From the soon-to-be released cook book Third Coast Cuisine: Recipes from the Gulf of Mexico.
When most Americans venture into their local Mexican
restaurant they are looking for that "authentic Mexican" flavor from south of
the border. Foods like crunchy tacos,
fajitas, and good old chips and salsa come to mind when the typical American
thinks of real Mexican food. These,
however, are not traditional Mexican foods.
They are the products of Anglo meddlings into a Latino/native American
culture. Most of the foods that we
identify as Mexican are actually Tex-Mex.
They resulted from the post civil war migration of white Europeans into
Texas.
So if what we call Mexican is really Tex-Mex then what is
real Mexican like? And what is the
stuff that we call Tex-Mex? And where
does Southwestern Cuisine fit into all this?
All good questions.
Real, honest to goodness food from Mexico’s interior is a
far cry from what we are accustomed to at the local Macho Taco. Yes, there are tortillas and zesty sauces,
but it is quite different. The
tortillas are made of corn not flour and they are much thicker than what we
have grown accustomed to here in the States.
For the most part tortillas are silverware in interior Mexico. The sauces are different as well, the
bastardized marinaras give way to moles and pepianes, sauces that predate the Conquistadors. Moles
are most often made by grinding dried chilies and unsweetened chocolate with
other ingredients to form a thick paste.
Pepianes are similar but use
ground pumpkinseeds for their base.
Ingredients are both familiar and peculiar. Beef, pork, and chicken of course are prevalent as are turkey,
lamb, and seafood. Now it trips bizarre
because goat, insects, and huitlacoche,
a fungus that grows on corn, are also very popular ingredients. There are no fried taco shells, no gooey
cheddar cheese sauces, and no piles of nachos.
For a taste of real Mexico without the delay at customs try any of the
Chicago restaurants owned by celebrity chef Rick Bayless. No body does it better.
The next step is Tex-Mex.
From the end of the civil war on there has been a marriage Mexican and
American foods thriving along the Texas/Mexico border. It started with food carts in cities like
Houston and San Antonio and is now nestled into every strip mall in the
country. Tex/Mex is also very popular
in Europe and Asia. It consists of most
of the foods we associate when we think of Mexican food: fried tacos, fajitas,
burritos, and such, and of course that scrumptious white cheese dip. The classification Tex-Mex came from a book
by food author Diana Kennedy called The
Cuisines of Mexico back in 1972. In
her book Kennedy coined the phrase Tex-Mex to describe this Americanized
version of Mexican cuisine. At first
the name was considered an insult to restaurant owners in Texas, but now it is
the most popular regional cuisine in the nation.
As if we had not twisted Mexican food enough, now comes
Gringo-Mex. It is even more American
than Tex-Mex. Gone is the white cheese
sauce and in its places comes cheddar, a cheese almost never seen in
Mexico. Gringo-Mex is a caricature of
Mexican culture where all of the interesting parts are distorted for more
effect. The typical Gringo-Mex
restaurant may be filled with palm trees and colorful sombreros, and they
always have a cleverly named margarita like "top shelf". You know the ones - Chili’s, Don Pablos, et al.
It is basically Top 40 Mexican food as opposed to something more
memorable.
If Gringo-Mex is Barbie doll pop music then Southwestern
Cuisine is Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of
the Moon. Groundbreaking and
innovative, Southwestern is wonderfully flamboyant. Southwestern Cuisine really
came into its own in the nineties as classical European cooking techniques
collided headlong with the bold flavors and wildness of the Desert Southwest.
Born at the rustic Bed &Breakfast's, resorts, and inns that dot the painted
landscape of Arizona and Nevada, it is known for its common use of rich sauces
and wild game. Brooklyn-born chef Bobby
Flay does Southwestern better than anyone and has taken it farther than anybody
ever dreamed by incorporating some Caribbean influence to what is already an
amazingly exotic cuisine.
The final stop on the Mexican cavalcade is Mexican/Creole
Cuisine. As I explored in my first
cookbook, Amigeauxs - Mexican/Creole Cuisine, this latest form of Mexican
blends perfectly with recipes and ingredients from the Louisiana bayou
country. One could say that these two
culinary cousins are “amigeauxs.” Mexican/Creole Fusion is relatively new, but
we are familiar with some recipes that might now fall under this
classification, chiefly Creole Jambalaya (a variation of Paella) and the Mobile
classic West Indies Salad, which one might describe as a Gulf Coast twist on a
Mexican Ceviche.
There is no right or wrong way to eat the various types of
Mexican food nor is anyone of them better than any of the others. Whichever style you prefer is the best
style. Each of us has different likes
and dislikes and I personally love them all.