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Mexican Christmas Traditions

MexMonday: What I'm reading

3 · Dec 5, 2011 · 1 Comment

While I catch up from being away for a long weekend in Acapulco, I'm sharing my reading list with you of things I've enjoyed reading over the last few weeks.

English:

  • Mariachi music recognized as a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Patrimony, via SpanglishBaby
  • Tlaxcala: an Old-World escape near Mexico City, by Freda Moon via The New York Times
  • Indigenous fashion inspires Mexican runways, via Viva Colorado
  • Cranberry margarita recipe, via SweetLifeBake

Español:

  • Las mejores cocinas de México; La revista Travel+Leisure México reconoce con los "Gourmet Awards" a lo mejor de la gastronomía nacional, via CNNExpansión
  • INAH busca tumba real en Teotihuacan, via El Universal
  • Lesley Tellez de Eat México en el show de Chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita, "Código Cocina Mexicana," via Código DF radio cultural en linea

Know of other recent good reads floating around the internet about Mexican cuisine, culture or travel destinations? Please feel free to share them in the comments below.

México en tus sentidos

3 · Dec 2, 2011 · 4 Comments

While I'm away this weekend traveling in Mexico, here's a cool tourism video that I wanted to share. One of our cousins from Mexico shared it with me on Facebook this past week and I've got to say, it's definitely worth watching the whole eight minutes. If it doesn't tug at your heartstrings, put a tear in your eye, have you glued to the screen, make you want to visit Mexico ahora ...you might not have a soul. Just kidding. But really, if nothing in this video moves you or gets you excited, you probably don't love Mexico very much or don't know enough about it to know what you're missing! 😛

Happy virtual travels! We'll be back to the grind on Monday.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUTXIkvzXuM[/youtube]

  • Leave a comment to let me know: What's your favorite part? I love the voladores de Papantla (at about the 4-minute mark) and the Ángel de la Independencia (around the 5-minute mark).

Wordless Wednesday: Nochebuenas by the fireplace

5 · Nov 30, 2011 · 1 Comment

I spotted my first nochebuenas of the season last weekend and couldn't resist buying some to decorate by my fireplace!

Learn more about poinsettias and how they came from Mexico in my post from last year.

  • If you love nochebuenas, take a photo of yours and post it to The Other Side of The Tortilla's Facebook fan page and check out our photo album of nochebuenas from last year! We hope to add to it with more photos and more varieties.

10 things to love about Mexico City's Museo Dolores Olmedo

7 · Nov 29, 2011 · 9 Comments

The tiles on the wall at the Museo Dolores Olmedo read: "By the example of my mother, professor Maria Patiño Suarez, widow of Olmedo, who always told me: 'Share all you have with those around you.' I leave this house with all my collections of art, the product of my life's work, so the people of Mexico can enjoy it." —Dolores Olmedo Patiño

Last year on a visit to Mexico City during the holidays, I spent a special day with friends exploring a few places I had never been before. Thanks to the abundance of cultural activities the city has to offer, there's always something new to discover. I was thrilled to hear that the Museo Dolores Olmedo was on the itinerary they planned since I'm a big Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera fan.

Dolores Olmedo Patiño, also known to many as Doña Lola, was an aggressive collector and patron of the arts and is still revered today as one of the biggest individual benefactors and promoters of Mexican art and culture. At age 17, she met Diego Rivera by chance in an elevator at the Ministry of Public Education when he was still working on the murals there (that can still be seen today), and he ended up asking her to model for him. According to the museum, she modeled in nearly 30 nude sketches and then was the subject of other later paintings by Rivera. After separating from her husband, British journalist Howard Phillips (whom she married in 1935), the well-to-do single Olmedo made a career as a partner in a construction materials firm in the late 1940s. In the mid-1950s, she reconnected with Rivera and eventually became his benefactor, caretaker and eventually, executor of his estate and that of Frida Kahlo.

In the early 1960s Olmedo acquired Hacienda La Noria, a 16th-century Spanish colonial hacienda located in Xochimilco (a neighborhood in the south of Mexico City). At the time she acquired the property, it was a shell of its original state and so she set out on a mission to restore and preserve the hacienda. In the late 1980s, Olmedo announced plans to convert her hacienda into a museum, which opened in September 1994. Olmedo passed away in 2002 but her legacy still lives on in this charming museum she left behind for all to admire just as intended.

Here are my top ten reasons to visit the Museo Dolores Olmedo
the next time you're in Mexico City...

Read More

Visiting the ex hacienda de Apanquetzalco in Yautepec

8 · Nov 28, 2011 · 7 Comments

In October, I traveled to Mexico for a cousin's wedding. It wasn't your typical church wedding followed by a reception at a banquet hall. Instead, it was held at a beautiful ex hacienda in the town of Yautepec, located in the state of Morelos. Not far from Cuernavaca, Yautepec is a short trip (about an hour and a half drive) from Mexico City. If you go, I recommend a stay at the very hospitable Villa Iyautli, where our family often stays. This area is incredibly rich with history and I was thrilled to visit and learn all about it.

THE HISTORY OF THE AREA AND EX HACIENDA APANQUETZALCO...

Read More

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Hi, I'm Maura Hernández, an award-winning food and travel writer, recipe developer, and former journalist sharing my passion for all things Mexico. I've traveled Mexico extensively over the last 18 years and Mexico City is my home away from home. Here, you'll find a mix of traditional and modern Mexican cooking, along with my advice on where to eat, stay and play on your visit to Mexico!

More about me

Paletas

  • Berries and cream popsicles are a mixed-berry spin on the traditional Mexican fresas con crema dessert. Recipe via theothersideofthetortilla.com
    Moras con Crema Popsicles
  • How to make strawberry hibiscus popsicles via theothersideofthetortilla.com
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  • How to make banana, chia and coconut milk popsicles. This recipe is dairy-free and vegan-friendly! Via theothersideofthetortilla.com
    Banana chia popsicles
  • Mango cantaloupe and chile powder paletas from The Other Side of The Tortilla
    Mango cantaloupe paletas with chile powder
  • #Vegan fudge #popsicles made with avocado, raw cacao powder, coconut sugar and coconut milk. Get more #recipes from theothersideofthetortilla.com #paletas #receta #recipe
    Vegan avocado fudge pops

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