Provenance Technique Library

Mexican Techniques

104 techniques from Mexican cuisine

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Mexican
Toasting dried chiles on a comal — timing, temperature, the point of over-burn
Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. The comal is the universal cooking surface of Mexican cuisine; chile toasting is documented in colonial-era sources describing pre-Columbian cooking.
Toasting dried chiles on an ungreased comal is the technique that unlocks their flavour complexity before soaking and blending. The heat from the comal surface volatilises the chiles natural oils, creates controlled Maillard browning on the chile skin, and softens the dried flesh just enough to facilitate hydration. Correct toasting: heat the comal to medium-high (a drop of water should evaporate immediately). Open the dried chile by tearing off the stem and shaking out most of the seeds (leave a few for flavour). Press the chile flat on the comal, skin side down, with the back of a spatula. Toast for 15–30 seconds per side — the chile should blister slightly, release a fragrant, complex aroma, and darken slightly in colour without turning black. The aroma is the guide: a well-toasted chile smells of chocolate, dried fruit, and smoke. An over-toasted chile smells of ash and bitter carbon — this is the point of no return. Over-toasted chiles make the entire sauce bitter and must be discarded; under-toasted chiles produce a flat, one-dimensional sauce.
Mexican — Chile Technique — Toasting
Tommy's Margarita
Julio Bermejo, Tommy's Mexican Restaurant, San Francisco, California, 1990. Bermejo created the drink as a response to the false economy of using Cointreau in a Margarita — by eliminating the orange liqueur, he reduced the drink's cost while increasing the quality of its tequila expression. The IBA recognised it as an official cocktail in 2011.
Tommy's Margarita is the 20th century's most important Margarita evolution — tequila, fresh lime juice, and agave nectar (replacing the triple sec entirely), created by Julio Bermejo at Tommy's Mexican Restaurant in San Francisco in 1990. By eliminating the orange liqueur and substituting the tequila's natural sweetener (agave nectar from the same plant), Bermejo completed the agave story and created a cleaner, purer Margarita that allows the tequila's terroir to speak without the interference of Cointreau's orange character. The International Bartenders Association recognised Tommy's Margarita as an Official IBA Cocktail — one of the very few modern cocktails to receive this designation.
Provenance 500 Drinks — Cocktails
Tostadas (fried or baked crisp tortilla base)
National Mexican tradition — a practical technique for day-old tortillas; now produced industrially and artisanally
Tostadas are corn tortillas fried in oil or baked until completely crisp and dry. They serve as edible plates for layered toppings — refried beans, shredded chicken, seafood ceviche, tinga, or salad. Tostadas can be fried from fresh tortillas or made from day-old tortillas that are already partially dried. Commercially produced tostadas are widely used but lack the flavour of fresh-fried. The structural integrity of the tostada must support the toppings without snapping under hand pressure.
Mexican — National — Masa & Antojitos canonical
尤卡坦和安第斯 Beyond Mexico: Central American and Andean Root Traditions
The culinary traditions of Central America (Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama) and the broader Andean region (Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina) represent significant bodies of culinary knowledge that are frequently overlooked in favour of Mexican (which dominates the North American understanding of Latin American food) and Peruvian (which dominates the fine dining understanding). This entry documents specific techniques and ingredients from these traditions.
Selected techniques from Central American and broader Andean traditions.
preparation