Joined Jan 18, 2020 Read more
  • Day 24

    Ideas for the pot

    February 29, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Teaching Patrick how to make my veggie Chilli

    We decided another veggie chilli was in order, primarily as it's so versatile, but also because Patrick wanted to learn how to make it. He doesn't cook a whole lot, and especially not veggie food, but he loved the chilli so much before that he was keen to learn something without meat.

    I've also decided that I'm going to make my own version of Tostielotes- it's going to have the veggie Chilli, as well as cucumber and jicama (per the tostilocos at Balandra), corn, sour cream, a variety of hot sauces, a squeeze of lime, and some queso fresco. I imagine feeding this to friends at home, using Doritos, I guess. I think it would go down a real treat. I can't wait to cook all this stuff for friends along the road and at home.

    On the hot sauce front, I'm needing to ask what they add to tostielotes. I'm sure it's just bottles of stuff off a shelf, which is fine- no need to mess with it- I just need to know what ones. The tostilocos had three sauces in there, our tostielotes only had one. I think maybe there's a bit sauce, a chipotle one, and a tamarind one, just judging by the colours. It's impossible to tell when it's all just thrown in there.

    I see tamarind pods in the supermarkets, so I need to explore how they process it and use it. I'm used to using it in Asian cookery, but in the paste form which will avoid what I'm sure will be a fairly footery process.

    As well as the Tostito dish- which I think I may badge Tostidavitos or Locodavitos or something suitable, we've some poblano peppers to be stuffed, too.

    Yesterday, we also made some more pickled Jalapeños, Green Tomato Sauce and Pico de Gallo. All decent. We have stuff left to make some Red Sauce, Guac, and a few other bits n bobs. I think the goal here is to likely always have a bunch of these items as store cupboard/fridge stocked items as it's all so interchangeable, and it's so easy and cheap to find the ingredients. I imagine I'll be able to cook almost all Mexican dishes. I like this idea of having a base set of easily sourced things which I can pivot to do anything- the opportunity here is that shopping will be less dependent on pte-meditating what we're going to eat, and more a case of just stocking up on the same set of ingredients, and then deciding as we go. What a great way to live, and I'm sure once I get in the swing of other dishes, we'll be eating close to as good as restaurant food for even cheaper.

    We found lemons yesterday in Cabo- you never see yellow lemons here. That means we can use the Asadero cheese to try to make a take on a lemon/oregano halloumi dish we used to make at home- marinated then grilled. Looking forward to that, maybe in a Vanini (a name we gave to a tortilla stuffed with whatever and cooked in the van)- think wrapped quesadilla.

    I'm also wanting to explore doing a veggie Pastor, using the marinade I have on the same Asadero cheese.

    So lots of ideas in the pot...

    Oh, and we christened the HP sauce we bought in California yesterday, thanks to Jen making some scrambled eggs and toast. Perfection.
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  • Day 18

    Last day in La Paz

    February 23, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    Susie's meatballs and leftover chilli quesadillas.

    After too many days of partying and the resultant hangover yesterday, today's food needed to be practical to allow us time to catch our tails on a bunch of tasks so that we can leave town tomorrow.

    We had a smidge of bean chilli and trimmings left over from our Balandra beach gatherings, so Susie put on some quesadillas for lunch with some pointers from Jen, who has mastered them over the last year or so. The tortillas we are using are a little higher in fat content than most which makes for quite a nice result regards how crispy they get, even if they're a little less healthy. The asadero cheese - think mozzarella but slightly drier- worked a treat, and the trimmings of creme fraiche and leftover beef Adobada, and red sauce topped it off nicely- we do love a free lunch.

    Susie offered to cook dinner. Given her results with the chicken avocado sandwich, which suggests she's got a great palate, I was looking forward to whatever she made. Meatballs with a tomato sauce, spaghetti and parmesan were knocked out in quick order. Really decent, too. I've always had problems getting meatballs to be quite as soft as when you order them (polpette) in Italy. These were much better than my previous attempts.

    Susie told me that she doesn't normally do meatballs, it's more common for her to make a pasta sauce with fresher tomatoes, spicy Italian sausage and seasoning. They've eaten that as a family since way back, so it's one of those staple dishes for them by the sounds of it. The same kind of thing was a firm favourite with me for years at home, less so Jen as she's not a huge fan of the fennel flavour in Italian sausage.

    Tomorrow we head for Todo Santos. I've not checked out what the food possibilities are down there yet, but Jen said we can buy fish from the fisherman on the beach, and that someone mentioned having red snapper, so that's got me in the mood for a BBQ on the beach if we can make it come together.

    The area we're heading to is much more expensive, so I doubt we'll be hitting any nice restaurants- taco stands, family run joints, and plenty of cooking in the van all be in order.
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  • Day 17

    Getting Curious

    February 22, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    22nd February. Dirty pizza; the birthday(s) ends.

    After so many days of indulgence, it all had to end some point. Today was a sluggish one, accumulated hangovers finally grinding us to a hault with all the associated guilt of calories consumed and pounds gained. The only question that really matters is was it worth it? And yes, it was. That's the best birthday celebration I think I've ever been a part of. 4 days of brilliant people with food playing the wonderful role it does in bringing people from all over the world together with a common language of deliciousness. I am delighted that I had the opportunity to contribute, and humbled by how well it all landed.

    Today's helping of dirty pizza from Little Caesar's was the only thing any of us wanted. Satisfying and depressing at the same time. Exactly as required for a hangover. Healthy eating starts tomorrow.

    So that's me sat and plugged in all my historic notes into this app so I'm now up to speed. Through the process of making the updates, I started to notice a specific gap in how I'm approaching the topic. I said I would talk more to people about all things food, and I also referenced that's hard for me in some situations. But what I hadn't realised is that I'm missing quite an easy opportunity to talk to the other travellers I meet. It got me to thinking about how I can start better conversations, likely with quite an explicit interview style, so I spent a little time writing down the kind of questions I think I can start asking to get people to open up and, hopefully, I'll learn lots of information and make stronger connections as a result.

    Here's the kind of stuff I'm thinking about. Learning some of them in Spanish will be interesting; not as hard as trying to decipher the answers I get, mind you.

    What are your fondest memories of eating?

    What was the one dish everyone in your family loved?

    Describe your relationship with food

    Describe mealtimes with your family. How has that changed through your life?

    What matters to you when it comes to eating?

    Describe a particular meal/occasion that stands out in your memory

    Desert Island scenario. What's that meal or set of ingredients you'd take? 

    Who would you most like to dine with? What would the over-the-table conversation be about?

    Describe the role that food plays in your family home, with your friends, in your country and culture. What value does that relationship carry?

    What's your attitude towards current hot topics, such as sustainability, environmental impact and animal welfare?

    How would you rate your cooking skills? Would you like that to be different/what stands in the way?

    What is your favourite dish to cook or have cooked for you?

    What's your earliest memories of being in the kitchen?

    What does the future of food look like for you?

    So I suppose I should try answer them for myself to see how well they work. Not bad, I think is my conclusion. We'll see what actually happens when I start asking people such things out of the blue.

    What are your fondest memories of eating?

    Any time with friends and good times. Particularly ones where I've managed to really deliver some food that blew someone away. Definitely the annual event my parents held to celebrate a poet. It was my opportunity to push myself to please a wider audience with large numbers. It was always stressful, and it would end up with my mum having to do so much help to keep things clean and moving, but the only bit that sticks is how people responded, and those clean plates.

    What was the one dish everyone in your family loved?

    Sausage pie. My mum's way of getting onions into me- I was a fussy wee bugger. Richmond recipe Irish sausages, chopped into chunks and fried with onions, tomato puree, and a tin of Heinz baked beans. Fired into an oven dish and topped with fluffy mash, maybe cheese as a treat on top, then into the oven to crisp the top. It remains a favourite, and it's an example of how, despite being able to knock out some pretty high end food these days, trying to replicate my mother's dish, no matter how elementary it may seem, is a task beyond me. I'm less able to perfectly burn onions for a start.

    Describe your relationship with food

    I'm fairly obsessed. It can be unhealthy for me, psychologically at times. If planning a big meal, I'll often start work on the menu design months in advance, and even in those early stages, be waking up with ideas in the middle of the night. My mind is at its worst when it's at its best, creatively. My desire to do everything from scratch means I get good results, but I spend more time than most would going to lengths that aren't always necessary. But I love it. Food and cooking is capable of making me cry with pleasure, so I know that it is truly my 'thing'. I'm a bit more balanced with things right now, because I can't have it dominating a trip that is as much about all the other thrills of travel as it is about being a food nut.

    I love to challenge myself with cookery, and the buzz of pushing to execute something exceptional. I put myself through torture sometimes by doing things like cooking in restaurant kitchens- it makes me seriously anxious- but the feeling I get when I finish a shift, working with people I look yo as heroes, is worth all the nerves. I've made friends for life through food. It has changed my life.

    Describe mealtimes with your family. How has that changed through your life?

    In earlier years we always ate together. That started to change as I got older and, maybe, as society changes in that regard. I always wanted to be with my friends. Sunday dinner was still generally done. It's one thing I miss from being at home. If and when we return, I'll make mote of an effort to be around for that.

    What matters to you when it comes to eating?

    That whoever made the food cared about what they did. It's everything. Sometimes people close to me don't want to cook for me because they see how critical I am of my own food, but they miss an important point- I just love someone taking their time and being kind enough to serve me a plate of food, because they'll have done it with the care it deserves. I'm happy with scrambled eggs and toast. It's just so nice to sit down and be served something. It's relaxing.

    Describe a particular meal/occasion that stands out in your memory

    The first time we walked into The Gannet in Glasgow. We were only in for drinks- it had not long opened to the public, and we had other plans for dinner. I saw a plate going past and knew immediately that it was high quality- the colour preserved in the cooking of the spinach, the translucence of the sauce, and how everything sat up on the plate. That moment changed everything, possibly my life, forever. We went in a few days later and it blew my mind. We were in all the time and got super friendly with the staff, particularly Rory, the guy running bar. It turned out he was the brother of the owner, Peter. Eventually I plucked up the balls to ask him if he would ask his brother if I could come into the kitchen to learn.

    My first shift, I thought I'd just be picking lettuce and watching, but it was very much hands in and I was given plenty of tasks. My second shift, I expected similar, but I was put on my own station on their second busiest night ever. I didn't have a single dish sent back from being sent to the 'pass'. Since then, I've become extremely close with Peter, and his friends and family; I've stood side by side with him as my food hero, cooking in front of the public at food festivals. I've cooked with him for local charitable causes. He values my opinion on his dishes, perhaps the greatest honour. My food has improved exponentially, and I now dream of a future that involves food in some way.

    I've had a several profound meals in my life, not least at Central, in Lima, Peru, which is one of the leading restaurants in the world with particularly inspirational work on sustainability of culture, environment and indigenous people and practice. That made me cry. I couldn't even talk when I got introduced to the kitchen team.

    Desert Island scenario. What's that meal or set of ingredients you'd take? 

    I can't answer it. My mind changes every day. If I had to take ingredients, likely a handful of core veggies that I can use to make a variety of Mediterranean dishes. I love Italian food.

    Who would you most like to dine with? What would the over-the-table conversation be about?

    Tough one. Maybe Anthony Bourdain. I'd like to talk to him about some of the crazy stories, but mainly about how to be a great travel and food writer like he was.

    Describe the role that food plays in your family home, with your friends, in your country and culture. What value does that relationship carry?

    It's still very important in my family home. Everything is home cooked. My mum is a great cook and she's trying many new things all the time, whilst keeping a sense of routine with old favourites which keeps my dad happy. My close friends are pretty much all into food and cooking, so it's integral to our social scene. I love it. As for the country, we've lost connection in many ways to our history with food. That's not all a bad thing as we've a fantastic, vibrant food scene, but there's also a lot of crap, like anywhere, and it was be nice to keep connected. I'm not sure how much families are together around food, these days, so it would be good not to drift any further, but I suspect that's just the way things are going. People are busy and have different priorities.

    What's your attitude towards current hot topics, such as sustainability, environmental impact and animal welfare?

    It would be tempting, given that I believe it's too late for humans to save themselves, to be apathetic, but these are extremely important topics. I'd love to have a restaurant that had a net positive impact on the world and it's animals. I struggle greatly with the fact I'm eating meat. It used to be that so long as it was reared well l, then I'd be cool with it, but the death of a creature is a serious thing and I don't believe it's my decision to make, yet I am, at the moment, eating meat. I'm not sure what my future will be with it, especially if I ever open a restaurant.

    How would you rate your cooking skills? Would you like that to be different/what stands in the way?

    I'm good at what I do, sometimes exceptional, given I've no formal training. But I need a much broader knowledge of more of the structural stuff that would give me way more flexibility to produce more varied and interesting food.

    What is your favourite dish to cook or have cooked for you?

    I love to cook a full tasting menu, and the highlight for me is always trying to nail the meat dish which would ideally be home-based, with a refined sauce and some smartly though-out garnishes. But I'm also just as happy making an epic lasagne.

    What's your earliest memories of being in the kitchen?

    Licking sponge mix off the mixer blade when my mum was baking, then gradually getting into helping.

    What does the future of food look like for you?

    Fuck knows. I'd be surprised if I don't do something career-wise with it, but I'm open to whatever at the moment. I know I need to cook for people more often than I do, and that I need to learn more food from more places to make people happy.
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  • Day 16

    Carne-Val

    February 21, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    21st February. Carnaval in La Paz.

    The fourth day of Jen's birthday celebrations saw us back into the city of La Paz for the annual Carnaval celebrations. Besides fun and laughs, this was about streetfood.

    We had;

    Tostielotes- like the tostilocos, but just corn, sour cream, fresh cheese and hot sauce. The ones in Oaxaca are better but still a damn tasty treat for munching in the move.

    Quesadillas- the best I've seen. Fresh pressed blue corn dough, made by proper hard-working Mexican grandmas. They knew what they were doing. The second I saw the stand, the ladies, the way they worked and the way people were eating, I knew this was the real deal. Mushroom and cheese filling in one, and then another with chicharron- pork belly braised down in a spice mix that I can't yet out my finger on. First class.

    Tacos- no new varieties, but the pastor was carved very thin, quite different to how we've normally had it.

    We'd have had more but the booze was flowing pretty well and time seemed to evaporate.
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  • Day 15

    Balandra #2: Next Level Leftovers

    February 20, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    February 20th. Next level leftovers for the Balandra crew.

    As celebrations continued for yet another day, it was time to feed the crew once more. We had leftovers of everything, and then I also roasted some poblano peppers which I stuffed with Asadero cheese and my first attempt at beef Adobada- which was kinda hard having never properly read how to make it. I seared some dried ancho and guajillo chillies- both quite fruity in their dried state. To that, added some red wine vinegar, a bunch of garlic, some water and then into the blitzer for the completion of the marinade. 24hrs in the fridge, and then I cooked it off in a low oven, diced it and then fried it to get some colour. It wasn't like I've had in restaurants, so will need some work, but it was good in its own right.

    I also threw together a red salsa. My guess was that it involved cooked tomatoes and dried ancho chillies. Boosted in confidence from the results of cooking the green tomato salsa, I felt happy about only half roasting red tomatoes. I added anchos, some garlic, red wine vinegar, lime juice, sugar. Blitzed. Done. I like that most Mexican food I've been making so far is not very labour intensive- something I'm sure I'll feel bless about as the weather gets hotter and more humid as we head south.

    The spread went down really well with the group again. There really is nothing better than kickass leftovers. Photos to follow.
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  • Day 14

    Cooking for the Balandra gang #1

    February 19, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    19th February. My veggie chilli and a spread for the gang at Balandra beach.

    The night before, for Jen's Birthday, we'd met a wonderful bunch of folks, including Argentinians Lucas and Ben, the former of which is famous in Latin America after an Instagram video he made went viral. He now travels off the back of what that brings him. His pal, Ben owns a video production company so they make a good team. And they're both pretty attractive specimens, so there's little to dislike. Maybe in a stupor of awe with Lucas' presence, and certainly influenced by the booze which had flowed all night, I suggested I cook for the whole party of new friends who had assembled to make Jen's birthday an amazing, unexpected treat.

    When I awoke, somewhat hungover, in the public car park in town where we'd camped for tje night, and remembered my proposal, I felt it was important to honour it. I decided the most practical thing would be a big pot of veggie chilli and a good spread of sides. A mission around the supermarket saw us tooled up- $40 was enough to make enough food to feed 10 of us for 2 nights, and still have leftovers.

    We went out to a cool spot called Balandra- a ridiculously beautiful cove with sand bars. Very touristy and busy as hell, so I was cooking the prep stuff in the middle of a packed car park, whilst Susie slept off the hangover and Patrick and Jen went a walk and for a swim.

    Before starting to cook, we got some tostilocos- a packet of tostito tortilla chips, sliced open and rammed with crispy nuts, cucumber, jicama (like a turnip), 3 hot sauces and some fresh cheese. It's a beast of a thing. Tangy in the extreme and pretty satisfying.

    I managed to chill for a while on the beach with the gang as they reassembled from their separate forays in town, returning in time for the sunset. Once it was dark, I had to spring into action to ensure I didn't end up late as can happen when cooking with booze. The nature of the spread was that it all benefited from last minute prep, besides the chilli which was already done.

    The spread in total was;

    Veggie chilli

    Longaniza sausage, fried and crumbled

    Fresh cheese (queso fresco)- nice and sour

    Home made pickled jalapeños

    Lettuce

    Cabbage

    Green tomato salsa

    Guacamole 

    Pico de Gallo salsa

    Radishes

    Creme fraiche

    Fresh tortillas- supermarkets or tortillerias sell them warm and freshly made

    Tortilla chips

    The green tomato salsa was a first. I've been eating it with many tacos and felt it was time to start increasing my repertoire. I checked a recipe as a reference point and was surprised to find that it involves slightly grilling the green tomatoes - it doesn't taste like a cooked tomato sauce. But the trick is that they're only grilled lightly. Normally, with the cooking styles I'm used to, if grilling, it would be done until fully cooked to get that grilled flavour and texture, but not so here, so that was a learning.. The only other components were white onion, Serrano chillies, lime. The important thing is sitting the onion in water first to take the harshness out. Throw it together into the blitzer, and done.

    As food was served, along with some roasted veg and a potato and egg dish from another chap, keen to contribute, I realised that the guy knocking them out was Mexican. Here was I, on a beach in Mexico, serving up traditional Mexican food (the chilli, excepted) to a Mexican, who was cooking arguably more European food. I was nervous about what he'd think- Mexicans are proud and are willing to share their opinion, and I could tell he was curious to see whether I could deliver. He gave me 10/10 for my guacamole and my salsas. He'd never had anything like the veggie chilli and he was super impressed. Honestly, I was nearly in tears, that's one of my highlights of any cooking episode.

    It was nothing short of magic, seeing everyone gathered around in the dark with candles and head-torches, making up their tacos with all different combinations. The place was silent for the most part, with groans of pleasure, and eventually building into conversation about the individual components. I was so happy to have played my part in bringing together people around food to help make a really special occasion to continue the celebrations for Jen's Birthday.

    Good photos will need to wait until Ben completes production of the video he made of me preparing the food. I may yet be famous.

    Note- our friend, Susie, makes a mean sandwich filling with chicken, whipped avocado, hard boiled egg, mayo and mustard. We'll defo be doing that one in future.
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  • Day 13

    Whalesharks and Tacos

    February 18, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    18th February. Birthday Tacos in La Paz.

    After swimming with whale sharks for Jen's Birthday, which was truly spectacular, we went into town for some tacos. I went for one familiar item (Pastor) to ensure some satisfaction in case my other wildcard items didn't pay off. Pastor is, I believe,  of Persian descent- flavours and techniques (I.e. kebab on the grill) of the middle east, brought by the Spanish as they invaded. It's a spice blend, primarily of dried chillies and cumin, cooked in vinegar and then it marinades meat of any kind, usually pork as it's well suited. If done in the pan instead, it's known as Adobada.

    My other orders were things I forgot to note the name of, so I'll need to revisit. Basically, one was carne asada (grilled beef) topped with chorizo. The other, I have no idea. I deliberately didn't ask as I am trying to be more adventurous. I'll need to ask again next time. The carne asada/chorizo combo was pretty damn good. The other thing, which I think was maybe offal, didn't quite capture my heart.

    Jen was on Baja style fish tacos with the batter. Very nice indeed. Susie went for grilled fish crispy rolled tacos. Patrick was carne asada all the way. It's hard to know how many to order as they vary in size from place to place and price isn't always a gauge of quantity. At about $1.50 a pop in a more expensive place like this, when 3 fill you, you can't complain. Lunch for 3 of us  including cocktails, came in at around $25. 

    The other advantage is being able to have variety and a quantity to suit how hungry you are as you can just order as you go. It's a fantastic way to eat, and always leaves open the possibility of a nibble elsewhere...
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  • Day 9

    Pancakes & Peppers

    February 14, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    14th February. Valentine van Chillies Rellenos; salty pancakes. Near Loreto.

    A classic Mexican dish, traditionally done by roasting the pepper (poblano or annaheim), then removing the skin, slicing it open, cleaning it out and stuffing with asadero cheese, maybe with meat of some description, then wrapped up and dipped in a light batter- it would seem with egg whites whisked separately and then into the yolks and flour, before frying. I went for a simpler version for a first attempt- roasted the peppers, left the skin on, pulled out the insides and stuffed with my veggie bean chilli and the asadero cheese. Good result, actually. Trouble with these peppers is they can get a bit hot towards the tip, so maybe using normal peppers would be better for Jen, at least. Pretty tasty first go. A simple, fairly light dinner. If doing traditionally, a tomato sauce/stew would be on top, but not the right thing for this, given the tomato based chilli inside. Expect this will be a regular in the van. Thinking I can prepare them in advance, maybe a batch, then just roast them to order, only taking 10 minutes. Maybe they'd even freeze.

    Jen also did some cooking with a return to her favoured pancakes. New vehicle, new tools, and a new recipe that turned out to be way too salty, resulting in eating them with ketchup to make it a savoury snack. I was happy enough. Jen less so.
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  • Day 8

    Pizza n Chips...on the pizza

    February 13, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    13th February. Pizza with chips (on the pizza). Loreto.

    Our meal out was meant to be in a traditional place that has no menu and just serves you up whatever the lady of the house is putting together that day. It turned out to be closed. I was a bit disappointed as I was looking forward to an opportunity to experiment and get inquisitive. Our alternative turned out to be an ok pizza (with chips on it?!)- our first non Mexican food we've eaten (out-with our truck, Spud)- but it took an hour to arrive by which time any notion of a nice romantic meal was starting to slide into tiredness, as it was past our standard bedtime or 8pm.

    In Latin America, when it comes to pizza, and maybe even cooking in general, the concept of 'less is more' isn't particularly well understood or practised. So, in the case of pizza, excess cheese is an issue. Yet, we never seemed to bloody learn before. Better now, as we're rarely eating food that isn't traditional for the place we're in.

    A theme that's underpinning my current thinking of how principles such as 'less is more' might translate into whatever I do down the line, is refinement. I like the idea of taking authentic dishes and, whilst keeping them authentic regards flavour profile and, to an extent, texture, improving elements to turn out a more precise product with more distinction in the elements. The test that it should still pass is that someone from the place would still be able to recognise and connect with the dish and see it as a respectful nod. It has to be close enough to the original as well, because I want to be able to say, with integrity, that what I am serving is a real slice of the place. Authenticity is the differentiator that has the power to create an opportunity at home in the UK with Latin American cookery, but precision is what can take it to the next level, should that be the kind of product I decide I want to create. Ask most people what they think of when you say Mexican cuisine, and it'll probably be Fajitas, or other more Tex Mex varietals. I can't wait to serve people Mole, the rich and massively varied sauce from Oaxaca with all it's complex spices and chocolate (in some cases).
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  • Day 5

    Some favourites served on the beach

    February 10, 2020 in Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    10th Feb. Veggie burger crispy balls, wraps, veg and yoghurt. Then veggie chilli tacos. All served right on epic El Coyote beach, in Bahia Concepción.

    Recipe links to follow separately at a later date.

    For our friends, Patrick and Susie, we offered to make some dinner. Ahead of that, I knocked together some lunch using leftover veggie burger mix (my standard recipe) out of the freezer, and turned it into balls which I breaded and fried. We then tore them up into some wraps with a bunch of fresh veg and a yoghurt, lime and cilantro  dressing. They went down mighty well, so as this was the first I've cooked for them, I was feeling good about that. I always love an opportunity to please people through their tummies. I think most folk are expecting what can often be a disappointing experience with a veggie burger, so these really seem to hit the spot. Crunchy, tasty, dense, and spiced in the middle-ground so they're easy to match with a variety of flavours from different parts of the world, from Indian to Southeast Asian, to BBQ sauce with cheese and onion. Dynamite. Not a bad view, either.

    Dinner was a batch of veggie chilli, served up with tacos, fresh cheese, guacamole, pico de Gallo salsa, and some sour cream- no pics. I'm noticing for the guac, less is more. I've taken cilantro out, and only put a small amount of white onion in it. A little tomato is fine, minus the pulp, and besides that, it's just about getting the lime balance right and the seasoning on point. As always, considering the flavour profile of all the other trimmings to make sure that the overall assembly is balanced is important. I don't like trying to just make everything all perfectly balanced in its own right. It's about contrasts within the whole- making sure the guac is creamy and not too tart; letting the salsa deliver the zing of acid along with the chilli heat- being bold enough with that heat because it's generally only a little and it's set against all those other flavours, some of which are fatty and can take it. The chilli itself is slightly sweet, and very deep in its spicing; it's thick in texture to play the role of the meat in the dish. From the cheese, there's richness with a slight tang. From the cream, some sour. I didn't do pickled chillies this time out, but I like that as a different way of introducing acid ans heat into the dish. If doing them, I'll tone down the lime in the salsa, and let the vinegar of the pickle do the talking that way, and I'll reduce the chilli content, or ideally use a milder chilli in the salsa, to still maintain that fresh, fruity chilli flavour that makes Pico de Gallo so epic, but without doubling down on the heat of the jalapeños, which can be pretty full-on. I've noticed that to get the right result in pickling jalapeños, cooking them out in the vinegar solution for a bit longer is best- maybe 5 minutes on the simmer. 

    Maybe the best thing about this kind of eating is the fact that it's interactive. Nothing quite like everything creating their own perfect taco to their taste, and passing stuff about the place. It's at the heart of the connective power of a meal that makes it transcend beyond being just the act of eating.
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