Tag: Mexicali

Hispanic Heritage Month Has Got Me Making Homemade Flour Tortillas

Hispanic Heritage Month Has Got Me Making Homemade Flour Tortillas

Flour tortillas for Hispanic Heritage Month #WMTMoms

The deep creases and valleys that fold in the skin of Tommie’s hands tell me she has been rolling tortillas for most of her life. Hands against the wooden rolling pin to serve her family something warm comfort. The glutenous dough soon rolls out to a flat disk and cooks on a the blazing hot comal becoming a pillowy light flour tortilla. I remember as a child her husband (Charro) use to tell me that the flour tortilla was all you needed in order to eat, by tearing it into pieces you could shield your fingers with each piece and scoop the food right into the center. No need for a fork or spoon, we had flour tortillas.

My grandfather recounts the days of his poor mother making flour tortillas to feed her 5 children, even though she had nothing to put inside. My grandfather worked on the streets all day as a young child during the depression, just to be able to bring home a few cents to help feed the family. Having a single tortilla for dinner was a big deal, because a lot of times they just went to bed hungry. He says if they were lucky enough to have a pot of beans to go with the flour tortilla… that was considered a feast.

I listen to Mando’s mom Martha talk of how her Mom use to wake up every morning at 5 a.m. in Mexicali to make her husband fresh flour tortillas before he went to work in the morning, and how Martha adopted that same ritual once she got married. She goes over the fine details of what her husband ate in the morning, and how the left over tortillas became his burrito for lunchtime, and if his co-worker was lucky she would send him one too.

Each of these stories all hold ties to a struggling time, but are also retold as if they were the best time of their lives. I think the homemade flour tortilla has that sort of captivation over Latinos, it’s hard not to smile when you think of them. I know they certainly have a grip on me.

A few weeks ago Walmart asked me to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month with them, by creating a recipe. I thought what food really identifies where I come from? Where do my food roots begin? The first thing that came to mind was the treasured flour tortilla. I bought all the ingredients for this recipe at Walmart, and am happy to share it with you. Here’s to family traditions and keeping those roots alive, even if only through a recipe.

Ingredients for flour tortillas #WMTMoms

Ingredients for flour tortillas:

  • 1 1/2 – cups all purpose flour
  • 1 – teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 – teaspoon baking powder
  • 3 – tablespoons lard
  • 1/2 – cup warm water

Directions:

  1. Sift flour, salt and baking powder together.
  2. Add in lard. Lard for flour tortillas
  3. Using your hands mix lard into flour until crumbly about 2 minutes. flour and lard worked into one to make flour tortillas
  4. Slowly pour in water and knead dough until you have a big ball of smooth dough. Flour tortilla doughsmooth flour tortilla dough
  5. Then cover dough with a cloth and let sit on countertop for 2 hours. cover
  6. Heat a comal.
  7. Then divide dough into 6 equally sized balls. tortilla balls
  8. On a floured surface roll each ball out into a thin round disk. Ready to roll rolling pin on flour tortilla #WMTMoms
  9. Place dough on hot comal and cook for 20 to 30 seconds or until brown spots form on white dough. The tortilla may puff, with the back of a spatula press it down. flour tortilla cooking on the comalPressing down on flour tortilla with a spatula #WMTMoms
  10. Cook tortilla on other side.
  11. When done, store in a cloth and eat warm. Stack of homemade flour tortillas #WMTMoms
  12. Enjoy!

Here is a quick video on how to roll them and cook them: 

Walmart-Moms-Disclaimer.2013

 

Chabela

Chabela

I’ve found myself across the border town of Mexicali many times in the last 10 years visiting family and friends. There are hundreds of things that I love and celebrate about Mexico especially the food and drink. I relish all the authentic flavors and preparations of some of my favorite dishes when in the Capital of Baja California. Doesn’t matter if it’s winter spring summer or fall, I run around trying to eat all the specialties of Mexicali. Now if you have ever visited in the summer months then you know that it is hot enough to fry an egg on the hood of your car and that the heat is relentless. People stay indoors all day blasting the ac and the second night falls the city comes alive. A summer night in Mexicali wouldn’t be complete without a Chabela. The refreshing drink is the perfect antidote to the scorching heat. It sets the atmosphere and you hope there will be a light breeze accompanying the Chabela adding some relief.  My primo Amp-Dog introduced me to this recipe and it will always remind me of the flavors of an electric evening in Mexico.

Ingredients for Chabela Summer Masterpiece: 

Chalice Glass

5 Ice cubes

1/2 – teaspoon Tajin

1 – oz. freshly squeezed lime juice

worcestershire Sauce (hold for a count of 2)

4 – squirts of tabasco sauce

1/2 – cup of clamato

1 – cup Mexican beer

Add lime juice to the bottom of the Chalice glass and swirl around, then add some Tajin to the side walls of glass.  Add ice, worcestershire sauce, tabasco sauce, clamato and at last, the most important ingredient……THE MEXICAN BEER!  I used Modelo for this post but it also goes well with dark beer like Negra Modelo, Leon Negra, Bohemia Obscura or Indio.

Que esto y que el otro….SALUD!!!!

All photos by: Nicole Presley