I make no secret of
the fact that I love tacos, or that I insist upon a cookbook being colorful,
easy-to-read, and loaded with mouth-watering pictures. Lorena Garcia's New Taco Classics lives up to, and surpasses, both
of these. Prepare to find yourself running to the kitchen in search of
ingredients only pages into this book, because she makes you want to stop what
you're doing and start making tacos. But this book is so much more than just
tacos. By the time you cook your way through, you will be an ace at preparing
Latin American street food.
Beginning with teaching you how to make the base (or vessel as she more
accurately refers to it) for your taco (or empanadas, telitas, arepa, or
tamale), she then provides you with recipes to make an amazing amount of
fillings based upon what you crave (or what is in your cupboard or available
locally), then the crunchy aspect of the slaw or salad, and finally the salsas.
You will soon be mixing and matching from what she offers here to suit your own
tastes.
There is a staggering amount of recipes for making the base. My experience
has been either flour or corn, but she employs carrot, beets, cilantro, and
black beans in addition to that.
When I make tacos, I tend to stick to my usual, and that is a thin spread of homemade
refried beans. She provides many recipes for spreads here using a wide variety
of beans including black-eyed peas, fava beans, garbanzo beans, and pintos. The
recipes are easy and intensely flavorful due to her carefully chosen selection
of complementary herbs and spices.
Recipes for sauces abound, from savory to sweet, all quick and easy, and all so
delicious that you will be spooning them over everything, if not eating them
directly from the bowl. A cilantro fan, I make her green cilantro sauce in
minutes and find myself labeling it onto almost anything that I can find,
including my taco
meatloaf.
Her chapter on Picos was eye-opening. As she says, “There's so much more to pico than a few chopped tomatoes, onions, and chiles.” I confess to being stuck in that rut most of the time, but have happily expended my repertoire thanks to her, now using corn, mint, peaches, and pineapple, although her toothsome Brazilian Pico de Gallo remains at the top of my list.
Her chapter on Picos was eye-opening. As she says, “There's so much more to pico than a few chopped tomatoes, onions, and chiles.” I confess to being stuck in that rut most of the time, but have happily expended my repertoire thanks to her, now using corn, mint, peaches, and pineapple, although her toothsome Brazilian Pico de Gallo remains at the top of my list.
If you want to take a walk on the wild side, trying replacing your usual salsa
with pickled vegetables. The section on how to make these will have your mouth
watering, and make just change your taco making forever. The cilantro (you can
substitute parsley) lime pickled onions are heavenly!
The wide variety of fillings will shock you. She employs the use of everything from simple pulled pork or beef to beef tenderloin, sausage and peppers, and fried chicken.
The chapter on creams and the one on sides is worth the price of the book alone. Making my own, fresh creams, was very appealing and, as one who is often stumped for ideas for sides, this section proved invaluable. Consider Grilled Avocado Salad, Peruvian Corn Gratin (with Parmesan, mascarpone, spinach, and hearts of palm -- Heaven!), grilled cauliflower, herbs rice, and the amazingly easy seasoned lemons and limes that truly add so much flavor. I no longer eat avocados without squeezing them with the juice from a seasoned lime.
I cannot recommend this book enough, for taco or Latin food lovers, yes, but also for people who are interested in expanding their daily cooking into something a bit more flavorful. Anyone can make these easy recipes, and you will certainly be glad that you did.
The wide variety of fillings will shock you. She employs the use of everything from simple pulled pork or beef to beef tenderloin, sausage and peppers, and fried chicken.
The chapter on creams and the one on sides is worth the price of the book alone. Making my own, fresh creams, was very appealing and, as one who is often stumped for ideas for sides, this section proved invaluable. Consider Grilled Avocado Salad, Peruvian Corn Gratin (with Parmesan, mascarpone, spinach, and hearts of palm -- Heaven!), grilled cauliflower, herbs rice, and the amazingly easy seasoned lemons and limes that truly add so much flavor. I no longer eat avocados without squeezing them with the juice from a seasoned lime.
I cannot recommend this book enough, for taco or Latin food lovers, yes, but also for people who are interested in expanding their daily cooking into something a bit more flavorful. Anyone can make these easy recipes, and you will certainly be glad that you did.
Disclaimer: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the
publisher in exchange for an honest review.
Sounds like my kinda cookbook Pattie. Your review is an enormous help. Thanks! I''l be pinning...
ReplyDelete