“We love tacos so much, that anything yum ends up in a taco,” says Pati Jinich. The Mexican chef and TV host is talking about both Mexico’s love of stuffing tortillas and her own family’s appetite for doing the same.
“We taco everything. Everything!”
And indeed, the world has embraced the taco because there is a taco for everyone – including those who can’t decide. Whether you’re a meat-lover or vegan, whether you embrace the homemade soft, floury tortilla or love to stuff your filling into a hard corn shell, there’s a taco for you.
Start with the tortilla
“We have family taco night every week - and you can't have tacos without tortillas! I want to show you how easy it is to make your own,” says Jinich, of her (which also includes instructions on how to store them; they’ll keep for up to three days, or can be frozen for several months).And if the first few don’t turn out quite as you expect, take heart from Peter Kuruvita’s encouragement: “Tortillas, although incredibly simple to make, do take practice. Persistence is a part of any skill, and absolutely essential to cooking – keep going, even if you fail at your first few. You’ll get there,” he says (get his recipe ).
Pati's corn tortillas Source: Pati's Mexican Table
Jinich’s and Kuruvita’s recipes use masa harina, a type of corn flour. If you’re a fan of flour tortillas, try .
Al pastor, the classic street food
Tacos al pastor are one of the best known and most loved Mexican street foods. Marinated pork is stacked and cooked on vertical rotisseries, but you don’t need one of those to create a delicious home-style version. Try the combo of juicy pork and pan-fried pineapple in (add cheese to turn them into gringas); in , which has a fresh and zingy pineapple salsa; or (below), where the pieces of marinated pork are seared in a smoking-hot pan to replicate the appeal of the classic spit-cooked street food.
Tacos al pastor Source: Angie Mosier/Andrews McMeel Publishing
The hearty beef option
“There is no need or mood a taco can’t tackle. And if you want to feed your family a generous and satiating weeknight meal, make them bricklayer tacos,” says Jinich. Beef, bacon and tomato come together in simple but filling tortillas.
Bricklayer tacos (tacos al albañil) Source: Pati Jinich
The taco for those who can’t decide
“You have soft meat and crunchy meat and chiccerones, it is absolutely delicious!” Jinich says of , one of the taco recipes she makes in the latest season of Pati’s Mexican Table, where her travels in Mexico include a visit to the town of Los Mochis. It is heaven for taco lovers: ”Tacos, tacos, tacos. Chunky, crispy, fried, adovada, greasy, steamed. you crave it, they've got it,” she says.
The campechano is one example of a tacos combinados, a taco that combines multiple types of meat. “And it's very common for somebody [in Mexico] to go to a street stand and to say, 'give me a little bit of cuerito (the chewy part of the meat), give me a little bit of maciza (luscious meat), give me a little of the fat…” she explains.
Her version combines tender beef, spicy crisp sausage and crunchy pork crackling. And it comes with salsa for those who can’t decide too: “When you go to a taqueria, they give you different kinds of salsas. They give you the green salsa, the red salsa, the pico de gallo, but then because we love salsa so much, people started mixing them and asking for a mix. So now taquerias and stands have their salsa callejera, or salsa taquera, which is their house combination,” Jinich says (get her recipe for salsa callejera .)
Campechano tacos with street-style salsa Source: Pati's Mexican Table
Give it the bird
Putting an Australian spin on the Mexican classic, puts the barbecue to very good use: barbecue chipotle chicken and lime and black bean salsa are served up with soft, homemade flour tortillas (these use butter and a little baking powder).
Soft flour tortilla with bbq chipotle chicken Source: Petrina Tinslay
Seafood stars
These have everything: crisp, golden beer-battered fish fillets tucked into homemade flour tortillas and topped with onion, cabbage, sour cream and hot sauce. Equally tempting are these .More seafood options: Try , or .
Spiced fish tacos with chipotle sauce Source: Smith Street Books
Vegetarian tacos
You don’t need meat to make a five-star taco. Fire up your breakfast with a Mexican-inspired ; give tofu a star turn in ; or make beans the biz in .
Chipotle black bean tacos with jalapeño slaw Source: Benito Martin
And even chocolate
Take the idea of a taco and turn it into fun chocolate dessert: a .