would come and take the order and serve us in the car.  In my university days are full of memories where we used to all eat crammed inside my VW Beetle, and the smell of coriander would linger for days in the car!!  Sadly nowadays this place is a chain with franchises, more of a ‘concept’ now and their tacos do taste formulaic, however it might be worth visiting because they are in Condesa, because they are cheap, and because that first bite of a hot taco al pastor with all the trimmings is a fantastic experience.. and also because to watch Mr. Taco Master at work is something worth watching.

*this guide was partly borrowed from Chilango magazine and also from my own experiences and memories… enjoy!