Tag Archives: mexican food

{32} Serrano Peppers

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Indian Corn + Esquites

We all feel a little lost sometimes – as to what we want, where we want to be, or who we want to become – and we all have a way to deal with it. As for me – photography has been one of the ways that I, as cheesy and jaded as it may sound, find my way again, and in the last few years, cooking has also become one of my ways – but for some strange reason, I sometimes forget this and I don’t know why. I cannot really explain how, or why, creating an image that I love – more specifically if it’s food-related – gives me a sense of fulfillment, peace; simply, happiness. For this and other reasons I would rather keep for myself at the moment (but will reveal them to you soon, hopefully), I decided to get back to cooking and blogging about it.

This is where a very funny story comes in.

I went to the farmer’s market like I do every other week, and I saw the most beautiful Indian corn – the one in color palette {29}. I, for some reason, had never seen it – surprisingly, not even when I lived in Boston where fall and everything fall-related (pumpkin-picking, apple picking, Halloween, Thanksgiving) are a big thing – like in the rest of New England.

I bought a few cobs of Indian corn, took them home with me and Googled “how to cook Indian corn.” I didn’t really know what I was going to make with them because I rarely cook corn, but I figured they would make the most wonderful, colorful esquites in the world. I put the corn in water and placed the pot on the stove. After an hour I realized the corn was still hard as a rock. A few days later I went back to the farmer’s market and explained to my produce guy. Turns out the babies I bought were not intended for cooking – they are simply for decoration! I felt so ridiculous. I laughed at myself for hours.

So I bought regular corn and made traditional non-Indian corn esquites. Still delicious. Esquites are a traditional Mexican snack, or {antojito} – very commonly found on the streets in {puestitos}, or food stands. It is the Mexican version of corn on-the-cob, only sold in small cups and seasoned quite differently.

And to make this return-to-cooking-and-blogging entry a bit more special, I threw in a second round: my grandma’s {pastel de elote} – or Mexican-style sweet-corn cake, or bread – but I’ll leave that one for our next post.

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{12} Coconut-Strawberry Ice Pops

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The {Taco} Beach Shed I Fell in Love With

A few weeks ago someone sent me a photo similar to this one with the message: “next blog post!” I liked what I saw: a rustic, white, handmade wood sign with the paint peeling off spelling: TACOS. Being told I’d “fall in love” with this place, I decided to pay it a visit.


A friend and I hit Rockaway Beach looking for a break from the city. 90 minutes from Manhattan by train, Rockaway Beach lays on a strip of land that extends from the southern point of Queens referred to as The Rockaways or Rockaway Peninsula. It has gradually become a popular spot for hipsters, artists, skaters, and surfers – those who want to hit the beach, yet are not into the ostentatious vibe at the Hamptons or the family environment at Jones Beach. No white sand or crystalline waters here – only an unpretentious escape from the craziness in Manhattan.


Around 10 years ago, hard-core surfers came to Rockaway in the search of some waves, risking getting fined for paddling into the water since surfing was illegal in the area back then. At that point in time, Rockaway was only a gritty and even shady town, home to bungalows and public housing; the beach is nothing special – it is well kept and the water is clean – very similar to what Venice Beach, CA was years before it became what it is today. Over the years, Rockaway Beach has increasingly become popular – so much so that it wouldn’t surprise me if in another decade or less we have our own version of Venice Beach here in New York – a hipster/artistic epicenter home to surf shops + iconic food establishments like Caracas Arepas Bar, Meat Hook, Roberta’s and Blue Bottle Café, to name a few.

After spending 4 hours in the 90-something degree heat, my friend and I went looking for Rockaway Taco. Little did I know I was in for a surprise.  Here in the middle of this lazy beach town, was this picturesque gem – a corner with a farmers market, an Italian shaved ice spot and a Rockaway Taco.

Rockaway Taco is basically a beach shack constructed with rustic wood, where a huge line of people waiting to eat a fish taco forms around the corner. A thought instantly came to mind: you could have literally picked this place up from Puerto Escondido (a hot surf spot in Mexico) and brought it here. The laid-back, tropical beach town feel of the place is created by every tiny detail: the open kitchen, friendly staff, hand-painted signs and benches, broken surfboards, chalkboard menu and bags of {cacahuates} and {pepitas} hanging from clothespins on a rope, and of course, the food.


The fish tacos served with guacamole, radish and cabbage were very good, objectively speaking, although I am not a personal fan of mayo (and they had quite a lot of it). The meat tacos were good as well, but the definite winners were the bean-cheese-plantain tacos – referred to as “quesadillas” at Rockaway Taco. Beans + cheese + plantain: 3 basic ingredients from Latin American cuisine, yet I’d never had them in a taco together and I can tell you, I’d been missing out. Then to really transport you to a beach town in Mexico there’s the watermelon {jugo}, Jarritos sodas, and the little bag of jicama cucumber and mango with lime and {chile piquin}, a classic Mexican snack. Top this amazing meal off with an Italian shaved ice from DisCosmo’s next door and you’re more than good to go – the grapefruit shaved ice tastes literally like you’re biting into an actual piece of fruit.

One of my dreams is to someday have an orchard in my own backyard – grow fresh herbs, tomatoes, and whatever I can put my hands on, and use these ingredients in my family’s daily meals, so I was naturally drawn to produce growing in plastic buckets, bins + all sorts of containers at Rockaway Taco – on the roof, the floor and even hanging from the fence. David Selig, owner of Rockaway Taco and DiCosmo’s, Ñ, a tapas bar in Manhattan, Rice, an Asian fusion spot (which is now closed) mentioned he would love to grow enough fresh produce to use at Rockaway Taco and make it self-sustaining, but weather + other factors don’t help much, so they actually use it to cook a daily meal for the “Rockaway family.”

David and his business partner, Andrew Field (who lived in Mexico for a few years), now own the concession to all the food stands on the boardwalk, and they have decided to create a foodie paradise, partnering with Motorboat & the Big Banana (created by the owners of Vinegar Hill House), La Newyorkina, Thai Rocks, Baby Cakes, among others. So if the beach is not enough to get you out of the city to Rockaway Beach, maybe the fantastic food here will.

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{5} Avocado Paletas

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{4} Tamarind Water

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{2} Hot ‘n Spicy

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Flavors + Colors in the Coast of {Mexico}

Breakfast with fresh “pan dulce” (typical Mexican pastries) straight from the local bakery. Shrimp cocktail while you’re sitting at the beach. A cool, crisp beer at the poolside while overlooking the ocean.  A fresh squeezed juice with quesadillas at the local market. The best mole tamales you’ve ever tasted on New Year’s Eve. This is how life tastes down in the coast of Mexico.

This New Year we went down to Puerto Escondido, a surfing spot in the coast of Oaxaca, Mexico I’ve written about before. Besides enjoying the beach + the water + all the good food I just mentioned, I also paid the market a visit – where the eating continued, of course.

Tourists and locals alike visit the market in search of fresh everything – fruit, vegetables, fish, meat, tortillas, salsas (hot sauces), cheese and chapulines (seasoned and toasted grasshoppers, which taste way better than that sounds).

From the bright painted signs to the vibrant color of the apples, oranges, papayas and all sorts of fruits and vegetables – the market radiates color everywhere you turn, not unlike other markets around the country.

I love stopping by the market to pick up a fresh squeezed juice – only here (and in Mexico in general), you not only get the typical orange, grapefruit and carrot juices, but there’s beet, celery, papaya, mamey, banana, strawberry, kiwi – you name it. You can drink the single-fruit juice, or the interesting mixes like my favorite, jugo verde – made with spinach, celery, parsley, pineapple and orange juice. Besides the juices, there’s the licuados (smoothies), quesadillas, sopes, tortas and all sorts of Mexican “antojitos.” Come by with $50 pesos (less than $5) and be prepared to eat, drink and walk away with a very happy stomach.

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A Little Piece of Mexico in {Homestead}

Just about an hour away from my house in Miami, there’s a market in Homestead where I found a little piece of Mexico. I’d been told I could find all sorts of {chiles}, fresh {tortillas} and other Mexican goods over there, so I was really looking forward to this visit.

When you don’t live in your home country, it is always exciting and comforting to find people, food, a flag, or anything that reminds you or is original from where you come from. To this day, I haven’t met a Mexican who wouldn’t get excited about finding Mexican groceries or good tacos outside Mexico.

The market is very similar to the markets from back home – a wide variety of fruits and vegetables at super low prices (specially compared to regular supermarkets here in Miami), audio and designer knock offs, taco, {ezquites} and other typical food stands, stands selling fresh juices, and junk food like {chicharron}. The Mexican flag and the number of Mexicans there (80% of vendors maybe) add a very special touch to the traditional feel of the place.

I was able to find specialties like dried chiles, {nopales}, dominico bananas, tortillas made on the spot and best of all, epazote plant (very rare here in the States). Not only a bunch, but an actual pot of epazote for $1! That is fresh ezapote for months.

For $1.

Now, the next best thing were the tacos al pastor. Now, if you’re Mexican or you’ve been to Mexico and you’ve looked for these elsewhere, you know decent ones are very very hard to find.

I came up to the {taquero} – the guy who was making the tacos – and I said hello. We immediately started talking about Mexico, where in Mexico we come from, tacos in Miami, and so on. I tell him I haven’t been able to find good tacos in Miami (I accept it, I’m a little snobbish when it comes to eating Mexican food outside Mexico – it’s just so hard to find good authentic food), and he immediately gives me one for free so I can try it.

It was good. It did the trick! I bought a pound of tacos and took them home.

The hour-long drive was worth it. I found decent tacos al pastor in Miami, and that is something very very valuable.

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