It's Not Easy Being Green - Avocados from Mexico

Growing up Cuban meant we didn't eat many salads. And by "many," I mean, "none."

For the most part, the only time green things appeared on our plates were the tiny, diced pieces of bell pepper in our sofrito. (For the uninformed, sofrito is at the beginning of most Cuban dishes. Sauteed onion, garlic, and green bell pepper form the basis of the magic that is Cuban food, but that's not important right now.)

We add asparagus to our Arroz con Pollo and I think that pretty much ends our venture into "green" territory.

The exception being that on special occasions, we were treated to An Avocado Salad. *insert heavenly choir here*

Having grown up here in California makes me partial to the beautiful dark-skinned Avocados from Mexico (as opposed to the big, fat, smooth ones from South Florida). Don't judge me. I also make a pretty mean guacamole.

Today, Mexico is the only place in the world where avocado trees naturally bloom four times a year. Which means that we get avocados here pretty much year-round. (Thank you, God.)

But every now and then I want my Avocados from Mexico to taste, well, Cuban. And this is my go-to salad. Don't you love it when I share?

Buen Provecho!

Avocado salad copy

CUBAN-STYLE AVOCADO SALAD

  • 2 ripe avocados, sliced
  • 1/2 large sweet red onion, sliced into rings
  • Sea salt
  • Fresh cilantro, chopped

Dressing:

  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • Juice of 3 limes (about 1/4 cup)
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced
  • 1/2 packet of Sazón Goya Complete
  • Salt & pepper to taste

1) Blanch the bell pepper by putting in a small bowl and microwaving on high for about 40 seconds. Let cool.

2) For the dressing, whisk together the olive oil, lime juice, Sazón Goya Complete and the cooled red bell pepper.

Dressing for avocado salad copy

3) Arrange red onions on a plate, top with sliced avocados.

4) Salt the avocados.

Salted avocados copy

5) Pour dressing over everything.

6) Top with fresh cilantro.

Cilantro on avocado salad copy

It totally feels like a special occasion, doesn't it?

Find many more avocado recipes (including mine!) on the Avocados from Mexico site.

Avocados3

{Disclaimer: I am being compensated by Avocados from Mexico for this campaign. Isn't that totally awesome?}

Marta's Homemade Cuban Churros Recipe

Making a Memory

My kids were all born here in Southern California. My husband is also a native Californian. So the only kind of churros they've ever known have come from a cart at Disneyland.

Churro cart at Disneyland
Churro cart at Disneyland

But those are Mexican-style. They are hard and crunchy with lots of brown sugar. They are tasty enough, but I am used to light and fluffy Cuban-style churros.  

Oh, yeah!

The kind you can have for breakfast with Café con Leche, or on a cold night with Chocolaté Caliente.

It was unseasonably cold here yesterday, which seemed like a perfect time to make churros.

Jonathan, especially gets such a kick out of this.  Some foods, he believes, can only be made in restaurants or found in grocery stores.

So, when I get an urge to make home-made potato chips or something that usually comes packaged, he responds with:  "Mom, that's so . . . pro."

When I served the "Vaca Frita" for dinner. Eric said, "Honey, this is a gourmet meal."

I take the compliments and refrain from the lecture about how important the entire process is.  My own childhood was filled with memories of food and family and the kitchen and conversation.  It is part of my very Cuban DNA.  It's not just about getting food on the table. It's not about convenience and speed, (although, this particular recipe is super simple and only takes a few minutes) but about the pleasure of working side by side.  It's about the aromas and tastes that affect memory.  It's about laughing together.  It's about making the memory.

But I know that this is something that is more "caught, than taught."  And I continue to feed them in my "pro and gourmet" way, because later in life I know they will say, "My mom made the BEST churros!"

And I know they won't be able to remember which was really better: the churros themselves, or the fun we had preparing them. 

And it really won't matter. =D

Marta's Homemade Cuban Churros Recipe

Marta's Homemade Churros
Marta's Homemade Churros

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup (all-purpose) flour
  • 1 cup water with 1/8 tsp. of salt
  • vegetable oil
  • Plate of granulated or powdered sugar

1) Sift the flour in a mixing bowl, while bringing the salted water to a boil.

2) Pour the boiling water over the flour, stirring lightly until the dough forms into a ball - about 30 seconds. The dough should be compact, but not runny or too soft.

3) If you have a churrera or a cookie press, load it up with the dough. If not, a big freezer zip lock or a pastry bag with a corner cut off works, too.  Use a star shaped tip, if you have it.

4) Squeeze dough onto waxed paper in about 6 inch strips.

5) Heat the oil until very hot.

Cooking churros
Cooking churros

6) Fry the dough in the super-hot oil, turning once when you see the edges barely begin to pick up color. (think pancakes) Fry for about 5 minutes total.

7) Remove with a slotted spoon, draining as much oil as possible and place on the sugar plate and roll in the sugar.

Rolling churros in sugar
Rolling churros in sugar

8) The churros will be ready to eat almost immediately.

9) The memory will last forever. ;-)

Cuando salí de Cuba - Christina's story

Marta here: I'm celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month: Cuban-Style with a series of stories about Cuban American families: Cuando Sali de Cuba, stories of courage and hope.

This one is from my friend and fellow blogger, Christina Gomez-Pina. Inspired by the book/film Julie & Julia, she has embarked on her own Project: to celebrate the Cuban kitchen — the food, the abuelas who prepared it, and the family who gathered around the table to enjoy every bite. For her generation — and for her childrens’  generation — she is cooking her way through Nitza Villapol’s 1950s classic Cocina al Minuto. Her blog is fittingly called La Cocina de Christina.

Enjoy.

Cuando-sali-de-Cuba-for-web
Cuando-sali-de-Cuba-for-web

Cuando salí de Cuba...

Christina F. Gomez-Pina

Nunca podré morirme,

mi corazón no lo tengo aquí.

Alguién me está esperando,

me está aguardando que vuelva aquí. 

I wasn’t born in Cuba, per se.  But, I see that as a technicality.  From my very beginnings, I was taught about Cuba with heart.  Y mi corazón has been there ever since.  As I grew, I realized that the Cuba I know and love is actually a state in the heart.  It is the stories from your family and the stories you created in your mind.  

Cuando salí de Cuba,

dejé mi vida dejé mi amor.

Cuando salí de Cuba,

dejé enterrado mi corazón. 

I understand what our families left behind.  I cannot comprehend what they went through, or what they were thinking when they left their lives and loves behind.  But what I do know is that one of my grandmothers brought Cocina al Minuto to Miami – a foreign land, where she hoped she’d see her three sons upon arrival.  She brought her book.  There was no way our grandmothers were leaving behind their pieces of home.

08
08

 The women of La Cocina de Christina, present day.  Daughter, Mom, me, Paternal grandmother (with her original book, the one she brought from Cuba) and my Mother in Law (with the copy I use for The Project, which she gave me as a wedding present in 2000).

Late y sigue latiendo

porque la tierra vida le da,

pero llegará un día

en que mi mano te alcanzará.

The heart keeps beating and the kitchen was where our grandmothers let it beat the loudest.  

Cuando salí de Cuba,

dejé mi vida dejé mi amor.

Cuando salí de Cuba,

dejé enterrado mi corazón. 

They left everything behind but they would not let their traditions, their culture, their olores a cocina disappear.  

Abuela teresa
Abuela teresa

Abuela Teresa, my dad's grandmother.  My great-grandmother.

Una triste tormenta

te está azotando sin descansar

pero el sol de tus hijos

pronto la calma te hará alcanzar. 

They taught us to cook.  After school, when our moms were at work and we were taken care of by our abuelas, they taught us to cook.  Carne fria, croquetas, flanes and arroz.  Whatever it was to both keep us busy and keep the meaning of what they lived for alive.

Ali + mom mariquitas
Ali + mom mariquitas

Daughter & me.  Making mariquitas for a photo shoot with The Miami Herald's Al Diaz, for a story in August 2009.

Cuando salí de Cuba,

dejé mi vida dejé mi amor.

Cuando salí de Cuba,

dejé enterrado mi corazón.

And I teach my daughter and sons to cook.  Because my abuelos left everything behind so that those children who became our parents and our own children would have a better life.  And I cook.  So that my children can learn where they came from – and where one day, they will return and make the reality they dream of in their minds.

Thanksgiving 2006 abuela mig aba midge mami mimi
Thanksgiving 2006 abuela mig aba midge mami mimi

Thanksgiving 2006 - Maternal grandmother, me, daughter and Mom.

Christina has been featured on The Burger Beast Blog preparing Cuban-style hamburgers and bacon-wrapped hot dogs.

Please visit Christina at her blog: La Cocina de Christina and if you want to help her out by commenting on the process of making her next recipe, go "like" her Facebook page, too.