Can foreigners handle the heat? Mexicans divided on milder food for tourists
ByJames Wagner
JULY 7, 2024
Mexico City: Gerardo Medina runs the Taqueria Los Amigos, a 24-hour stand at a busy intersection in an upscale neighbourhood in Mexico City.
With more customers from abroad eating his tacos, he began noticing similar reactions to his pico de gallo: red faces, sweat, complaints about the spiciness.
Medina, 30, got rid of the serrano peppers, leaving just tomatoes, onions and cilantro. While he still offers an avocado salsa with serrano and a red salsa with morita chiles and chiles de arbol, he wanted to provide a non-spicy option for international visitors unaccustomed to intense heat.
It attracts more people, he said.
Chillis are fundamental to Mexican cuisine and, in turn, the countrys identity. Mexicans put them, often in the form of salsas, on everything: tacos, seafood, chips, fruit, beer and even sorbet.
Food that isnt spicy practically isnt good food for the majority of Mexicans, Isaac Palacios, 37, who lives in Mexico City, said after consuming tacos smothered in salsa.
More:
https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-america/can-foreigners-handle-the-heat-mexico-city-ponders-milder-salsas-20240707-p5jrnz.html