Rice and pasta, known as sopas, are standard side dishes here in Mexico, and they are usually kept pretty simple - margarine, onion, or pureed tomatoes, usually. In all the meals that I have eaten and then all that I have made, there is a clear pattern in which rice goes with which meal. Simple white onion rice goes with chile seco, ribs or salsa verde; arroz amarillo (rice cooked in tomato puree) is absolutely necessary for chiles rellenos and pretty common for mole.
This rice recipe is a much more substantial rice, a traditional Mexican vegetable rice. It's also the kind of rice that you find on the side of your enchiladas at On The Border and other Mexican chain restaurants.
While this recipe is traditional, in my experience, it's not an everyday recipe. Too many ingredients, too expensive, too time-consuming, but this rice is a great thing to make when you have a lot of leftover vegetables. It's satisfying as a side dish, but after all that chopping work that you've done, go the extra step, throw in some shrimp or shredded chicken and make it a meal. (Or throw in both and some chorizo, and have yourself a nice little fake-out paella-esque dish).
Ingredients
3 Tbsp. vegetable oil
1 jalapeño, finely chopped
1 red onion, finely chopped
4 roma tomatoes, finely chopped
2 cups rice
1 cup frozen peas
1 tsp. oregano
1 tsp. cumin
1 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. salt (more or less, but be careful; some stock can be really salty)
3 1/2 cups chicken stock (or water and a stock cube)
Directions
1 - Heat the oil in a deep pot with a lid.
2 - Add the onion, and cook for about 10 minutes or until translucent. Add the jalapeño and the tomato and cook another 5 minutes, until softened.
3 - Add the rice, and toast for about 5 minutes.
4 - Add the oregano, cumin, black pepper and salt. Stir well.
5 - Add the chicken stock, stir well, and bring to a boil over low heat.
6 - Put the lid on, turn to low heat, and cook the rice for 25 minutes.
7 - Add the peas, and put the lid back on for about 5 more minutes (or until peas are defrosted and heated through).
8 - Fluff with a fork and serve.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Monday, March 26, 2012
Mexican Cheesecake
OK, so there is very little Mexican about this recipe. In fact, Mexico has its own style of cheesecake all its own, pay de queso (cheese pie), which you will see in this blog one day, but for now, I just need to brag on my Mexican husband a bit.
Now, there are three Mexican-specific elements to making a New York style cheesecake here in Mexico City. First, lemons are fairly pricey and annoyingly difficult to find, so we use limes.
Second, I have never seen a graham cracker in any of the supermarkets or warehouse stores that I have been to, so we use Maria cookies or this great nuez-flavored cookie (nuez literally means nut, but refers to pecan here), called Marianitas - which really adds this great level of flavor.
Third, squeezee bottle dulce de leche is pretty much a standard staple here, so we went ahead and swirled some of that in, too.
So, it's not Mexican, but my husband is...and it looks so pretty!
Now, there are three Mexican-specific elements to making a New York style cheesecake here in Mexico City. First, lemons are fairly pricey and annoyingly difficult to find, so we use limes.
Second, I have never seen a graham cracker in any of the supermarkets or warehouse stores that I have been to, so we use Maria cookies or this great nuez-flavored cookie (nuez literally means nut, but refers to pecan here), called Marianitas - which really adds this great level of flavor.
Third, squeezee bottle dulce de leche is pretty much a standard staple here, so we went ahead and swirled some of that in, too.
So, it's not Mexican, but my husband is...and it looks so pretty!
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Proper Piñata Protocol
So, it's that birthday time of year again (well, for me and Benito Juarez and springtime, at least), and after writing about mañanitas and diving head first into tres leches, it's about time for some piñata facts.
1 - I have never seen the rainbow donkey (in piñata form...or in real life, for that matter) that seem to be the traditional American piñata. It may be popular up north, but here in South Central, it is all about the traditional form of the five pointed star. Dora, Santa, and other human shapes are also common enough (but there's something weird about beating those ones).
2 - Piñatas are for birthdays, but also for other holidays, like the Posadas (9 days before Christmas), Christmas and New Year's Eve, but much to my dismay, hitting the piñata and knocking children over for candy seems to be only for other children.
3 - The best and most popular piñata candy is the Damy, a hard candy of milk and peanut flavoring, or its brother, Tomy, a caramel hard candy. (You can get them online and in highly Mexican areas, and I would recommend finding and trying them.)
4 - The number one rule of the piñata is that the youngest/smallest kids go first, the biggest/oldest ones last; that way, everyone gets at least one at bat.
5 - In the United States, we have the blindfolding, the spinning, and the moving of the piñata all right, but we lack the song. And the piñata song is really quite important because it keeps the time of each child's turn.
Dale Dale Dale, Hit it, Hit it, Hit it,
No pierdas el tino, Don't lose your aim,
Porque si lo pierdes, Because if you lose it,
Pierdes el camino. Then you lose your way.
Dale Dale Dale, Hit it, Hit it, Hit it,
Dale, No le dio, Hit it, No you didn't,
Quitenle la venda, Take off the blindfold,
Porque sigo yo. Because it's my turn.
Ya le diste una, Now you hit it once
Ya le diste dos, Now you hit it twice
Ya le diste tres, Now you hit it three times
Y tu tiempo se acabo! And your time is done!
OK, so the song really does not translate well into English, but the idea is that when the song ends, so does your turn.
(Note: I know most of these pictures are inside, but that's because it rained all Christmas week in Veracruz this year. Generally, you want to do this whole piñata thing outdoors.)
1 - I have never seen the rainbow donkey (in piñata form...or in real life, for that matter) that seem to be the traditional American piñata. It may be popular up north, but here in South Central, it is all about the traditional form of the five pointed star. Dora, Santa, and other human shapes are also common enough (but there's something weird about beating those ones).
2 - Piñatas are for birthdays, but also for other holidays, like the Posadas (9 days before Christmas), Christmas and New Year's Eve, but much to my dismay, hitting the piñata and knocking children over for candy seems to be only for other children.
3 - The best and most popular piñata candy is the Damy, a hard candy of milk and peanut flavoring, or its brother, Tomy, a caramel hard candy. (You can get them online and in highly Mexican areas, and I would recommend finding and trying them.)
4 - The number one rule of the piñata is that the youngest/smallest kids go first, the biggest/oldest ones last; that way, everyone gets at least one at bat.
5 - In the United States, we have the blindfolding, the spinning, and the moving of the piñata all right, but we lack the song. And the piñata song is really quite important because it keeps the time of each child's turn.
Dale Dale Dale, Hit it, Hit it, Hit it,
No pierdas el tino, Don't lose your aim,
Porque si lo pierdes, Because if you lose it,
Pierdes el camino. Then you lose your way.
Dale Dale Dale, Hit it, Hit it, Hit it,
Dale, No le dio, Hit it, No you didn't,
Quitenle la venda, Take off the blindfold,
Porque sigo yo. Because it's my turn.
Ya le diste una, Now you hit it once
Ya le diste dos, Now you hit it twice
Ya le diste tres, Now you hit it three times
Y tu tiempo se acabo! And your time is done!
OK, so the song really does not translate well into English, but the idea is that when the song ends, so does your turn.
(Note: I know most of these pictures are inside, but that's because it rained all Christmas week in Veracruz this year. Generally, you want to do this whole piñata thing outdoors.)