Latin American
How to Make Tortilla Chips Taste Even Better
The fastest way to upgrade your chips and salsa game.
By Sheela Prakash
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Portobello and Poblano Enchiladas
Portobello mushrooms add hearty flavor to these creamy vegetarian enchiladas.
By Katherine Sacks
3 Meaty (but Vegetarian!) Mushroom Dinners
Portobello burgers, meet your match.
By Katherine SacksPhotography by Chelsea Kyle
Dry Chimichurri Rub
In Argentina, this mix of herbs and spices is combined with oil and vinegar and used as a sauce for grilled meats. For best results, use dried herb leaves—not powdered or ground.
By Andrew Schloss
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Green Posole with Cod and Cilantro
This light and brothy stew is just the thing for crisp autumn nights.
By Chris Morocco
Sammy's Asada
By Sammy Hagar
Ancho Tortilla Soup
Ancho chilies are dried Poblano chilies, and have an earthy, sweet flavor and mild heat level. This classic tortilla soup is a creative way to use leftover turkey—substitute 1 1/2 cups finely chopped cooked turkey for the chicken.
Charred Tomatillo Salsa
To choose a fresh tomatillo, they should be firm and the husks mostly intact. A split is ok, but you want them looking pretty tight. Roast the onions here if you like a deeper, caramelized flavor, or add them in raw for a more authentic salsa.
Papadzules
In this classic dish, native to the Yucatàn peninsula, warm corn tortillas are dunked into a pumpkin seed salsa, rolled up with crumbled hard-boiled eggs, and topped with a duo of sauces: more pumpkin seed and tomato salsa to boot.
By Diana Kennedy
Meet the Tostada Party, the Make-Ahead, No-Stress Backyard Bash of Summer
When a party is this simple, this delicious, and involves this much tequila, a host has no choice but to pour a drink and join in.
By Nils Bernstein
Beet Dip with Cotija Cheese
By Chef Mary Nolan
Enchiladas Verdes (Green Chicken Enchiladas)
Typical Mexican enchiladas arrive rolled up and stuffed, but at my favorite enchilada street stand—the inspiration for this recipe—they're stacked in a messy, luxurious pile, with separate individual layers of corn tortillas, fresh cilantro and onion, green enchilada sauce, shredded cheese and chicken. The whole thing is topped with a blanket of crema and more cheese. It's almost like a deconstructed lasagna. The dish is enough to make you fall deeply in love with Mexico City—particularly when the corn tortillas are homemade, and the green sauce is prepared with a slow-simmering pot of fresh chicken stock.
By Lesley Téllez
Tacos Al Pastor (Marinated, Spit-Roasted Tacos)
Tacos al pastor—made from marinated pork that's been roasted on a vertical spit—are wildly popular in Mexico City, particularly at night.
The best taqueros put on a show, slicing off bits of caramelized meat and catching it in one hand (or behind their back!), and then reaching above the meat to slice off a piece of warm, juicy pineapple. According to city folklore, these tacos were invented in the capital. The dish is a direct descendant of shawarma, brought by Lebanese immigrants who arrived in Mexico in the early twentieth century.
The marinade in this recipe comes from Tacos Don Guero in the Cuauhtémoc neighborhood, whose taqueros were kind enough to explain their ingredients to me at six a.m. one weekday morning. Obviously very few people at home will have a vertical spit—part of what gives tacos al pastor its signature flavor—but a grill would work well, or a blazing-hot cast iron skillet or griddle greased with a little lard.
By Lesley Téllez
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Every Recipe You Need to Throw the Ultimate Tostada Party
Tacos are great for dinner. But when you're throwing a backyard bash, easy, make-ahead tostadas take the cake. Of course, you can't serve tostadas alone. So here's the whole fiesta—from the no-lime guacamole to the tequila-spiked cucumber juice.
By Nils Bernstein
Shrimp-Salad Tostadas with Tomatoes and Cucumber
In the state of Chiapas, these are made with chewy dried shrimp and called tostadas turulas. Use the most flavorful shrimp and best tomatoes you can find.
By Nils Bernstein