Latin American
Tortillas with Eggs
This dish is a twist on chilaquiles, a tortilla-based hash. It's great served with salsa for breakfast.
By Tammy Moore-Worthington
Juan Diego Michel's Cheese-Stuffed Poblanos
This recipe for chiles en macedonia combines ingredients from three states—Jalisco, Colima, and Michoacan. It came from the late Juan Diego Michel, who taught in Billy Cross's schools in Napa Valley and PuertoVallarta. The dish was a favorite of the Michel family in Jalisco, where, in his younger days, Juan Diego had his own restaurant and used the recipes from 200 years ago that had been passed down to him. To Cross, he was a Mexican-cooking mentor.
Grilled Rib-Eye Steaks with Green Chile Mushroom Salsa Butter
The recado is a dry rub that gives a burst of flavor to almost any meat or vegetable but is particularly wonderful on beef and corn.
By Reed Hearon
Tostones
Fried green plantains.
When making tostones look for unripe plantains that are a deep shade of green: The recipe will not work with ripe plantains. Ideally, the plantains should be fried the day they are purchased, but they can be kept, wrapped well in a plastic bag and chilled, for 2 to 3 days.
Garlic Ancho Chile Jam
By Robert del Grande
Panque de Almendra
Almond "Pound Cake"
Panque is apparently a phonetic spelling of "pound cake," though it really isn't very similar. The texture is somewhat more like a sponge cake. My recipe is an adaption of one by Mària Concepción Portillo de Carballido.
By Zarela Martinez
Charred Tomato Mint Salsa
By Reed Hearon
Mussels in Pasilla Broth with Corn, Jícama, and Cilantro
Serve this terrific dish with crusty bread and soup spoons so that your guests can enjoy every last drop.
By Dan Krinsky and Ticha Krinsky
Stuffed Mashed Potatoes
Causa Limena
Editor's Note: This recipe and introductory text are excerpted from The Exotic Kitchens of Peru, by Copeland Marks. We've also added some tips of our own below.
For a complete guide to Peruvian cuisine, click here.
This appetizer, a popular national dish, is from Lima, the capital city of Peru, which has metropolitan and modern ideas. The dictionary does not reveal how the word "causa” came to be applied to a concoction, albeit a delicious one, that features cold mashed potatoes.
A causa is considered a light lunch or snack, a most appealing dish that is often served at weddings or other celebrations.
Crimson Prickly Pear Sauce
This is one of my favorite sauces: Its deep, purpley, cranberry color is reason enough for that designation, but then again so is the bright strawberry/kiwi/watermelon flavor, with its hints of the unbridled tropics. And the fact that you can tell your guests you're serving them cactus fruit (and that it is delicious) gives you a decidedly exotic edge.
The puree is very watery, like watermelon juice, so in order to give the sauce some body but not take away all the fruit's freshness, I've directed you to rapidly boil down part of the puree with sugar, then cool it and add the remaining uncooked puree. This method works well with watermelon puree, too, should you not be able to find prickly pears. You will need about 3 cups seeded, pureed watermelon pulp.
By Rick Bayless, Deann Groen Bayless, and JeanMarie Brownson
Oaxacan String Cheese in Green Salsa
Quesillo en Salsa Verde
If you arrive for breakfast at the refined La Olla Restaurant & Bar, head to the rooftop dining area, where you can survey the city as you dine in the shade of an umbrella. No matter what you order, be sure to try the cheese with green salsa, which is served with fresh, homemade tortillas. When you're done with your feast, you can walk to the historic Santo Domingo church or the zócalo (the central square).
You can use more or less sugar, depending on the acidity of the tomatillos.
Chayote Soup
The delicately flavored fruit chayote is ubiquitous in the central highlands of Mexico. It varies greatly in size, ranges in color from white to dark green, and can have prickly or smooth skin. The variety most commonly available in the United States (also known as a vegetable pear or mirliton) has smooth, pale green skin that can be eaten but is sometimes removed.
Pumpkin Cooked in Raw Sugar
Calabaza en Tacha
Señora Consuelo de Mendoza
There are many regional recipes for pumpkins cooked with raw sugar, either piloncillo in the form of cones, or panela, in thick rounds — the darker the color the richer the flavor. This recipe comes from the eastern part of Michoacán, where it is eaten preferably for breakfast with a glass of cold milk.
By Diana Kennedy