Mexican
Cuisine, over 500 years in the making
Chocolate & Vanilla
Nutritionally Mexican
Mexican
Cuisine, over 500 years in the making
By Priyanka Sharma

Mexican
cuisine is one of the best known and loved the world over, and
for a reason: its flavors, sometimes robust and varied and sometimes
mild and subtle, always have a haunting, mysterious quality
that hints at the range of spices, herbs and condiments that
it uses. Mexican food can be delightfully different from the
stereotypes of the greasy and excessively spicy versions that
are often served in less than authentic restaurants around the
globe. In terms of diversity of tastes and textures, Mexican
cuisine is one of the richest in the world. It is essentially
a ‘hybrid food’ that developed over five centuries
of blending of the Prehispanic cooking traditions with ingredients
and techniques borrowed from Europe, mostly Spain and France.
Prehispanic
Cooking The Spanish conquistadores (led by Hernan Cortes)
arrived in the Aztec capital (the area where current Mexico
City is situated) in 1521. They observed that the local populations
subsisted largely on corn-based dishes such as tamales and tortillas,
beans, and squash which they flavored with herbs and a large
variety of chiles. Historical research suggests that even though
the Aztecs ate a variety of different stews and roasted meats,
their diet relied extensively on plant life. The cornerstone
of such a diet was provided by maize, squash, beans, chile,
and agave, which together formed the culinary base of Prehispanic
cuisine. Over the years, ingredients such as chayote, amaranto,
avocados, sweet potatoes, and other aromatic plants and herbs
were added to the everyday diet. However, maize continued to
be the dominant food in Prehispanic culture, and it was (and
is) prepared and consumed in solid, powdered, and liquid forms.
The Aztecs
consumed the entire corn plant using a variety of cooking and
preparation techniques. Young and tender ears of corn were consumed
fresh without any cooking. The more mature corn was boiled,
steamed, or roasted and used in stews. The most exotic maize
product the Aztecs used was huitlacoche, which is a purple colored
corn fungus. This was (and is) typically combined with squash
blossoms and served in stews or stuffed into tortillas. The
corn silk was boiled into a tea, and corn worms were eaten in
stews or in tortillas. Masa – dough made of ground corn
- was used to prepare tamales and tortillas. Prehispanic tamales
were filled with meats, fruits, beans, corn, corn tassel, frogs,
fish, and worms. The tamales varied in shape from elongated
to square. For special occasions, the surface of the tamale
was decorated with drawings made with beans. There are historical
accounts of a three-foot long tamale that the Mayas prepared
in honor of their beloved departed. Before the conquest, tortillas
also served as a symbol of status: the tortillas eaten on a
daily basis by the members of the upper class were white, warm,
folded, and served covered with a white cloth. The working classes
ate tortillas that were white, thick, large, and coarse. Tortillas
known as tortillas decoradas or tortillas ceremoniales were
prepared for special occasions, and ranged from purple, bright
yellow, blue and red in color.
In addition
to corn, Prehispanic cuisine utilized an enormous variety of
plants, vegetables, fruits, condiments and aromatic herbs that
were used to flavor, garnish, and decorate. The avocado garnished
different kinds of foods and served as filling in tacos. The
avocado leaves were used as a flavoring for different varieties
of beans. Another important plant in the culinary base of Prehispanic
cooking was the tomato; the Aztecs used both the green (tomatillos)
and the red. Tomatoes were an important ingredient in all manner
of stews, sauces, and beans, and garnished other foods, like
tacos and avocados. Chile added the zing to many kinds of foods.
There were many different kinds of chiles: green, yellow, red,
dried, and smoked, and their sizes ranged from the small to
large. Over one hundred varieties of chiles were sold in the
marketplaces. The vegetables, fruits, chile sauces, and cooking
techniques that were the result of the merger of Spanish and
Prehispanic traditions continue to influence modern Mexican
cuisine. The result of this gastronomic marriage is the development
of a Mestizo cuisine which is the everyday food of most modern
day Mexicans.
Conquest
and Introduction of Spanish Ingredients The original
diet of the conquistadores consisted of rice, beef, pork, chicken,
wine, garlic, and onions which they brought with them from Spain.
Over the years, they expanded their repertoire to include ingredients
of pre-Columbian Mexico – most notably chocolate, maize,
tomato, vanilla, avocado, papaya, pineapple, chile pepper, beans,
squash, sweet potato, peanuts and turkey. Additionally, the
Spaniards imported into Mexico animals such as horses, cattle,
pigs, sheep, goats, and chickens. Among the condiments that
they introduced were olive oil, cinnamon, parsley, cilantro,
oregano, saffron, cloves and black pepper as also nuts and grains
such as almonds, rice, wheat, and barley; and fruit and vegetables
such as apples, oranges, grapes, lettuce, carrots, cauliflowers,
potatoes and sugarcane.
During colonial
times, the more prolific Spanish women and members of Spanish
religious orders invented much of today's more sophisticated
fare. Nuns pioneered such delights as the candy called cajeta,
the fritter like buñuelos, and the egg-based liqueur
called rompope. Dishes such as Lomo en adobo (pork loin in a
spicy sauce), chiles rellenos (chilies stuffed with cheese,
beef or pork), guacamole (avocado, tomato, onion, chili and
cilantro), and escabeche (marinades) were also widely used during
the colonial period. Alongside the nuns, the priests planted
trees and vegetables and raised cattle, pigs, sheep, goats,
and other animals. Apart from the meat, milk was also produced,
and this led to the production of cream and cheese. The priests
introduced a calendar of festive events that related to the
religious life cycle, and, over the years, typical foods and
dishes became strongly associated with these.
Between
1864 and 1867, Mexico was ruled by the former Austrian archduke
Ferdinand Maximilian, and during this period French-inspired
Mexican dishes such as chiles en nogado (stuffed chilies in
a walnut sauce), and conejo en mostaza (rabbit in mustard sauce)
were introduced.
Modern
Day Mexican Cuisine Modern day Mexican cuisine is a
blend of the Prehispanic and Spanish traditions and, being a
hybrid cuisine, contains a very rich variety of vegetable, and
meat and seafood dishes. There is also a very rich tradition
of baking and bread making, with a special focus on sweet breads
(Pan de dulce). The Caribbean influence in Mexican cuisine can
be felt particularly in some regional dishes from the states
of Veracruz and Yucatan. Mexican food varies by region because
of local climate, geography and ethnic differences among the
indigenous inhabitants, and also because the different populations
were influenced by the Spaniards in varying degrees. The north
of Mexico is known for its beef production and meat dishes;
southeastern Mexico, on the other hand, is known for its spicy
vegetable and chicken-based dishes. Veracruz-style is a common
method of preparing seafood. Mexican cuisine has also been combined
with the cuisine of the southwest United States to form TexMex
cuisine.
During much
of its recent history Mexican society has been divided into
fairly distinct upper and lower strata, and these two strata
eat different foods. The upper classes benefited disproportionately
from all the various influences and additions to the local fare
over centuries. The lower classes and particularly the indigenous
peoples still live on a diet that consists mainly of beans and
corn tortillas, with a smattering of other foods, acquired locally.
One could thus conclude that we do have amongst us even today
people whose diet differs little from what their ancestors ate
almost 600 years ago.

Chocolate
and Vanilla In 1519, when the first Spanish conquistadors
entered the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan, they found that the
Aztec emperor Montezuma was extremely fond of a drink made from
vanilla and chocolate, which was sweetened with honey. This
was a native Mexican-Indian food that was probably introduced
by the Maya and later relished throughout Mesoamerica. Vanilla
planifolia - whose fruit-pod is popularly known as a vanilla
bean – comes from a species of the Mexican orchid. Chocolate
comes from the fruit of the Mexican Theobroma cacao tree .The
plant was regarded by the Aztecs as being of divine origin.
They used the tree's beans as currency - 100 beans would buy
a slave, 12 beans the services of a courtesan and 10 beans a
rabbit.


Nutritionally
Mexican Corn and beans were the two main foods of indigenous
Mexicans, and much of modern day Mexican cuisine is based on
these two ingredients. The extraordinary thing about this is
the fact that corn and beans have "complimentary amino
acids." Amino acids are the building blocks of protein,
which the body absolutely needs. If any one of several amino-acids
is missing from a person's diet, then the production of protein
is restricted, and the body ceases functioning, or performs
at a diminished level. On their own, neither corn nor beans
supply the full complement of amino acids needed for protein
synthesis. However, put together, they supply the full complement
of amino acids needed. Interestingly, other combinations, such
as rice and corn, wheat and rice, corn and potatoes, or potatoes
and beans, do not provide the full complement of amino acids.

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR: Priyanka Sharma is a mother, trained social
worker and a food and writing aficionado. She lives in Mexico
City with her Economist husband and her 2 and a half year old
daughter. She has worked in local and international NGOs in
India and Mexico. Priyanka is currently working on a series
of articles on regional cuisines from her native India. She
is also taking an advanced Spanish language course at the UNAM.
Her other interests are travel, cooking, reading and cinema.
(ADIP November
2006)