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Food historians tell us Tex-Mex cuisine originated hundreds of years ago when Spanish/Mexican recipes combined with Anglo fare. TexMex, as we Americans know it today, is a twentieth century phenomenon. Dictionaries and food history sources confirm the first print evidence of the term "Tex Mex" occured in the 1940s. Linguists remind us words are often used for several years before they appear in print. TexMex restaurants first surfaced ouside the southwest region in cities with large Mexican populations. The gourmet Tex Mex "fad" began in the 1970s. Diana Kennedy, noted Mexican culinary expert, is credited for elevating this common food to trendy fare. These foods appealed to the younger generation.
What is Tex- Mex? Tex-Mex food might be described as native foreign food, contradictory through that term may seem, It is native, for it does not exist elsewhere; it was born on this soil. But it is foreign in that its inspiration came from an alien cuisine; that it has never merged into the mainstream of American cooking and remains alive almost solely in the region where it originated.Eating in America, Waverly Root & Richard de Rochemont (William Morrow:New York) 1976 (p. 281)
1940... Tex-Mex. A combination of the words "Texan" and "Mexican," first printed in 1945, that refers to an adaptation of Mexican dishes by Texas cooks. It is difficult to be precise as to what distinguishes Tex-Mex from true Mexican food, except to say that the variety of the latter is wider and more regional, whereas throughout the state and, now, throughout the entire United States.Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999 (p. 325)
1950... Mexican restaurants, whos popularity coincided with the arrival of large numbers of Mexican immigrants after 1950, have for the most part followed the from and style of what is called "Tex-Mex" food, and amalgam of Northern Mexican peasant food with Texas farm and cowboy fare. Chili, which some condsider Texas's state dish, was unknown in Mexico and derived from the ample use of beef in Texan cooking. "Refried beans" are a mistranslation of the Mexican dish frijoles refritos, which actually means well-fried beans...The combination platter of enchiladas, tacos, and tortillas became the unvarying standards of the Tex-Mex menu, while new dishes like chimichangas (supposedly invented in the the 1950s at El Charro restaurant in Tucson, Arizona) and nachos (supposedly first served at a consession at Dallas's State Fair of Texas in 1964...) were concocted to please the American palate....One Tex-Mex item that may someday rival the pizza as an extraordinarily successful ethnic dish is the fajita...introduced at Ninfa's in Houston on July 13, 1973, as tacos al carbon. No one knows when or where it acquired the name fajita, which means girdle' or'strip' in Spanish and refers to the skirt steak originally used in the preparation...Only in the last decade has refined, regional Mexican food taken a foot-hold in American cities, reflecting not only the tenets of Tex-Mex cookery by the cuisines of Mexico City, the Yucatan, and other regions with long standing culinary traditions.America Eats Out, John Mariani [William Morrow:New York] 1991 (p. 80-1)
1970... In the good old days, Texans went to "Mexican restaurants" and ate "Mexican food." Then in 1972, The Cuisines of Mexico, an influential cookbook by food authority Diana Kennedy, drew the line between authentic interior Mexican food and the "mixed plates" we ate at "so-called Mexican restaurants" in the United States. Kennedy and her friends in the food community began referring to Americanized Mexican food as "Tex-Mex," a term previously used to describe anything that was half-Texan and half-Mexican. Texas-Mexican restaurant owners considered it an insult. By a strange twist of fate, the insult launched a success. For the rest of the world, "Tex-Mex" had an exciting ring. It evoked images of cantinas, cowboys and the Wild West. Dozens of Tex-Mex restaurants sprang up in Paris, and the trend spread across Europe and on to Bangkok, Buenos Aires and Abu Dhabi. Tortilla chips, margaritas and chili con carne are now well-known around the world. Houston Post, 6 part series, all online.
By http://www.foodtimeline.org/foodmexican.html
Taco Salad
Copyright 2011 Christine's Pantry. All rights reserved.
Ingredients:
1 pound ground beef
1 small onion, chopped
1 (14.5 oz) can diced tomatoes with green chilies
1 (8 oz) can tomato sauce
1 package taco seasoning mix
salt and pepper, to taste
light ranch dressing
cheddar cheese
cole slaw
tortilla chips, use as much as you like
Directions:
In skillet, over medium heat, add ground beef, breaking meat up as it cooks, cook until no longer pink. Add onions, diced tomatoes with green chilies, tomato sauce and taco seasoning mix. Stir well. Reduce heat, simmer for 10 minutes. Place tortilla chips on dinner plate, then add meat mixture, cheese, cole slaw, add additional cheese and drizzle light ranch dressing. Enjoy!
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Cole slaw...what an interesting addition. I love cole slaw on my chili cheese hot dogs, so I bet it's good. Always enjoy the facts you include!
ReplyDeleteYUM,,,,I love taco's good idea use green chilli for taco too
ReplyDeleteRidwan
Wow that was a really good breakdown Christine. Thank you for this recipe too, I love taco salad.
ReplyDeleteThis does look tasty. The cole slaw is a much better ingredient than lettuce. It is so much sturdier than leaf lettuce-I do not know why I did not think of it! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI've never put ranch dressing on a taco salad but I think next time I'll try it. That sounds good!
ReplyDeleteThe taco salad looks great, and I rally enjoyed reading the origins of Tex-Mex cuisine. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteTaco salad is my favorite, this looks delicious! :)
ReplyDeleteLovely taco, nice with all the toppings.
ReplyDeleteThis salad is new to me, nice combo thought!
ReplyDeleteI love the trivia on this one Christine. Cool reading how the Tex Mex food culture evolved.
ReplyDeleteNot to mention, I love taco salad!!! :-D
Great idea to use cole slaw! We have tacos once a week, but I haven't tried cole slaw!
ReplyDeleteThis taco salad looks so good. What a great recipe!
ReplyDeletei know the taco salad but still love the history you are attaching to your dishes:)
ReplyDeleteGreat taco salad...love the history behind it, and the recipe, as well!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing:DDD
I love taco salad! Yours looks really good and has all the good stuff! :)
ReplyDeleteI think I friended you on Facebook or maybe sent a request. If you don't get it, let me know and I'll try again.
ReplyDeleteI'm tech savvy but I still struggle with Facebook sometimes.
Hi Life 101,
ReplyDeleteI got your friend request on Facebook... thanks.
Thank you to all for all the kind comments... love them all.
ReplyDeleteLooks fantastic Christine! Hope you have a great week.
ReplyDeleteI haveto try your taco salad...simmy
ReplyDeleteGreat idea using coleslaw as a crunch and flavor ingredient...
ReplyDeleteI recently had taco salad and absolutely loved it. Your recipe looks great. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteInteresting info about Tex Mex - I've heard of the term but didn't quite know the history about it. I've never made taco salad at home before. Sounds delicous and I've got inspired!
ReplyDeleteWhat a tasty treat! This would be great for game day!
ReplyDeletelove the taco salad with no beans and the Tex Mex history;)
ReplyDeleteI have tried putting taco chips into salad, it is nice and crispy. Thanks for this post, I now have a better understanding of Tex-Max food!
ReplyDeleteChristine, this is a very nice touch of taco version. Bookmarked it for later use. I bet my kids will love it. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteHope you're having a great week ahead, dear.
Blessings, Kristy
I haven't eaten taco salad in years, but your delicious rendition has put me fully in the mood! YUM!
ReplyDeleteAnother brilliant post. Food history is truly fascinating (and your recipe looks wonderful)!
ReplyDeleteLove the history lesson on tex-Mex :) and a great taco salad too!
ReplyDeleteYour comments mean a lot to me. I love reading all the comments and emails. Makes my day.
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious Christine! And awesome post, I really didn't know much about Tex-Mex. Now I could probably give a speech :)
ReplyDeleteTaco salad is so good. There's always tons of flavor even if you make it vegetarian with just beans. Great recipe!
ReplyDeletesounds delish, be right over......thanks, nice post andi
ReplyDeletelovely looking salad
ReplyDeleteNobody in my family likes taco salad except for me. So I always make tacos with enough extra that I get to eat taco salad for lunch the next day with the leftovers. I love it every time!
ReplyDeleteLooks like the perfect dish for the upcoming weekend!
ReplyDeleteThank you.Taco salad is a favorite for me.It is tasty and haelthy food at the same time.
ReplyDeletehi christine, tex-mex is interesting- there's a kennedy there.
ReplyDeleteyour taco salad looks deliciously flavored with varieties of condiments, seasonings an chili. bookmarked with thanks..
YUM!!! I love taco salads.. one of my favorites.
ReplyDeleteWow, I have never seen ranch dressing in a Tex Mex dish. Is that traditional, or your innovation?
ReplyDeleteHi Trix,
ReplyDeleteThat's my innovation. It sure was good.
Love taco salad - thanks for the reminder!
ReplyDeleteYummy salad ...you have a nice space too!!Thanx for dropping by my space..
ReplyDeletemm delicious and EASY!
ReplyDelete