Skip to main content

6 "Mexican" Dishes No One Eats in Mexico

Since Spain's conquest of the Aztec Empire in the early 1500s, Mexican cuisine has referred to a fusion of Mesoamerican recipes incorporating indigenous staples like corn, beans, tomatoes, avocados, and chili peppers, with Spanish introductions—livestock, dairy products, and old-world herbs and spices. Los yanquis took what they liked about this fusion and adapted it to their own palate, adding their own ingredients.

The result? More ground beef, yellow cheese, wheat flour, and canned vegetables—ingredients that were seldom used within the borders of Mexico. Here are some of the Americanized Mexican dishes that were lost in translation.

And for more, don't miss these 45+ Best Healthy Copycat Restaurant Recipes to Try Tonight.

1

Nachos

Nachos

Nachos were invented in Piedras Negras, Mexico, in 1943. Does that make them authentically Mexican? Not really. This bar-food staple was offered by a restaurant's maître-d after a group of women—the wives of U.S. soldiers stationed in nearby Fort Duncan—wanted something to eat after discovering that restaurant had already closed for the evening. All he had access to were tortillas (which he cut into triangles and fried), cheese (which he melted over the fried triangles), and pickled jalapeño peppers, which he used as a garnish. The versions you see around the world today are a far cry from this, incorporating ground beef, pulled pork, sour cream, guacamole, and an unseemly amount of yellow cheese.

For a similar but more traditional Mexican dish, try chilaquiles. Generally served at breakfast, they're made with quartered corn tortillas, lightly fried and simmered with salsa, then topped with scrambled or fried eggs. No beef, no cream, and no cheese mean a massive cut in the calorie count, and the addition of eggs provides the fat-burning nutrient choline.

RELATED: Sign up for our newsletter to get daily recipes and food news in your inbox!

2

Fajitas

Fajitas with sour cream on the tortilla

"Fajita" means "little strip." Despite the name, fajitas are practically as American as apple pie. (Incidentally, apple pie had been eaten in Europe for hundreds of years before the Mayflower's arrival, but that's another story.)

Fajitas were first mentioned in print in 1971. They were inspired by the ingredients of Mexico but would have seemed foreign to most people living south of the Rio Grande. The tip-off that the dish isn't muy auténtico is the white flour—not corn—tortillas served alongside the meat and vegetables.

Instead of eating a fajita, try cochinita pibil if you want a meaty Mexican dish. It's a slow-roasted pork entreé that requires marinating the meat in citrus juice, coloring it with annatto seed, and roasting it while it's wrapped in a banana leaf. As with fajitas, cochinita pibil is accompanied by corn tortillas and sides like pickled red onion, refried black beans, and habanero chiles.

RELATED: 51 Incredibly Healthy Mexican Recipes

3

Chili Con Carne

bowl of chili con carne

"Chili with meat" is the translation, and although you might think it's Mexican fare, this stew of ground beef, tomatoes, beans, spices, chili peppers, sour cream, and cheese is 100% fugazi. It was created by Texan settlers. Is chili con carne really so bad? Provided that the beef is lean, grass-fed and that you don't over-garnish it with cheese and cream, no. The version you'll find in restaurants and diners? Yes. Is the dish authentically Mexican? Creo que no.

A more authentically Mexican meaty stew to try as an alternative is rebocado, a slow-cooked stew of pork, chilies, and peppery purslane that is enjoyed with warm tortillas.

RELATED: 11 Secrets Texas Roadhouse Doesn't Want You to Know

4

Burritos

smothered burrito

In the U.S., burritos have gotten out of control, growing to approximately the size of a newborn baby. Generally, they're stretched to a tortilla's limits with rice, vegetables, beans, cheese, sour cream, and, at breakfast time, eggs, sausage, and pretty much anything else you can imagine. The name means "little donkey," and it's generally thought that the gigantic variant we know today was invented in the U.S. by miners, cowboys, or farm workers of Mexican origin.

The burrito we've come to know isn't authentically Mexican, but something similar does exist down Mexico's way. They are called tacos de harina and hail from provinces in the south of the country. Not only are these parcels thinner and smaller than the American version, but they also typically include just two or three ingredients: a meat or seafood base, with perhaps rice, beans, white cheese, or chilies.

RELATED: The Unhealthiest Restaurant Tacos—Ranked

5

Queso

queso with chips

You'll notice that Mexican food is Americanized with a generous application of molten or shredded cheese. But it's not just the amount of cheese that gringos add to "Mexican" food that would cause lovers of authentic Mexican cuisine to say, "¿Qué diablos es eso?" It's also the type. Cheddar cheese comes from the village of Cheddar in Somerset, England. England, you'll recall, is some distance from Chihuahua. The mild yellow cheese loosely derived from cheddar, which is often called "queso," couldn't be more different from the white, nuanced, tangy cheeses of Mexico that offset the heat of the peppers.

There are several kinds of authentic Mexican white cheese, each with its own unique flavor profile. These include queso blanco, queso Oaxaca, queso panela, añejo, chihuahua, and cotija, to name but a few. They range in taste from mild to strong-flavored and aged. Queso blanco, for example, has fewer calories and far less fat and cholesterol than cheddar.

RELATED: We Tasted 5 Queso Dips & This Is the Best

6

Chimichangas

chimichanga

The year was 1922. The place Tucson, Arizona. Monica Flin, the owner of an eatery called El Charro, accidentally dropped a pastry into a deep-fat fryer. That was the birth of the chimichanga—unless you believe Woody Johnson, who said the chimichanga was his brainchild. In 1946, he put some burritos—which you'll recall are not authentically Mexican in the first place—into a deep fryer at his restaurant in Phoenix.

Whichever version you choose, you'll have no doubt noticed that Tucson and Phoenix are on the U.S. side of the border. A healthier, more authentic dish would be fish tacos with roasted tomato salsa.

Did all this talk about Mexican food make you hungry? Try these:

13 Best Side Dishes for Mexican Food

61+ Best Healthy Fish Recipes for Weight Loss

50 Best Easy (and Fast) Dinner Recipes

The post 6 "Mexican" Dishes No One Eats in Mexico appeared first on Eat This Not That.


Eat This Not That

Popular posts from this blog

These 5 Grocery Items Are Cheaper Than Ever Right Now

The grocery industry has been facing major disruptions. The combined effects of the pandemic, climate change, and economic uncertainty over the past couple of years have culminated in a series of supply chain breakdowns. For the consumer, this means supply shortages , shipping delays , and temporary store closures are becoming more commonplace – and all of the added production cost to suppliers is driving up food prices . The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' Consumer Price Index report for January 2022 was released on Feb. 9, and it tells the story of cost trends for every spending category over the past year. Now the numbers are in, and since January 2021, "food at home" spending has increased 7.4%. Consumers should use this number as a benchmark, Phil Lempert, the consumer behavior analyst and founder behind Supermarket Guru , told Eat This, Not That! "Anything that's substantially less [than the 7.4% increase] is a deal," said Lempert. "When you

When Should I Take Creatine?

Creatine is probably the most well-researched supplement on the market today. Numerous studies have found positive adaptations in strength, power and muscle mass thanks to creatine supplementation—especially when it's combined with resistance training. Although the benefits of creatine are well-known to lifters, the best time to take it isn't common knowledge. Which leads us to some important questions:     Does an optimal time for consuming creatine exist?     If it does, should you take it before or after your workout? According to a new study published in the Journal of Exercise and Nutrition, the timing of creatine ingestion does indeed play a role in getting bigger and stronger. Creatine supplementation before resistance training increases muscular strength and lean muscle mass. Interestingly, taking creatine immediately after lifting weights results in greater muscle growth than taking it immediately before. However, in terms of strength gains, no difference betw

Reentry Anxiety Is Real - Why You May Experience It as Stay-at-Home Measures Ease

When the coronavirus stay-at-home orders began in March, most people's lives changed in immeasurable ways. At the time, we were bombarded with (admittedly, very helpful) advice on how to cope with anxiety , should we experience it during this time of social distancing and sheltering in place. But with restrictions slowly starting to ease in many parts of the world, there are many people who have seen an increase in anxiety all over again, this time about leaving their homes and reentering society. Posts about people's growing anxiety have been popping up around social media for the past couple of weeks, and it's given rise to the term "reentry anxiety." We wanted to find out exactly what reentry anxiety is, whether it's normal to be experiencing trepidation about leaving your stay-at-home orders, and how to cope if you are feeling anxious. What Is Reentry Anxiety? The short answer is that "post-lockdown anxiety is real," said Dr. Balu Pitchiah ,