Soma
Resources => Other Cultures [Public] => Topic started by: nichi on May 15, 2008, 01:14:39 PM
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Here in S.California, I look all the time at the mexican-american community: my mother's household is one of the few white families here. First I'll leave some pictures, then hopefully will have some data later.
(http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/library/graphics/prohibido.jpg)
(http://southdakotapolitics.blogs.com/south_dakota_politics/images/mexicanhomelandca.jpg)
(http://sandiego.indymedia.org/firepressconf102707.jpg)
(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/14/Mexican-Ame
rican_border_at_Nogales.jpg/800px-Mexican-American_border_at_Nogales.jpg)
(http://e1.news1.yimg.com/e1.yimg.com/ne/070409/telemundo/i117614616011maria.celeste3....jpg)
What is this doing here? This is the norm, as evidenced on television and anywhere public: there is a conspicuous standard for voluptuousness.
***A great scene from "Real Women Have Curves"*** (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nG1L3wIIxlc)
(http://proliferosary.org/db3/00223/proliferosary.org/_uimages/OurLadyofGuadalupe.jpg)
Our Lady Guadalupe
(http://www.stmary.pvt.k12.de.us/gif%5Cguad-Image1.gif)
Guadalupe is a common name for females -- nickname "Lupe".
According to Mexican national legend, the Virgin Mary appeared to a Juan Diego (a Mexican Indian) in 1531 on the Cerro de Tepeyac in the north of Mexico City. She appeared three times in the guise of an Indian princess and commanded a church to be built in the area, where the Basilica de Guadelupe now stands. More miraculously she imprinted her image into Juan Diego's cloak, and this cloak now is preserved and set in gold.
You can view this cloth in the new basilica, which was built in response to earthquakes in the area that cracked the original basilica. Viewing occurs on a motorized platform that moves you past the Lady of Guadelupe. Whilst this may be an efficient way to allow the entire crowd to view her image, but can seem to be a little cynical in the face of a religious wonder.
Festivities
From early December onwards Mexicans celebrate the day of Our Lady of Guadelupe. The pilgrimage to the Basilica de Guadelupe culminates on their national holiday in her honour on December 12th. This pilgrimage is a mammoth affair with about 5 million Mexicans making the journey to the Basilica that holds round the clock services to cater to the throngs of pilgrims.
The Roman Church is a uniting force in Mexico, and this festival is no exception. The Virgin de Guadelupe is depicted as an Indian "dark Madonna", and this has helped the integration of indigenous people and their religion into the Roman Catholic Church. The resulting Catholicism exists in a more multifaceted form which attempts to be meaningful for the whole Mexican population, whether white, indigenous or mestizo.
(to be continued...)
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Salsa Dance (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeB1bIr8fUg&feature=related)
Mariachi (never looked so good, heheh) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TY3F5A9L3V0)
Traditional Mariachi (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNldy3Uw3TM&NR=1)
Djobi Djoba by Gipsy Kings (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9G94tFlqPTQ&feature=related)
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I love that real women have curves clip
I also have always liked salsa - wish I had discovered it when I was younger, I think I would have made a study of it - love the rhythm. It's actually a classic African rhythm underneath, but what they do with it is terrific - very different to the Africans.
The gipsy kings are good too - an old favourite of ours.
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"Real Women Have Curves" was a wonderful movie -- made for HBO, I think. I'm not sure about the SALSA clip: there are some indications that it's cuban/puerto rican rather than mexican. But. The dance is the same, and that music is on the radio stations here.
Which brings to mind ... in the San Diego area, on FM, I count 23 stations that come in clearly, and only 10 or 11 of them are english-speaking.
A coworker of mine was teaching me spanish once, back in norfolk. She was puerto rican. She kept pointing out the differences between mexican-spanish and puerto rican spanish. From the puerto rican point of view, the mexican turns-of-phrase are more vulgar. I'm in no position to assess that. But if I lived here, I would surely learn spanish -- I've always been shocked that mom and john haven't.
There's a pull/tension here. For example, John, retired navy/retired civil servant, feels it isn't his job to learn spanish: it's the mexican-american's job to learn english. The movement to which you see alluded in the initial pictures is experienced as a threat in the border states, culturally. (Other border states would be Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, perhaps Nevada.)
Me, I want to understand. There was a group of guys doing construction on the house next door last time I was here, for example, singing in spanish about a "rojo" - headed woman while they were looking at me. Might have been handy to know/understand the intent. That's not the only reason to learn: it just goes without saying that you can't have communication without the language.
More pictures and tidbits later.
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I've been dreaming about them all night.
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George Lopez, Stand-Up Comedy (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOS5cB7HZuY&feature=related)
George Lopez, Comic Relief (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-K742G5acQY&feature=related)
George Lopez, Fast Food (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v56vwp3r-hE)
George Lopez: America's Mexican "Kids Then and Now" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRG_YxXv14I)
George Lopez: America's Mexican "We Don't Need No Permits" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7VyIjK9O2w)
George Lopez: America's Mexican "Bedtime Stories" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JorUrIgEO5w&feature=related)
George Lopez Why You Cryin part 1 intro (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7g6w4t-pPQI&feature=related)
George Lopez Why You Cryin part 2 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTM09KHr3yM&feature=related)
George Lopez Why You Cryin part 3 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bcZve582l2s&feature=related)
part 4 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQr9CDKNN3k&feature=related)
part 5 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEz0K1oGrsk&feature=related)
part 6 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0gWQ-3tEpk&feature=related)
part 7 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Z8EBpadz5s&feature=related)
part 8 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7ujHuKzZsA&feature=related)
part 9 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9qTHvIf8bk&feature=related)
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I watched a George Lopez episode on TV for the first time. We get a lot of different 'ethnic' type TV shows here... especially Black-American. It was interesting, the George Lopez show. Different from the "white" type sitcom, and yet strangely much the same.
TV is of course not the way to learn about other cultures... the shoes seem very stereotyped, and yet when I watch locally produced shows, I see also the stereotyping in them, and yet they are quite 'real' in a way too.
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Tortillas (the basis of many mexican dishes)
(http://zaakistan.com/photos/blog3/tortilla.jpg)
(http://www.companysj.com/v211/mmtortilla.jpg)
(http://www.newworldvillages.org/MakingTortillas.jpg)
(http://www.dallasfood.org/photos/mexonmaple/mexonmapletwo/mexonmapthree/mexonmaplefour/sancheztortillamakingtwo.jpg)
(http://images.ourfaves.com/images/User/sharon/p843944574_o.jpg)
(http://lib.store.yahoo.net/lib/mex-grocer/coming-soon.jpg)
Masa harina is a type of traditional flour used in Mexican cooking.
To make masa harina, field corn (or maize) is dried and then treated in a solution of lime and water, also called slaked lime. This loosens the hulls from the kernels and softens the corn. In addition, the lime reacts with the corn so that the nutrient niacin can be assimilated by the digestive tract.
The soaked maize is then washed, and the wet corn is ground into a dough, called masa. It is this fresh masa, when dried and powdered, that becomes masa harina. (Add water once again to make dough for tortillas or tamales.)
Fresh masa is available in Mexican markets, refrigerated and sold by the pound. But masa harina is a fine substitute. Availability and your personal taste determine whether you start with fresh or dried masa.
Do not substitute corn meal or regular corn flour, however; they're produced from different types of corn and are processed differently. They will not produce the same results. Regular wheat flour also cannot be substituted.
(http://www.amigosmexican.com/USERIMAGES/P9220422.JPG)
Cilantro
(http://whatscooking.us/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/cilantro.jpg)
(http://www.thecamreport.com/images/fresh_lime.jpg)
(http://www.all-creatures.org/recipes/images/i-jalapeno-01.jpg)
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I watched a George Lopez episode on TV for the first time. We get a lot of different 'ethnic' type TV shows here... especially Black-American. It was interesting, the George Lopez show. Different from the "white" type sitcom, and yet strangely much the same.
TV is of course not the way to learn about other cultures... the shoes seem very stereotyped, and yet when I watch locally produced shows, I see also the stereotyping in them, and yet they are quite 'real' in a way too.
That sitcom was an extension of his stand-up -- and a bit of controlled stereotyping (that is, under his control). The previous sitcoms involving latinos in the us were insipid, and far worse, for stereotyping. The G Lopez show attempted to be positive, while real. Not nearly as daring as his stand-up, though.
Lopez has some axes to grind, with his mother and grandmother.
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(http://whatscooking.us/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/cilantro.jpg)
(http://www.thecamreport.com/images/fresh_lime.jpg)
MMMmmm, I love Mexican cooking. I recently worked with a guy who was from Ecuador, so not exactly Mexican, he calls himself Spanish, but I did get to learn a lot of of his secrets. Which seem to be similar to Mexican cooking. Lots of cilantro, lime and spices such as cumin. Garlic of course, too. Nice for Summer or barbeque dishes. I guess I'm kind of off topic, but cooking esp different ethnic dishes is really interesting tome, a passion.
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MMMmmm, I love Mexican cooking. I recently worked with a guy who was from Ecuador, so not exactly Mexican, he calls himself Spanish, but I did get to learn a lot of of his secrets. Which seem to be similar to Mexican cooking. Lots of cilantro, lime and spices such as cumin. Garlic of course, too. Nice for Summer or barbeque dishes. I guess I'm kind of off topic, but cooking esp different ethnic dishes is really interesting tome, a passion.
Not off-topic!
Glad you mentioned cumin, that was next on my list. And cayenne.
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"mexican-american" is no doubt a case of "western" culture, like M was referring to. It is... and it isn't.
As tempting as it would be to say that the violence is a function of the us, I am fairly certain they have their own brand of it. For example, when I was in Tijuana in the late 70's, there were many puppet displays. The kind with strings. I was fascinated to see Tweety-Bird, Bugs Bunny, and Sylvester, all with gun holsters and guns. That you wouldn't see in the us.
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On that same trip, I was in a jewelry shop, looking around (they have a lot of silversmiths and good silver and turquoise jewelry). I was "haggling" with the proprietor, a fiercely good-looking man in his 30's, who reached over the counter and began to untie my blouse.
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Something noteworthy about this 'other culture' is that I am not nor will I ever be welcome in it.
It's not that I wanted to join it, because while I love the color and the music and the fire in it, it isn't me.
And that's the real value of absorbing one's self in "another culture", to me:: the same distance applies to whatever one's culture of origin is as well. I'm not a member, and I know that in its reality, I am not really welcome there either. The only plus is that I can move in it more discreetly and anonymously.
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belonging to another culture, or your own, is another matter. It is not the purpose of our interest. We are trying to see that we could live there, and how that would be different for us. This pits one cultural view against another.
Despite the fact we may not feel we belong in our own culture, we are infused with it on level far below our consciousness. When we look into another culture, it challenges us on that deep level.
Plus it is enjoyable, and refreshing - except where we see the dark side of the culture.
It is really of 'making our boundaries permeable' utility, in this situation. However, I have other techniques, in which the application of this cultural Achilles Heel to our Humpty-Dumpty is sufficient to bring down the whole kingdom!
I hope I will share that with some one day.
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Myself, I think it is not another matter.
It's like the anthropologist who goes in, pretending that s/he belongs there, pretending that s/he is "one" of whatever tribe, pretending that gestures s/he does not understand are friendly, when they are not. There's a presumption of understanding, and so often it seems false.
We hear this a lot in the states -- like with the african-american culture. The civil rights sympathizers in the 60's and 70's, consisting of people of color and white liberals, were eventually cautioned that unless you literally walk in the shoes of another and live that life (and not on the weekends), understanding was virtually impossible. The pretense of understanding became basically unacceptable, as the african americans sought to speak their own voice, without white liberal intermediary. Not to mention, the bourgeoisie white liberals were deemed the enemy, in the end.
Perhaps this is my "conditioning", then, but it came from a different stream of experience than the mainstream. It's some ingrained response of mine now to back off -- to not look too closely, to not delude myself that I have friends, to not mistake some ancient dignity of grace and hospitality as real welcome into an inner sanctum. For the inner sanctum, I must find the members of my circle -- my soul-circle, my spiritual circle, independent of any culture except the one which develops as a function of the affiliation therein.
Meanwhile, one is a stranger in a strange land.
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What was true in the african-american example is also true with the mexican-american culture.
I, white, blue-eyed woman, am the conquistador, the usurper, and one must sift through the hatred there. It's part of "the culture" therein, and there's no getting around it.
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one can be influenced by another culture without 'belonging'.
the reason I say belonging is another matter, is because I have noticed with myself and others who have walked this path of trans-cultural, that belonging is a mysterious matter. Why and how one realises that one belongs is an unpredictable process. And belonging does not mean being included in the culture's social inner world - most cultural societies have a set against full inclusion, but I see that as different to belonging.
If you ever see the film 'Shadow Warrior' (Kagemusha) by Akira Kurosawa you will see a very insightful exploration of what I am speaking of here.
The reason I say that is a different matter, is that is is not necessary to 'belong' to 'feel' a culture. Many members of cultures do not realise where their culture is - they think it is in the secret social 'understandings' that one has to be born into to comprehend, but actually it is not - it is in the obvious, the way people move, the way they build, and the flow of their world. All things which sensitive people can allow to permeate into their beings, without even understanding the language. It is a feeling, not a set of constructs and agreements.
So we, who are interested in pitting one culture against another, internally, only need sufficient exposure to feel the boundaries of our own assumptions. that is the purpose we seek - I expect people like us will never really 'belong' to any culture.
However, in the other sense of belonging, as in Kurosawa's film, we can belong without being accepted - that form of belonging is a deep feeling within us that says, I feel at home in this world. That does not mean we feel trusted by the people of that culture, it means we feel an inner relaxation immediately we enter that cultural space. This has happened to me a few times - in Australia, India, Afghanistan, Greece, and Scotland. I have been to Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia, but never had that feeling in those countries. I didn't have it in England or Ireland either - or anywhere in Europe I went to.
When I watch those clips you showed on the mexican-american, I 'felt' their cultural 'aroma'. This can't be hidden - its on display for all to see - and I was able to take that down into my psyche during the night and allow it to infuse my being.
You know, I actually find understanding the language a disability in understanding a culture - one gets caught up in tricks of the mind, instead of simply feeling.
I will admit there are levels of understanding a culture, but if you wanted to understand Australian culture, you are better to watch them on the beach, at the swimming pool and in the pub, than to listen to the drivel they speak.
What you say about the white liberals and the cultures they seek to help - yes we have that here also, but in almost all cases, it is a political issue - like trying to help in another's family fight. That is about the play of power and the endless dissatisfactions of human beings. That is not what we as warriors of freedom are concerned with.
Let me give another example. Human cultures are not the only form of cultures we are capable of 'extending' into. Animals, plants, birds and even insects are all available. the trick is to go quiet, to set aside one's own cultural stencil, and to watch carefully. You can actually feel their movements and mood in your own body - I'm sure many here already do this. Soon you begin to see the world like they do - it is a trick of our bodies, that we can absorb.
As far as human cultures, I have found the most powerful way to absorb them is to go to their homeland - it is in the land itself. That has been my realisation - the land exudes the culture. I expect in enough time, the whites in Australia will become more like the Aboriginals - we have been here only 200 years, they for over 60,000 years.
Ah, such a wonderful discussion... I could rave on for hours.
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The reason I say that is a different matter, is that is is not necessary to 'belong' to 'feel' a culture.
Indeed, indeed, but ... what if 'feeling' the other culture includes feeling the 'hatred' which is part of that culture -- part of its fiber, so to speak? And the hatred is directed to the "you" they assume that you are?
Naturally, you pass off the hate, as in a deft aikido evasive move, but to dismiss it as part of who that culture is .. I dunno.
I do understand what you're saying, though. Immersing one's self in another culture is a great exercise in stepping into another reality: and I value the treasures you share, for example, from your experiences of india.
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what if 'feeling' the other culture includes feeling the 'hatred' which is part of that culture -- part of its fiber, so to speak? And the hatred is directed to the "you" they assume that you are?
That makes it very difficult to want to extend into their culture - we tend to be at the mercy of our first encounters.
There are so many cultures, that when I find one that extends to me some dark side which is in their own stuff, I usually pass on, and leave them to it. There are plenty more.
The only time I caution with that approach is when interfacing with India - I have observed many times people perceive they are getting the rough end of the stick at first, when in fact all they are seeing is their own reflections. I don't know of any other culture that causes that negative reflection, to the degree that India does - I've seen it again and again, and so we speak of the threshold one has to pass through.
With other cultures, yes that can happen - it is in the nature of the unknown, to reflect our own insecurities and inadequacies, but Indian culture is different. This is often a topic in talks with people who have not been to India and have been to other places - they say, "Oh, that's just like in ....". But those who have travelled widely, always reply, "No, India IS different."
I tend to be one that snoops into other cultures no matter what - I love them. But I am also very quick to let them have it if I feel bruised from what they actively project at me. Indians tend to mirror - they obfuscate and delay in annoying ways, but rarely project negativity.
Cultures are so different - Indonesia has a very happy friendly face to the first time visitor. I really enjoyed that - it is obvious it is a two-faced culture, but a friendly happy front face has to be enjoyable! However I have little interest in returning - hard to say why. I think because of the lack of deeper and deeper layers. the most superficial culture I have ever encountered in the world is the White Australian culture - really there is pretty nearly absolutely nothing there. But they can be very friendly and easy going, and that's a plus. I think their best cultural characteristic is their irreverence - that part I certainly enjoy.
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I believe you: India IS different.
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Indeed, indeed, but ... what if 'feeling' the other culture includes feeling the 'hatred' which is part of that culture -- part of its fiber, so to speak? And the hatred is directed to the "you" they assume that you are?
I lived in NYC in the early 80's. I was in a work/study program at college and spent 4 of my study quarters in NYC. Two of those quarters were spent at a garment manufacturer where I worked in a garment factory, in the office area, as an assistant to the designer/pattern maker. The cutters, seamstresses, marker makers were comprised of mostly Puerto Ricans and some from the Dominican Republic.
To me NYC was a foreign country (actually, Many foreign countries), it was intriguing to watch many different cultures interact and at the same time segregate themselves from each other.
Anyway, what interested me was the "hate" issue. It was somewhat of an attraction to a white girl from a middle american upbringing. Why did they hate "us". I wanted to Know these people and get into their skin. So I put myself in some of the most compromising situations, I walked the streets of Spanish Harlem at night, after taking the subway up there, to visit my Puerto Rican friend. I also lived in a totally black neighborhood at one time (an "up and coming" neighborhood, of course ;) ) ... right next to Bed-Sty (Bedford Stuyvesant). When I got on the train at my subway stop, I was the only White person on the train. I did keep my awareness high, but none of this bothered me (naivety, ignorance??), as at the time I felt safe ... that no one would bother me .... and never did. :) I found some of the nicest people I'd ever met, and that hatred has no cultural boundaries. I may not have been "one of them", but there was always a welcoming of sorts after they got to know me.
Btw, V ... I love the salsa clips ;)
A
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hatred has no cultural boundaries.
Love either...
kiss kiss ;)
:-*
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(http://hrc.nevada.edu/museum/Exhibits/Archives/DiasdelosMuertos/Images/tamales%5B1%5D.jpg)
Tamales
These are an artform, and many make them in their home and sell them on the side. They are comfort food. In S California, they are usually cooked inside the outer husks of corn, which is wrapped around the tamale and tied. (You untie them, take them out of the husk, and eat them, yum.)
(http://i.timeinc.net/recipes/i/recipes/ck/00/12/tamales-ck-223064-l.jpg)
The filling is usually mexican soft cheese, fresh corn, and the hottest peppers and chiles known to man --- though sometimes you see a beef filling.
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In general, meat is marinated differently, giving it a unique flavor which is in most of the dishes. It's called Carne Asada, and you won't find that at fast food restaurants such as taco bell.
Tis muey delicioso.
Carne Asada
From Derrick Riches,
Your Guide to Barbecues & Grilling.
This Mexican Tradition is Much More Than Just a Meal
On its most basic level, Carne Asada is a marinated and grilled steak, sliced thin and served on tortillas. This "grilled beef" can be used however you want it, in tacos, burritos or served up straight. The basic method is to marinate most any kind of beef in a lime based marinade. Grill it over a hot fire and then slice into thin strips across the grain. But there is a whole lot more to it than that.
Tradition: In Mexico and the American Southwest you will find that Carne Asada is the Mexican equivalent of Barbecue. I mean that in the party sense of the word. Traditionally a large fire pit is used to prepare this party but you can use whatever you have. Since everything is prepared over direct heat you don't need a lid or a fancy grill. The cut of beef you use doesn't need to be fancy either.
Traditionally Carne Asada is made from Skirt Steak. You want a flavorful cut that doesn't need to be tender so if you can't get Skirt Steak go with a Flank Steak or even trimmed Brisket cut into 1 inch thick "steaks". If you are planning on a big party and want to have plenty for everyone plan on about 1 pound of meat per person. Of course, if you have lots of side dishes then cut back on the meat.
MarinadeMarinating is not necessary but it will add flavor and tenderness to your meat. A good marinade for Carne Asada will have lots of lime juice, garlic, onion and black pepper. Of course other fruit juices work great as well, especially papaya which really makes meat tender since it is a source of natural tenderizers. You can add hot peppers to the marinade if you want but be careful you don't over power the meat and make it too hot to handle. Don't add salt to your marinade.
Seasoning: Ideally the meat should be cooked over a charcoal fire. Traditionally mesquite is used, or course. Wood chips in a smoker box will help, but nothing beats the authentic flavor of a real fire. When you get ready to grill you will want to have salt on hand. Use a good coarse salt and add some cumin, powdered garlic and whatever else you like to the salt. Shake it up good and keep it on hand. You want to grill over a good, hot fire. This dish cooks pretty quickly so have everything else out of the way when you start.
Grilling: Place the meat on the grill and when the juices start to rise on the surface, sprinkle with the salt. When the salt liquefies on the surface flip the meat over and repeat. This seasons the meat as it cooks. Carne Asada is supposed to be on the salty side but this doesn't mean that you need to drown the meat in salt. This sprinkling is also the reason you don't want to use a marinade with salt.
Traditionally Carne Asada is grilled to well done. Most people who didn't grow up eating this dish might find that a little hard to swallow so I usually work towards a medium. Once you have the meat grilled to perfection you will want to take it straight to a carving board. Cut the meat across the grain with a good sharp knife. The pieces should be thin strips. Keep the meat warm in a heavy pot with a lid. You don't need to add heat but you want to hold in the heat you have.
Serve with warm tortillas and whatever fixings you prefer. A good Carne Asada taco would be topped with salsa, chopped red onion, guacamole, salt and lemon juice. Now that’s a taco. If you have leftovers, make enchiladas the next day. Oh, and serve with lots of your favorite cold beverage.
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all this food talk is great
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Flan
I tried this yesterday ------ yummmm. Nothing more comforting than a nice egg custard.
Pronounced with a schwa 'a'.
(http://alotaboutnothing.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2007/11/flan.jpg)
History of Flan
Flan is found in recipes as far back as ancient Rome. It was during Roman times that domesticated chickens were first kept for laying eggs. The Romans, with eggs in surplus, and consulting the Greek's knowledge of the art of cooking, developed new recipes, one of which turned out to be a custardly concoction known as flan. It was orignally a savory dish (not sweet, but aromatic and pleasing to the palate). The Romans concocted many dishes that we might find interesting, such as eel flan. They also had a very nice sweet flan that was flavored with honey.
The Roman Empire was destined to fall and on its ruins arose Medeival society. Yet the transition between ancient times and Medeival - though often violent - was somewhat contiguous. Flan survived barbarian invasions (and perhaps pacified a barbarian or two). It surfaced as a generally sweet dish but still based on the old idea of mixing creme and eggs to form a custard. Our word for flan actually is derived from the Latin, "flado" (meaning flat cake), which became "flaon" in Old French.
Interestingly, flan found two different outlets. In Spain it became a sweet custard generally made with caramelized sugar. The mixture of milk, eggs and sugar was cooked slowly in crocks and relished by many. Besides the Roman influence, the Moors introduced citrus and almonds which are commonly found to flavor flan. Once Christopher Columbus found America the rush to the riches of the region brought the richness of flan with it. Nearly all of Central and South America loves flan in its various custardly forms. It has become especially associated with Mexico where flan is exquisitely produced in the kitchens of rich and poor alike.
England, with its love for pastry crusts, went its own way and developed a different kind of flan. This one makes use of a pastry shell with an open top filled with custard and often mixed with nuts or fruit. This is the flan that is often mentioned in the literature of England and gets high marks in Brian Jacques's Redwall series. The characters there make and "scoff" several flans in every volume of delightful adventure.
There is some dispute about how the word "flan" is pronounced. This is easily sorted out, as the English flan is pronounced to rhyme with "plan", while the Spanish or Mexican style flan is pronounced more like "faun". With modern innovations there are now flan recipes to suit every taste, Spanish and English, savory or sweet.
Ingredients:
3/4 cup of granulated sugar
1 can of evaporated milk (12 oz.)
1 1/2 cups whole milk
4 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Produce 6 flan molds, any 8 oz oven-safe, smooth-sided dishes should do. This recipe can also be made in a single, larger 9-inch round flan mold. Lay these dishes out in a row. Now, place sugar in saucepan and place directly over medium heat on the stove top. Watch closely and constantly stir. The sugar will brown and turn to liquid. (Do not add water or other liquids.) Do not allow the sugar to scorch. Remove from heat and distribute the caramelized sugar equally across the bottom of the flan molds. The sugar will almost immediately harden, but once it is baked with the custard, it will liquify and remain so.
In a mixing bowl combine remaining ingredients and whisk together until the eggs are no longer recognizable as white or yoke. While mixing you may add a few tablespoons of sugar or honey to sweeten to taste. Now distribute the custard mixture in the various flan molds.
Run about an inch of water into a large roasting pan. Set on an oven rack and then place the molds within the roasting pan. (Do not allow water level to go over the side of your flan molds.) Carefully push in the rack and close the oven door. Set oven to 350 degrees F - do not preheat. Bake for one hour. Test for doneness by inserting a knife. If it comes out clean, then the custard has fully cooked. The photo above shows how the flan will appear at this stage.
(http://flan.holidaycook.com/images/spanish-flan-01.jpg)
When done, remove individual flans from roasting pan and place on a rack to cool. Flan can be served slightly warm or chilled in the refrigerator. To serve, run a knife around the top of the flan where it is connected to the mold. Flip over the mold onto the serving plate and then jiggle the flan loose so that it falls in one piece onto the plate. The caramelized sugar will form a sauce over the flan. There will be hard sugar remaining in the bottom of the molds, do not attempt to scrape this out to add to the sauce.
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Here we call it Creme Caramel. It is very yumm!!
(http://i52.photobucket.com/albums/g20/mysticaldaf/Recipe-P-Creme-Caramel.jpg)
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low-fat?
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low-fat?
INo
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Plus it is enjoyable, and refreshing - except where we see the dark side of the culture.
How can we look at anything without seeing its all sides? To see things, is to see them as they are and never close one's eyes in the face of darkness or pretend it is not there.
To play with culture and let oneself be absorbed, means being absorbed by the dark side of culture of interest as well - otherwise it is not letting oneself being absorbed.
I see such an exercise as requiring quite a bit of guts - to let myself be absorbed by the darkness of other culture and not submit to it.
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Mexican-influenced architecture and design.
(http://image59.webshots.com/659/0/48/70/2059048700054188876OLNsgx_ph.jpg)
(http://www.lumika.org/mexico/thumbnails/merida-mexico.jpg)
(http://wild-net.com.au/mexico/assets/images/mexico_building1_big_door2_250.jpg)
(http://image.homesandland.com/image/0421/3/27/0421177273.jpg)
(http://www.duganloyolarealestate.com/imagenes/Vergel.jpg)
(http://www.chroniclebooks.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2007/06/mexicasa3.jpg)
(http://www.chroniclebooks.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2007/06/mexicasa1.jpg)
(http://www.casatulco.com/images/house.jpg)
(http://www.setarnet.aw/users/jutter/images/hacienda.jpg)
(http://www.duganloyolarealestate.com/imagenes/pozosbarranca.jpg)
(http://www.duganloyolarealestate.com/imagenes/refugio72.jpg)
(http://www.london-se1.co.uk/whatson/imageuploads/1202049754_62.49.27.213.jpg)
(http://www.architecturaldigest.com/images/architects/2000/03/legorreta/arar01_legorreta.jpg)
(http://www.duganloyolarealestate.com/imagenes/Umaran.jpg)
(http://www.duganloyolarealestate.com/imagenes/BALCONES2.JPG)
(http://www.duganloyolarealestate.com/imagenes/Volanteros1.jpg)
(http://www.duganloyolarealestate.com/imagenes/Orizaba13.jpg)
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(http://www.balboaflooring.com/art/cer_room01.jpg)
(http://www.justmorocco.com/prod_images_blowup/tile_close_up1.jpg)
(http://www.westonpriory.org/esales/images/N08.jpg)
(http://www.lindapaul.com/tile_murals/Chili_Pepper_Kitchen/Chili_Pepper-Kitchen_mural.jpg)
(http://www.mostvacations.com/piazzabedroom.jpg)
(http://www.casadelmundo.ca/Images/mexbed1.jpg)
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Contemporary Ernesto Hernandez Olmos
(http://www.charityadvantage.com/canalwelcomecenter/images/ERNESTOLMOS1.jpg)
(http://www.charityadvantage.com/canalwelcomecenter/images/ERNESTOLMOS2.jpg)
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Diego Rivera
(http://www.ruelsa.com/gto/gto/25.jpg)
(http://faculty.indy.cc.ks.us/jnull/movementlarge.jpg)
Frida Kahlo
(http://www.1st-art-gallery.com/artists/kahlo_frida/frida_kahlo_the_little_deer_1946.jpg)
(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/1e/Frida_Kahlo_(self_portrait).jpg/460px-Frida_Kahlo_(self_portrait).jpg)
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Day of the Dead
El dia de los Muertos
From Wikipedia:
The Day of the Dead (El Día de los Muertos in Spanish) is a holiday celebrated mainly in Mexico and by people of Mexican heritage (and others) living in the United States and Canada. The celebration occurs on the 1st and 2nd of November, in connection with the Catholic holy days of All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day which take place on those days. Traditions include building private altars honoring the deceased, and using sugar skulls, marigolds, and the favorite foods and beverages of the departed. Observance of the holiday in Mexican-American communities in the United States has become more important and widespread as the community grows numerically and economically. Mexican-style Day of the Dead festivities have spread around the world, including to Europe and New Zealand.
Scholars trace the origins of the modern holiday to indigenous observances dating back thousands of years, and to an Aztec festival dedicated to a goddess called Mictecacihuatl (known in English as "The Lady of the Dead").
(http://updatecenter.britannica.com/eb/image?binaryId=77403&rendTypeId=4)
(http://updatecenter.britannica.com/eb/image?binaryId=59259&rendTypeId=4)
(http://www.saddleblanket.com/store/media/product_images/misc1/CALAVERA.jpg)
(http://brandicimo.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/day-of-the-dead.jpg)
(http://www.today.ucla.edu/out-about/071023_day-of-the-dead.jpg)
(http://aphs.worldnomads.com/gemma/6624/DSCN2501.jpg)
(http://www.slrobertson.com/images/mexico/oaxaca/day-dead/xoxo-cemetery-11-b.jpg)
(I love all the skeletons, puppets, and humour apparent therein!)
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About the last few posts:
I picked things which catch my eye in a pleasing way.
The colors used in Mexican design and ceramics are vibrant and alive! The style in the houses I would call open and airy: in California, it's easy to see why this style works, with the beautiful (and sometimes perilously hot) weather they have. It's a desert-oasis culture.
On the other hand, there's a baroque sense of architecture as well, from the colonial period, in the big cities like Mexico City.
(http://sg.yimg.com/i/travel/trv6/images/BN2669_2.jpg)
(http://www.noerlyng.dk/katrine/Mexico%20City_214kb.jpg)
(http://www.oldsouldesign.net/photo_blog/img/Cathedral_Zocalo_MexicoCity.jpg)
(http://www.oldsouldesign.net/photo_blog/img/Cathedral2_Zocalo_MexicoCity-thumb.jpg)
We don't see too much of the baroque in the US exteriors, but inside the houses ... altars abound.
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Mexican Kitsch
(http://www.kitsch.co.uk/acatalog/kitchen_wall_clock_blue.jpg)
(http://www.igougo.com/images/p179015-San_Diego_CA-Kitsch_Ya_gotta_love_it.jpg)
(http://img.inkfrog.com/pix/penelopepup/lg_embroideredsk8.jpg)
(http://deco-01.slide.com/r/1/82/dl/bqckGKGu5j9IQeUIvndBQm73olFlL5zi/watermark)
(http://img89.imageshack.us/img89/1630/11252007nt25g4ga129guo7fb1.jpg)
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WHO OWES WHOM?
by Margot Pepper
And what if we interrupted
the blue phosphorescent faces
that calmly assess our fate?
What if we stripped the presses of
their convenient projections,
voicing instead our own objections
to the national debt:
We cannot pay
because our cobble-stone streets,
flanked by the twice repossessed
temples to our future,
appear now like war zones:
bombed out,
abandoned like the dreams
hunger consumes.
We cannot pay
because malnutrition is engraved
in the ancient faces
of our children;
carved into the knotted driftwood backs
of our campesinos
who mush relinquish our food
to the world's table.
We will not pay the debt
because half our wealth
is hoarded by hands
as smooth and white
as the teeth of bankers,
las guardias blancas,
la Casa Blanca,
el banco mundial blanco,
though the skin at times may look brown.
We will not pay one increment more
than the blood and tears
shed like ticker-tape
in the miscarried revolutions
creditors aborted.
For how are we to repay a debt that is owed us?
All that land pried from the fingers of our dead
like artifacts to be sold to private collectors.
All those wares ripped like flesh
from the ribs of our hungry.
All that land on which we die
like ants in a poison rain when we till it;
like cockroaches when we trespass.
All those riches all that blood all that sweat.
How are we to repay a debt owed us?
©2006 Margot “Pimienta” Peppern
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!Hola!
(http://www.migdale.com/db/2025/MIGDALE2025051.jpg)
(http://updatecenter.britannica.com/eb/image?binaryId=73624&rendTypeId=4)
Quinceanara -- Sweet 15 Birthday celebration for girls
(http://i163.photobucket.com/albums/t310/lcp129/MexicanAmerican.jpg)
(http://www.tfaoi.com/cm/4cm/4cm246.jpg)
(http://www.firecoalition.com/images/open_borders_protestor.jpg)
(http://www.etext.org/Politics/MIM/art/borders.jpg)
(http://images.pictopia.com.edgesuite.net/perl/get_image?provider_id=318&md=2007-04-04%2017:38:30&ptp_photo_id=953060&size=420x275_mb)
(http://malrc.tamu.edu/Pictures/06-SanAntonio/220430139_9003a85341.jpg)
(http://pictopia.com/perl/get_image?provider_id=318&size=550x550_mb&ptp_photo_id=953061)
(http://www.wicn.org/files/show_image/Elena%20Cantina.jpg)
Elena Cantina
(http://www.usps.com/news/2002/philatelic/stamps/03_cchavez37.jpg)
Cesar Chavez (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesar_Chavez#Legacy.)
(http://thisdistractedglobe.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/eat-drink-man-woman-1994-sihung-lung-pic-3.jpg)
(http://images.goldstar.com/gse_media/108/4/qpressphoto2008.jpg)
Quetzal
(http://www.aaa.si.edu/images/poa1/AAA_poa1_0007r.jpg)
Frida Kahlo
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(http://www.hildapierce.com/MexicanPuppetsT.jpg)
(http://www.istockphoto.com/file_thumbview_approve/3822313/2/istockphoto_3822313_mexican_puppets.jpg)
(http://farm1.static.flickr.com/40/106025880_778ac3c308.jpg?v=0)
(http://images.inmagine.com/img/brandxpictures/x162/bxp45058.jpg)
(http://journal.davidbyrne.com/images/08_28_06_puppets.jpg)
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(http://www.433aw.afrc.af.mil/shared/media/photodb/photos/061014-F-8743M-009.jpg)
(http://www.cherylspelts.com/blog/images/2007-12-01-christmas-parade-2521.jpg)
(http://msp225.photobucket.com/albums/dd314/rjaim003/Mexico/Dancers.jpg)
(http://www.childrenwithdiabetes.com/activities/ummexico/i/Costumes21024.jpg)
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Love these costumes! :-*
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I was actually going to make a long post, but deleted it by accident. Besides you guys are covering things very well. I lived in Mexico with my pops for 2 years, and Honduras for 8 months. Will post about Honduras later if no one gets to it first, it is my favorite of the two. Still Mexican's and Hondurans, and I would surmise that Hispanics that were born and raised in a Hispanic culture all have this in common. It always seemed to me that they have a deeper experience of there emotions. A deeper feeling life. We Americans think think think (and never do our thought make it anywhere anyway), but down there they feel so much more. One religion is very important to them, rare it was for us to go into a house down there and not see a religious image on the wall. Two they dance, this seems really important. I've known a few white men that could dance, and the dances are different, but the peoples I have seen dance with the strongest feeling have rarely ( I think once.) been white. Don't mean to sound racist, there is no hate intended in what I am saying, god I can't dance. I have seen African Americans, and Hispanics and others, but it seems most white men have lost this beautiful gift. Some even dance well, but from my own limited observations it feels more like technique than feeling. In Mexico they have got it. This also makes there woman, again in my opinion, more interesting and lively. Sometimes even the air feels more alive and I think the spirit that moves them to dance places a part in that feeling in the air. Three I noticed, quite disturbing in my opinion, that they love their soap opera's like none other I have seen. Not saying soap opera's help them have a strong feeling life, I am simply referencing it as an example of how they love this cultural sharing of feeling and emotion. Four, and always a mixed blessing, in a way that is also mixed, they consider family to be very important, they have bigger families, and all these emotions are entrenched in that family structure. Five, it seems to me, that much of their food is sensual food, food for the passions, spicy, hot food etc. I'm sure there is more but that is enough for now. Six, and this may or may not matter for their feeling, but it seems to me that their language itself is much more rhythmic. Think of our English, so bulky it seems, there is little flow between words. Amor de dios es muy importante. Or, Love of God is very important. Which one sounds more rhythmic, the English may sound easier cause it is what you are used to, but that doesn't make it more smooooth. Is it possible that the rhythm of the language reflects and or effects the heart of the people who speak it as well as the mind? Maybe a smooth language equals a more passionate emotional life. Think of the German language and how clunky it is, think of the Italians, French, and think then of the Hindu and Sanskrit. Definitely a language like Sanskrit says something about the people using it.
This was one of the best things I learned about their culture. It seems very intrinsic to understanding them. There is more I know, and there is more I wish I had learned, but later.
Te Amo :-*
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Is it possible that the rhythm of the language reflects and or effects the heart of the people who speak it as well as the mind? Maybe a smooth language equals a more passionate emotional life. Think of the German language and how clunky it is, think of the Italians, French, and think then of the Hindu and Sanskrit. Definitely a language like Sanskrit says something about the people using it.
Te Amo :-*
This is very interesting Nicholas. It kinda fits with what we've been talking about lately about healing sounds, doesn't it.
Language is sounds...
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I lived in Mexico with my pops for 2 years, and Honduras for 8 months. Will post about Honduras later if no one gets to it first, it is my favorite of the two.
Cool! Look forward to it!
Still Mexican's and Hondurans, and I would surmise that Hispanics that were born and raised in a Hispanic culture all have this in common. It always seemed to me that they have a deeper experience of there emotions. A deeper feeling life. We Americans think think think (and never do our thought make it anywhere anyway), but down there they feel so much more.
That meets with my observation as well. Though there might be a double-edged sword in it, for, if I'm not mistaken, "crimes of passion" are more acceptable.
One religion is very important to them, rare it was for us to go into a house down there and not see a religious image on the wall.
I've noted this one a lot, Guadalupe (a Goddess image if I ever did see one):
(http://www.alivenotdead.com/attachments/2008/04/29080_200804081337082.thumb.jpg)
(http://www.sacred-destinations.com/mexico/images/mexico-city/basilica-guadalupe/icon-lg-pd-300h.jpg)
(http://farm1.static.flickr.com/18/68181764_8d93b44362.jpg?v=0)
as well...
(http://parisparfait.typepad.com/paris_parfait/images/2008/02/24/wall_of_faith_2.jpg)
(http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2150/1837544185_bf2dc6ccfe.jpg)
(http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/img/02-08/0229HOMEretablos.jpg)
cont...
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Some random images
(http://asuartmuseum.asu.edu/fiestas/altar.jpg)
(http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0aWD9EQ5ipddy/610x.jpg)
(http://poetryfoundation.org/harriet/Mariposa%20Muerto.jpg)
(http://www.coolhunting.com/images/renegados-final_lg.jpg)
(http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/images2/calavera_de_la_catrina.gif)
(http://z.about.com/d/gomexico/1/0/2/0/-/-/altar.jpg)
(http://www.karenwinters.com/blogimages/ofrenda.jpg)
(http://www.napavalleyregister.com/content/articles/2007/11/01/news/local/doc4729692d40157867927592.jpg)
(http://www.graffiti.org/index/mexican_masters2004LA.jpg)
(http://keralaarticles.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/great_goddess_of_teotihuacan.jpg)
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Two they dance, this seems really important. I've known a few white men that could dance, and the dances are different, but the peoples I have seen dance with the strongest feeling have rarely ( I think once.) been white. Don't mean to sound racist, there is no hate intended in what I am saying, god I can't dance. I have seen African Americans, and Hispanics and others, but it seems most white men have lost this beautiful gift. Some even dance well, but from my own limited observations it feels more like technique than feeling. In Mexico they have got it.
I don't think you're making a hateful generalization at all, N. I think it's just true: the Latina and African cultures have the rhythm, and you can hear it in the music as well as see it in the dance. The white, nordic, celtic, germanic cultures don't. Could have to do with the origins of tiny, cramped cold-ness for the white folk, don't know. But that there is a difference seems indisputable to me.
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Guajira by Amanda Martinez (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmGkP-Mbw7k)
Guajira by Yerba Buena (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3emxTEG8Aws)
(this is actually puerto-rican, not mexican, but I've heard it on the radio here in San Diego.)
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(http://farm1.static.flickr.com/104/294225545_ba82b3e5a3.jpg?v=0)
(http://farm1.static.flickr.com/51/187859623_373523c73b.jpg?v=0)
(http://marginalizedactiondinosaur.net/wordp/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/absolut-reconquista-ad.gif)