Drinko de Mayo
is approaching, one of my biggest nightmares. Every year I complain about
cultural appropriation, the distortion of Mexican history and white people
being incredibly insensitive.
Since I try to
keep this blog merely culinary related, I'll
avoid controversial subjects, but to talk about any cuisine we
need to understand historical aspects, geography, politics, climate,
immigration, traditions and religion. Cuisine is a complex and ever-evolving
phenomenon. Some techniques like braising and deglazing are as universal as
breathing and laughing, yet the ingredients make the difference, that's where
you have to talk about politics.
So, Cinco de
Mayo is May 5th translated to Spanish, so you can't have a seis de cinco, or
whatever some people are trying to do, that's just stupid and you should avoid
it. Second, Cinco de Mayo is broadly mistaken to be Mexico's Independence Day,
which is actually celebrated on September 16, but let's move on, May 5th is The
Day of the Battle of Puebla, the inconceivable defeat of Mexico over French
army back in 1862, only 41 years after Mexico won the war of Independence
against Spain, and just 14 years after pro-slavery US stole half of Mexico's
territory in defense of some racist libertarian ranchers in Texas.
I could tell you
the story about the French invasion and all of that, and I would love to, but I
have a crying baby in the background and I'm not your History teacher, it's
also cloudy and that doesn't help either.
So, now you know
that Mexico's independence from Spain is celebrated in September, that's a huge
advance, you still need to return those tiny sombreros to wherever you got them
from, and if you own a huge sombrero but have no idea what is it for or the why
of the sombrero, you have a special place in hell, sorry, I don't make
inferno's rules. You can also help civilization by not using fake mustaches,
I'm a real Mexican and I've never had a mustache. Have fun, go out, get some
margaritas or coronas, eat tamales and red rice, sing Mexican songs, do all of
that without insulting Mexicans. You probably don't behave like
that, but we all know some people who do.
First, trying to
describe French food is complicated, each region in France is different from
each other and the same thing happens in Mexico, each region possess incredibly
rich and unique dishes, but in order to understand Mexican most influential
cuisine we need to think Mexico City-Oaxaca-Puebla + Paris and Veracruz +
Marseille. French cuisine as a whole is also a compilation of Arabic flavors,
techniques and spices too, at least the most common food, not necessarily the 5
stars Parisian restaurants, but even them. I know this is getting complicated,
but trust me, the links between Mexican and French food are very strong and not
broken.
Four dishes from
Mexican-French war era: crêpes with huitlacoche (corn smut), quail with mango
sauce, bouillabaisse-style stew a la Veracruz and fresas con crema, or
strawberries with Crème fraîche.
You know how
important tortillas are to Mexicans, and of course corn as the base of our
diet, huitlacoche is a corn fungus and it's pronounced weetlakochee, my mouth
is watering right now just to think about it, its flavour is difficult to
describe, I can think of walnut and apricot together, with a hint of black
truffle. Now, go make your crêpes. Ok, if you're lucky enough you'll buy some
huitlacoche, which I doubt because you can't introduce corn smut into the US
other than pre-cooked canned huitlacoche, but let's pretend that you figure
something out, you're going to need shallots, garlic, fresh thyme, dry guajillo
pepper, olive oil, salt and pepper. Crème fraîche and shredded iceberg lettuce.
Caramelized your shallots, start in cold pan and seriously wait until your
shallots are caramelized, add your diced garlic, you figure out the amounts, I
trust you. Wait like a minute or two then add your huitlacoche, you probably
need some salt and pepper at this point if you didn't do it before, remember that
salt enhances flavors and pepper adds and disguises. When everything is cooked,
add some chili flakes, of course from the guajillo and fresh thyme. Toss
everything in a bowl, add more EVOO, this time the oil is adding flavour. You
can even add some parmesan cheese if you have a fancy restaurant in Soho,
otherwise avoid it, but my point is that you can play with it, just make sure
to leave some of the Huitlacoche flavours intact, you need to respect the main
ingredient. So, you have your stuffing ready and warn, I don't know what's the
origin of serving three tacos or crêpes on each plate, but just do it, two is
not enough and four is disrespectful if you have other hungry guests. Top your
huitlacoche crêpes with Crème fraîche and shredded lettuce. Enjoy.
You can also use
corn tortillas instead of crêpes and Oaxaca cheese along with your stuffing,
then top your quesadillas with salsa verde, queso cotija and sour cream. But,
right now you are in Mexico 1862, because you really want to celebrate Cinco de
Mayo and you can't find Mole Poblano for some strange reason.
Now, I said
strawberries with crème fraîche, fresas con crema is a dessert as Mexican as
Apple pie is American, they're neither, they're French, but we like them and
they're popular. Now Fresas con crema are broadly served with sour cream and
granulated sugar on top, fork-mashed taste better too. Mexicans think it's a
Mexican dish and you don't argue with a hungry Mexican, and I don't have the
heart to demystify my own family, that's a dangerous territory.
Quail entrees in
Mexico are coming back, especially in fine-dining restaurants and that's a
great thing because quail is delicious and for centuries Mexicans have cooked
game, or what we now call game, French and Mexican birds back in the 1800s were
completely different, but cooked with identical techniques but different
ingredients. If you've read Laura Esquivel's Como Agua para Chocolate (Like
Water for Chocolate) if not, I totally recommend that novel, one of the recipes
is precisely quail with rose water and rose petals, that's very arabic and
Mexican, it's both French and Mexican. This time we're going to go a
little bit more tropical, you're going to need the following ingredients:
semi-boneless quail, ripe mangoes, chile serrano, white onion, garlic,
cilantro, white wine, flour, butter, olive oil, saffron, salt +
pepper. You can stuff your quail too, that's optional. White rice with
pistachios is a great combination for stuffing, but you can make your own. If you have a cast iron pan, much
better. So, dust your birds with flour, add salt and pepper of course, wait
until your oil is screaming hot, you don't want your quail to swim in oil, just
be gentle, put your birds right in the center of the pan, I would be
gentle and use my hands, don't be scared of hot oil, if you are I
can guarantee that the oil is going to jump and burn your hand, so be
firm, you own that oil. Wait until
quails are golden brown and crispy, then cook the other side and finish them in
the oven, 350 F is a safe temperature, your food is crispy now, you
need to cook the interior of the quail now. In the meantime, blend your mangoes, add one chile serrano, no
salt and pepper. Remove quails from pan and put the pan back in the fire, add
butter, finely diced onion and garlic, once the butter is melted add
equal amount of flour,
you're making a roux, then add a little chicken stock (oh yeah, you need
chicken stock too) whisk very well, add saffron, reduce, now you're making a classic velouté,
add white wine and reduce, season. Add some of that mango blend now, strain the
mango first, you don't want the fiber in your sauce. Reduce. Your sauce is
going to be kind of thick right now, but not super thick, because of course you
didn't make roux to sink a battle ship, at this point you're going to pull some
of the chopped butter from the fridge, the one butter I didn't tell you about but you
need, you are going to incorporate your chilled butter into the sauce now, one
chunk at the time using your whisk, wait until butter blends with the sauce
before adding more butter. Serve with chopped cilantro on top, white rice goes
well together.
Finally, bouillabaisse-style
dish. If you have a debate between a proud Mexican from Veracruz and a
chauvinistic French from Marseille on whose fish stew is better, you'll have
the French army invading Mexico all over again as result, and Mexicans will
likely kicked their butts again too. Just know that Mexicans have cooked fish
stews for centuries, each town and family has a different recipe, you can use
crab and grouper in Veracruz, or shrimp, lobster and marlin in Sinaloa. Mexico
is lucky to be located between the Pacific ocean, Gulf of Mexico and the
Caribbean, so if you want to talk about Mexican cuisine, seafood is 1/2 of it,
poverty, NAFTA and tourism have changed the rules of the game, while
working-class people in Sinaloa and Veracruz can still access to fresh seafood,
people in other places have to pay higher prices now, and the best seafood goes
directly to US and European markets, as a Mexican chef in the US with family in
Sinaloa and Yucatan this breaks my heart, and when I cook seafood from the gulf
of Mexico or the Pacific, I know how illogical this is, NAFTA changed Mexican's
diet for generations to come, it's a bittersweet feeling because I love
cooking, I love cooking fish stews and entrees because it's part of me, my
heritage, but I also know how the market works, and it's not easy to deal with
this, I'm also a worker so I need the income.
Anyway,
if you like Mexican food, I invite you to be curious about our entire heritage
and culture, our politics and history. Can we also start considering
Mexican accent something sexy just like French? Because mine is not going
anywhere.
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