Mexican
Poached Eggs with Tomato Cilantro Sauce
In Mexico, this breakfast dish is called huevos ahogados, meaning "drowned eggs," since the eggs are served in soup bowls with a lot of sauce.
Cook the Food of Oaxaca, Mexico
A guide to Oaxacan food, with recipes for mole, tamales, and more from Chef Zarela Martinez.
Passion-Fruit Nieve
Nieve, or "snow," is Mexico's sorbet, sold from carts throughout the country. Ours is a quick version, made with passion-fruit nectar instead of puréed and strained fruit. For the best flavor, look for a nectar that contains just water, passion-fruit juice, and sugar.
Tomato Sauce
This sauce, called caldillo de jitomate ("tomato broth"), has a consistency closer to a light tomato soup than an Italian marinara.
Cold Avocado Corn Soup With Cilantro Oil
Crema — a Mexican cultured heavy cream similar to sour cream — is often drizzled over enchiladas and tostadas and added to side dishes and sauces. Here it lends a tangy balance to rich avocado and sweet corn.
Chile-Dusted Oranges, Jícama, and Cucumber
This dish — meant to be eaten with your fingers or with wooden picks — is a light, refreshing hors d'oeuvre to complement tequila. The recipe is a take on the jicama and cucumber spears that are a popular Mexican street snack.
Chocolate-Covered Poached Pears with Apricot-Pecan Stuffing and Chile Sabayon
(Peras Rellenas para Passover)
Coconut Tamales
(Tamal de Coco)
These tamales were created for a Mexican Passover menu, to accompany Santibañez's Slow-Braised Lamb Shanks with Guajillo-Pineapple Sauce. If you're not preparing the tamales for Passover, you can substitute nonkosher ingredients such as regular vanilla extract and butter.
Slow-Braised Lamb Shanks with Guajillo-Pineapple Sauce, Roasted Vegetables, and Coconut Tamales
(Chambaretes de Borrego)
Tropical Charoset
Charoset, a traditional Passover condiment, represents the mortar used by Israelite slaves in Egypt. In this contemporary Mexican version, bananas and other fruit are puréed and cooked down to a sweet spread.
"Some people say that the banana was the original 'apple' of the Garden of Eden," says Mexican-Jewish food writer Lila Louli, who collaborated with chef Roberto Santibañez on his Passover recipes. "It's also a very common ingredient in Mexican cooking."
Macaroni with Cream and Cheese
Macarrones con Crema y Queso
Poblano and serrano chiles give a mild kick to this cheesy Mexican pasta.
Confit Duck Leg Pozole
Pozole can refer to hominy, as well as to the name of the stew made with it.
Calabaza, Corn, and Coconut Soup
Calabazas are commonly found at Latino markets already cut into large wedges; kabochas are generally sold at natural foods stores.
Mexican Hot Fudge Sundaes
Shari Ledwidge of Greenehaven, Arizona, writes: "My husband and I spend several weeks each year traveling around the United States. Our journeys always take us to wonderful food stands and farmers' markets, which have inspired some of my favorite recipes."
Shrimp in Cilantro Sauce
Camarones al Cilantro
Laura Bookman of Weston, Massachusetts, writes: "Can you get me the recipe for camarones al cilantro from Cafe Sol Azteca, in Newton Center, Massachusetts?"
Homemade Sweet-and-Sour Mix for Margaritas
A base used for making Margaritas
Cucumber Agua Fresca
Luis Miguel López Alanís of Morelia, Mexico, writes: "Although I grew up in Mexico, it was in Chicago of all places that I learned to cook Mexican food. During the two years I lived there, I missed my country's food so much that I wrote to my mother in Zitácuaro and asked her to send me recipes so I could cook for myself.
"Now I work as a tour guide in Michoacán, my home state, where I lead tours on Morelia's colonial history and architecture, and show tourists the Paricutín Volcano and monarch butterfly sanctuaries. And sometimes I do restaurant and market tours. Whenever business slows down, I enjoy cooking for my family. "
Mexico is known for its aguas frescas, delicious cold "waters" made simply from fruits or vegetables, water, and sugar. They're the perfect refreshment on a hot day.