Episode 1102: A Tour of Traditions, Rick Bayless "Mexico One Plate at a Time"
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- čas přidán 22. 07. 2024
- Ask anyone about traditional cooking in the Yucatán and you’re bound to hear the name Miriam Peraza, a grandmotherly dynamo who knows every nook and cranny. She brings Rick to the bustling Mercado de Lucas de Galvez in Merida for a quick tour that includes a rare look at the making of recado spice pastes. Flanked by villagers in the remote town of Yaxunah, Miriam and Rick drop in to watch the making of pit-cooked cochinita pibil, the Yucatán’s iconic dish of achiote-smothered, pit-cooked suckling pig. At Manjarblanco restaurant in Merida, Miriam shows us her take on classic panuchos, sopa de lima and queso relleno. Then, Rick brings some of the Yucatán back to Chicago, where he cooks papadzules and shows us how to make cochinita pibil at home - banana leaves and quick-pickled onions included.
Episode Recipes
Papadzules: www.rickbayless.com/recipe/pa...
Cochinita Pibil: www.rickbayless.com/recipe/co...
Official Mexico: One Plate at a Time cookbook: rickbayless.shop/products/mex...
I love Mexican markets. A couple of weeks ago, I was in Ajijic, JAL (my Mexican friends call it GringoLand) and went to the weekly farmers market - WOW, so much fresh fruit & Veg and, of course, low prices. I love Mexico, its food, its people, everything.
Yes, produce is so much cheaper and fresher at the market I go to, and they carry things my supermarket doesn't, like mini tomatillos. Meats and shrimps have great prices, too. But a lot of their pantry items are priced way higher than supermarkets. Like beans and such. Even some of the spices are a better deal buying in bulk, which is what I do.
I’m so thankful for being born and raised in Yucatan, that’s like a country apart from Mexico itself 🥰💖
Goodness gracious that 2nd dish she made the corn tortilla with bean made me wanna lick my phone. GREAT VIDEO!! ❤️
That one looked absolutely fantastic. You know the texture contrasts and flavor choices were spot on
@@chilepeulla 💯
Rick, thx to you I have epasote planted in my garden !!!! Love the traditions video ty.
Señoras de la vieja escuela el mejor sazón de la comida mexicana. 👍👍
Thank you Rick for documenting the authenticity of Mexican cuisine. I learn so much from you. ❤️
I've been watching Rick way back to PBS show but just recently started cooking with these CZcams videos and I realize I'm damn good. Thank you Rick. Cochinita probably one of my top three Mexican dishes.
The advice about how to prep the habanero pepper depending on your heart preference is the perfect hack for my parents who are quite heat adverse. I will definitely make sure to mention it to them! Thanks
Love the music played in the videos. Makes me feel like I'm on vacation. The food all looks so delicious!!!
I cant watch this stuff, lol. I immediately start looking at plane tickets! 😁
Amazing video of Yucatan traditional cooks. Thanks for sharing!
Mexican food is underrated
Mexican food was the 1st recognized in the world as an UNESCO world heritage, 2010, by the U.N. UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) recognized it for its antiquity, history, and identity. Many countries don't meet those characteristics. Another reason it is recognized by UNESCO is due to its milenary ingredients, corn, chile, beans, they've survived the conquest, and are base ingredients used for cooking, so it uses ingredients native to mexico. The recognition is meant to preserve the ingredients and techniques for cooking it. Only few cuisines meet that criteria, later the French, Mediterranean, and Japanese cuisines were recognized. So yes, mexican food has world recognition.
The best cooking series on YT.
Saludos desde los Ángeles california 🇲🇽🇲🇽🇲🇽
Love your videos! I'll be spending more time down in mexico soon. You give great ideas on how to explore the food culture!
My major professor in grad school did most his research in Yucatán. Wish I had been willing to do fieldwork there.
Nice video!
I don't want BayLESS... I want BayMORE! 🤭
Another great video. Thank you!
Hey Rick, you could have added the extra water for the pumpkin seed puree to what was left in the blender. That way you thin it and clean the goodies out of the blender at the same time. ENJOY!
Amazing dishes and also the beautiful vegetables that were at the market!❤
You build it they will come and watch. The audience will build with the right guidance.
Your doing a fine job
Se ve muy rico, ya me inspiro a preparar cochinita aqui en mi casa en Houston, TX
The first part of the panucho, splitting the tortilla and putting the beans inside, that was how they made gorditas in Cd Mante. The pig being cooked in the ground, at first glance I thought they were making something like a zacahuil, kind of like a giant tamale, the size of a pig or so.
Better watch than Rick’s brother, Skip. 😎 And now I’m hungry!
Thank You Chief!
Always a winner….
Beautiful content ngl
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
❤❤❤❤
Can I come over for dinner ?😢 👍✌️☮️
Rick, how would they have made the papazulu sauce before blenders?
Mmmmmm😋😋😋😋😋😋
What is the difference between salsa rojo and salsa roja??
Shouldn't that be salsa rojx now?
Salsa rojo doesn't exist but salsa roja does. That minor difference is all there is to it.
@@mitchyoung93😂 stop
Using tap water and microwaves.
Mexico seems nice why dp so many Mexicans head north?
Mexico might be rich culturally speaking but the work opportunities and the benefits are not as good as the USA
Many reasons, but they often work hard for low pay and things like going to a university are out of reach for a lot of people, partly because loans for tuition, cars, houses are hard to get and too expensive. A lot of people don't have cars, if they have a house or a piece of property, they often build their houses little by little over the years. Many people go to the US, work a few years, go back to Mexico with a car and money to make their house, or were sending money to make their house. There's a lot of unfinished houses down there, too.
In November 2022, a majority of the migrants encountered at the U.S. Mexico border were from countries other than Mexico and the Northern Triangle. Some of the biggest increases in encounters have involved people from Colombia, Cuba, Nicaragua, Peru and Venezuela.
Not enough jobs.
@@goldenstate66 Yes I understand that. Still there has been massive and polity transforming migration from Mexico n the last three decades.
definition of irony? opening ad was for mickey d's. 🤔
What’s the point of roasting the tomatoes if you pull off all the roasted skin? None!
When I go to Mexico I gorge myself in fresh fruit, there are some types of fruit in Mexico we don't even know in the US, I almost feel bad for people in the US, the fruit we get in US markets taste nothing like fruit in Mexico, you wouldn't believe how good and how big the difference is unless you tried it yourself.