Torta de Aguacate
Torta de aguacate moves avocado from binding layer to lead filling, the vegetarian reading of the torta on a bean-bound telera. The fruit at its center was eaten in Puebla some ten thousand years ago.
Torta de aguacate moves avocado from binding layer to lead filling, the vegetarian reading of the torta on a bean-bound telera. The fruit at its center was eaten in Puebla some ten thousand years ago.
Count what goes in one roll: milanesa, ham, hot dog, fried egg, cheese, the lot. The cubana is the maximal Mexico City torta, held by a bean-and-avocado bind laid on toasted faces before the meat.
You lean over a torta ahogada; you do not carry it. The whole dish hangs on one defiant idea: a salty sourdough birote engineered to be flooded with chile salsa and still hold.
Half-drowned torta; less salsa than full ahogada, for those who want less heat.
Well-drowned torta; extra salsa, maximum heat and moisture.
A 30-to-40-centimetre dried corn round, brushed with asiento, layered with black beans and quesillo, folded over a meat, and set back across the wood-fired comal until the cheese ropes melt.
The beef-led Oaxacan tlayuda: a white-corn tortilla past 40 cm, brushed with asiento, floored with black beans and quesillo, crowned with smoky charcoal-grilled tasajo, folded over the coals.
Of the Oaxacan tlayudas the chorizo one is the greasiest in the way you want: the sausage renders and its red fat runs down into the black beans, seasoning the base before you reach the meat.
Oaxaca's meter-wide toasted tortilla layered with asiento, black beans, and stringy quesillo, topped with thin chile-rubbed cecina grilled hard over coals, then folded over the heat.
The flat, three-pillowed white wheat roll baked specifically to carry a torta. Soft crumb, thin pale skin, two lengthwise grooves that split it cleanly down the equator.
Small fried rolled taco; diminutive, often served as appetizer or snack.
Mild ricotta-like requesón given its spine by epazote, the anise-and-tar herb cooks reach for when something bland needs a backbone. Soft or fried crisp, green salsa over.
Tacos de papa fill a corn tortilla with seasoned mashed potato, soft or fried golden as a dorado: cheap, filling, vegetarian by default, a fixture of Lenten Fridays.
A tortilla folded around a filling, eaten in the hand: the irreducible Mexican handheld, doubled for a reason and finished by a grammar stricter than it looks.
The wheeled mobile kitchen as institution: a vertical trompo, a flat-top, a tortilla warmer, a window, and three al pastor tacos out the gap in twenty seconds.
The hard-shell taco at its most loaded: seasoned beef and cheddar in a brittle fried corn shell, finished with cold sour cream and diced tomato. Taco Bell trademarked the name in 1978.
Sudado means sweated, and it is the recipe: a corn tortilla dipped in chile oil, folded around a stew, then steamed in the dark by two hundred of its neighbors in a closed basket through the morning.
Taco salad in shell: seasoned ground beef and salad layered into a deep-fried flour-tortilla bowl. An edible-vessel American Tex-Mex dish codified by Taco Bell in 1984.
A taco identified by its red sauce, the colour naming the dish before the filling does: tinga, picadillo, or red chile pork from the red pot of the Mexico City fonda counter.
The morning market taco of central Mexico: a warm corn tortilla folded around whatever guisado the cook stewed overnight, ladled hot from clay pots and eaten standing on the plaza floor in twelve.
Shrimp and melted cheese folded into a buttered tortilla and crisped on the steel. A Mazatlán restaurant invented it for the Sinaloa governor in 1987 and named it after him mid-meal.
The governor's taco with smoked marlin in place of shrimp: flaked cured fish in a tomato-chile guiso, melted into cheese and griddled in a flour tortilla. A Sinaloa coastal staple.
The shrimp-forward gobernador: whole shrimp with roasted poblano and onion, sealed in cheese and crisped in a flour tortilla. The version most of the world pictures by the name.
A corn tortilla folded over potato or picadillo and fried holding the pose: the taco dorado is fonda Mexico's crisp half-moon, dressed through its open edge with lettuce, crema, and salsa.