Category Archives: Homesteading

Tamales

Did you know that the Maya didn’t make tortillas before 900 CE? The reason archeologists believe the tortilla is a more recent addition to their diet is that no comal has ever been recovered at any excavated sites of periods before 900 CE. So what did the Maya eat? TAMALES!

tamal hieroglyph

Tameles were foodstuff in the Aztec and Maya civilizations as far back as 7000 BC. The Maya even had a hieroglyph for tamales. Since a tamal is individually wrapped, it was the perfect portable food. They were often carried by warriors, hunters and travelers as a sort of meal on the go. Tamales could be reheated over the fire or eaten cold.

A tamal (notice there is not final “e” at the end of the word in singular) is made of masa (corn dough) steamed in a corn husk or banana leaf. The wrapping is not eaten, but we always save our wrappings for the goats. It can be filled with pretty much anything, meat, cheese, fruit, vegetables, chili etc.

 

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The Aztec had their favorite fillings. Tamales were often filled with turkey, flamingo, frog, axolotl (salamander), pocket gopher, rabbit, fish, turkey eggs, honey, fruit, squash or beans. Festival tamales were a cut above the rest. Tamales wrapped with amaranth leaves stuffed with greens and served with shrimp sauce were made for the Lord of Fire Xiuhtecuhtli. Tamales filled with beans and chilies were made in honor of the god “Smoking Mirror” Tezcatlipoca. The “Old God” Huehueteotl was honored with shrimp and chili tamales.

Tamales at festivals were passed around in baskets and always held in the left hand. Bad luck would come if you eat a tamal that had stuck to a cooking pot. Aztec women were forbidden to eat these tamales. A pregnant woman who ate a stuck tamal might have pregnancy complications, the child would cling to her womb just like the tamal clung to the side of the pot.

tamales codex

The Maya often had tamales filled with toasted squash seeds, squash flowers, beans, iguana, turkey, deer, and fish. The heart of the deer was used to make tamales for special festivals. They also had unique, elaborate tamales, rolled together and filled together like a jelly-roll, displaying spiral designs when cut. Often the tamales were wrapped in chaya instead of banana leaves or corn husks.

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Traditionally, food preparation was the domain of women. The ties began at birth when the umbilical cords of infant girls were buried under the grinding stone, symbolizing their future occupation. Girls learned at the knees of their mothers from a very young age so that by the age of 13, girls were responsible for grinding maize and food preparation. (See Codex Mendoza)

Women, young and old, participated in the extended tamal preparation in what was called a tamalada.

tamalada

La Tamalada by Carmen Lomas Garza

In Historia general de las cosas de la Nueva España, Bernardino de Sahagún described what he observed in a tamalada in preparation for a festivity.

“Among the ashes was the labor of the old women. They made tamales using dried grains of maize; …they made tamales of meat. Some cooked tamales in an olla. Some washed the maize grains which had been cooked in lime. Some carried and drew water, or poured it. Some broke up, ground, and pulverized cacao beans. Some mixed cooked maize with chocolate. Some cooked stews, or roasted chiles—different kinds of chiles. All night they remained there. Vigil was kept. They kept watch. There was constant awaiting of the light. They sat holding vigil and chattering.”

So how does one make tamales?

The beginning steps to preparing the masa are identical to making tortillas. (See Tortillas)

First, the dried corn is removed from the cob.

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Removing the corn from the cob.

The corn is then sifted to remove stones and dirt, then poured high so that the wind takes any chaff left over. Next corn is then boiled until soft with lime and the husks removed.

This is called nixtamalization.

The softened and peeled corn is then milled. Many tortillerias offer this service as hand grinding with a metate takes much longer. The resulting doughy mix is called masa.

Add melted manteca (lard) or vegetable oil to the masa and mix it until the dough is pasty.

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Corn husks can be bought already dried and flattened.

In addition to the masa (dough), the wrappings need to be prepared. If you are using dried corn husks, soak them in hot water until they are pliable. This could take up to 30 minutes. Drain and then pat dry.

Prepare your filling. For El Dia de Candalaria, we made pork tamales with chile.

In order to form the tamal, take a softened corn husk and spread the masa into a flat rectangle shape. Add the filling in the middle. Roll the husk and fold up it up at the end. Set the tamal upright in a steamer pot with 1 to 2 inches of water in the bottom. Cover and steam on medium-low heat until the dough pulls away from the corn husk. Enjoy!

Only one person should meter mano (put his/her hand in) to load the tamales into the pot, otherwise, the tamales will spoil, or so is the common belief.

The zacahuil tamal, a specialty still made by the Huastecan people, is 3 feet long, weighs about 150 pounds and uses most of the leaves of a banana tree to wrap. It is baked in an oven or in the ground rather than steamed.

As with any other integral part of life, there are several expressions using tamal/tamales found in Mexican Spanish.

The idea of infidelity comes into play again with the expression “Hacer de chivo los tamales” which literally means making tamales out of goat but means you are about to be betrayed by or betray your romantic partner.

Another is “El que obra mal, se le pudre el tamal“, literally, he that works poorly, causes the tamal to go bad. In other words, what comes around, goes around.

Or how about this one–“Para todo mal, un tamal. Para todo bien, tambien.” For everything bad, console yourself with a tamal. For everything good, celebrate with a tamal. With the variety of tamales available, there’s a flavor for every occasion. I’ve also heard this expression with mezcal replacing tamal. That will work too!

And one more–“El que nace pa’ tamal, del cielo le caen las hojas” He that was born to make tamales, the leaves fall from the sky. Once you’ve found your destiny, everything falls into place.

Bet you didn’t know the tamal was so profound, did you?

The Write Tribe Festival of Words #5

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Tortillas

The creation story of the Maya recorded in the Popol Vuh explains how the gods created man in a sort of trial and error kind of creation. The first attempt consisted of mud men which resulted in mindless creatures with no strength that were easily dissolved in water. So then the gods tried wood men. This type of being was stronger but lacked that infinitesimal spark the gods were looking for. After much discussion, the gods crafted humans from a mixture of yellow and white corn. Finally, this was a being with strength, intelligence and agility. Thus the race of humans was born.

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Being people of the corn, maize has a sacred place in Mexican culture. Maize was domesticated about 10,000 years ago in the Balsas River Valley in south-central Mexico. Mexico is home to more than 2,000 identified varieties of native corn and has the oldest varieties found in any place in the world.

Is it any surprise that the corn tortilla remains an essential part of the Mexican diet?

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The name tortilla comes from the word tlaxcalli in Náhuatl which comes from the longer word tlaxcalli tlán. The place nameTlaxcala means “the place of the tortilla” maybe giving some insight on where the tortilla was first developed. In Maya, tortillas are called waaj. In Totonaco, chaw. In Mixteco, ndíta. In Zapoteco, eta or gueta. In Otomi, hme. In Rarámuri, remeke.

Although there are now tortillerias (places that manufacture tortillas) where tortillas are machine pressed, it’s still possible to find delicious hand-pressed tortillas in a variety of colors wherever you are in Mexico. (See Tortilleria)

Making tortillas by hand is a very time-consuming process.

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Removing kernels

First, the dried corn is removed from the cob. It is possible to buy bags of corn and skip this step, though.

The corn is then sifted to remove stones and dirt, then poured high so that the wind takes any chaff left over.

Next corn is then boiled until soft with lime and the husks removed.

This is called nixtamalization. This process increases nutritional value, flavor and aroma of the while reducing mycotoxins when compared to unprocessed grain.

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The softened and peeled corn is then milled. Many tortillerias offer this service as hand grinding with a metate takes much longer .

The resulting doughy mix is called masa. Masa can be used for a variety of other delightful culinary treats which I’ll talk about in another post. (See Tamales)

tortillas

For tortillas, the dough is formed into small balls and then pressed flat. The now flattened result is transferred to the comal (heated flat pan) and toasted on one side, then flipped to be toasted briefly on the other. The finished product is removed and stacked.

There is a cara (face) to the tortilla which should be eaten that side up. I have yet to mastered being able to determine which side is the cara, but my son and husband have no problem, often flipping the tortilla before eating so that it is right side up. In the event that your taco is put together wrong, you might hear “le ponen los cuernos” (literally to put on the horns). This refers to the belief that in the event of an upside down taco, the preparer will be betrayed by his or her romantic partner. Hmm, maybe I’d better try a little harder to get that taco right side up.

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Tortillas come in a variety of colors mostly based on the type of corn used for the masa. When we went to the Monarch Butterfly Reserve, our delicious quesadillas were made from blue corn. I’ve also seen where tortillas can be made from cactus but haven’t had the pleasure of a taste of those yet.

The Write Tribe Festival of Words #5

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Failing at your own business–Seamstress

sew she did

So with my new acquisition of a singer treadle sewing machine (See Dirty and Ragged?), I was all impatient to get started. Unfortunately, my schedule didn’t allow me a chance to get right on it and my machine languished a week without me touching it. Finally, vacation started and I jumped right in with both feet. I was going to make millions with my new machine. Well, I wasn’t really aiming for millions, just enough to pay for the thing, it was rather a luxury item after all.

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Loading the bobbin!

So I sat down and determined to figure out how to use it. I spent 40 minutes trying to thread the needle. Then another 2 hours trying to figure out how to load the bobbin. I had to give it a rest after that. When my husband came home from work, I begged him to look at the machine since I was near tears. What could I be doing wrong? He said that his grandmother Sofia always put the foot down before fishing for the bobbin string. He did that and VOILA! It was ready to sew. DUH!

Well, I had enough for that day, but I was up and at’em early the next morning. I found that morning was not the time to sew. I had strategically placed my machine in the back room, giving me plenty of light and room to work. However, it’s an east facing room and entirely too bright for morning sewing. Sigh. Oh well, I had to wait until the afternoon and did the less exciting chores in the morning.

Finally, after lunch, I cleared my schedule to begin. My goal was to make a few pillows out of scraps I had been collecting from our old clothes. Pillows seemed an easy project, I’ve had some experience with making and selling those at Ye Olde Crappe Shoppe.

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My make-shift bandages

So I pinked and pinked and pinked until I had blisters on my fingers. After a few hours work, though, I had a nice pile of usable rectangles. I realized I may have gone a little overboard when my husband starting hiding his pants from me afraid I’d cut them to bits. Time for the next step.

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Piles and piles of pinked fabric

I picked a flower patterned group and a contrasting solid beige color for my first pillow and sat down at my machine, raring to go.

It was like I’d never sewn before. I bent the needle, didn’t pin appropriately and had the fabric move, had to rethread 40 million times, sewed the wrong sides together, had the thread bunch up, had to rip out the seams and start again, and tore the fabric piece. Maybe it was time to rethink my plan for world domination through sewing.

I did finally get the hang of it and produced a pillow. That was enough for that day!

Over the 2 week vacation period, I spent nearly every afternoon in the back room, cutting and pinning and stitching. My son said that he’d heard me cackling with glee on several occasions. My husband started complaining about the big mess I was making (that’s what he calls all my projects). It was amazing!  I could go as long as the light or my legs held out. By the end of the week, I had oodles of completed pillow cases ready to be stuffed.

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Some of my scrap pillows!

Only, I didn’t have any stuffing. As the whole point was to earn money without spending any more, the pillow cases were lovingly folded in my great Aunt Tootie’s hope chest (the one she bought when she married the tugboat captain from Virginia that I brought all the way to Mexico with me). And I moved on to other projects.

I hemmed my work pants and jeans. This is an essential part of my wardrobe because, although most Mexican women are 2-3 inches shorter than me, all Mexican made women’s pants are 5-6 inches too long for me. So I hem. That saved me about $500 pesos. Then I made a bed skirt, curtains and blanket for my son’s room remodel. That saved me some money too. I went further and made new covers for our pillows and restuffed them, adding a pinch of lavender for freshness. It was like having new pillows and saved me $100 pesos per pillow.

Well, I suppose that saving money and making money are essentially the same thing. All in all, my treadle sewing machine was a good investment after all.

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