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Cuisine of the Southwestern United States

The cuisine of the Southwestern United States is food styled after the rustic cooking of the Southwestern United States. It comprises a fusion of recipes for things that might have been eaten by Spanish colonial settlers, cowboys, Native Americans,[1] and Mexicans throughout the post-Columbian era; there is, however, a great diversity in this kind of cuisine throughout the Southwestern states.[citation needed]

A pot of chili con carne with beans and tomatoes

Southwestern cuisine is similar to Mexican cuisine but often involves larger cuts of meat, namely pork and beef, and less use of tripe, brain, and other parts not considered as desirable in the United States.[citation needed]

As with Mexican cuisine, Southwestern cuisine is also largely known for its use of spices (particularly the chile, or chili pepper).[citation needed] A number of casual dining and fast food restaurants specializing in Southwestern cuisine have become popular in the United States.[2]

New Mexican cuisine is the most popular in the states of New Mexico, Colorado, Northern Arizona, Southern Nevada and Utah. It is known for its dedication to the New Mexico chile, the majority of the crop is grown in Hatch, New Mexico. Part of New Mexican cuisine is smothering each dish with either red chile, green chile or both (mixing of both is referred to as "Christmas"), and usage of pork or beef. Beyond just chile it also includes flavors such as piñon, and dishes such as breakfast burritos, biscochitos, and sopapillas.

Texan cuisine has a Southwestern cuisine called Tex-Mex, while Arizona's style of Southwestern cuisine is often called Sonoran, since the Sonoran Desert covers a third of the state.

History Edit

When New Mexico was still part of New Spain and the Republic of Mexico, regional ingredients were more limited, with few imports supplementing locally grown food. This gave New Mexican cuisine its unique palate.[citation needed]

All cooking was done at home by women who toasted whole spices and ground corn by hand using metates. Hunters made "jerky", in the style of New Mexican carne seca, with game meats, fish and wild birds. Fruits and vegetables were sun-dried in preparation for the winter.[citation needed]

Food was slow-cooked in iron or copper pots over open fires, and the only imported items were non-perishables from New Spain—coffee, sugar and spices.[citation needed]

The expansion of the railway system allowed the importation of milled flour and corn meal, sugar, lemons, oranges and other ingredients from "the States".[clarification needed]

Traditional ways of cooking were eventually replaced by iron stoves. The basic chile, beans and corn dishes from Mexican cuisine evolved over time and in modern form often substitute extremely hot peppers and condiments for the subtle, balanced spicing of authentic Mexican cuisine. Native Americans and Hispanos developed the earliest forms of New Mexico chile to supplement this taste.[citation needed]

By the early 20th-century tostadas, "chile joints" and home-cooked "chile suppers" and tamale vendors had become part of the cultural landscape.[3]

Characteristics Edit

The staple ingredients of Southwestern cuisine are corn, squash and beans. Called the "three sisters", they have been staples of North-American agriculture since ancient times. Beans are served whole or refried, and both styles can be used as filling for tostadas, tacos, burritos and similar dishes. Many bean varieties are consumed but the pinto bean is the most iconic bean of southwestern cuisine.[4]

Southwestern food is distinguished by the use of chile peppers as the primary seasoning, first brought to Santa Fe with the arrival of the Spanish from Mexico.[citation needed]

Chile peppers are used as a topping for virtually every dish from pizza to bagels, or just fried tempura and eaten whole. Most dishes, from burritos to scrambled eggs, are served with plentiful amounts of chile sauce.[4]

States Edit

Arizona Edit

 
A Sonoran hot dog topped with pinto beans and tomatoes

The cuisine of Arizona is influenced by its location and proximity to Mexico and reflects a blend of Hispanic, Native-American and pioneer culinary traditions. The O'odham peoples cultivated crops like maize and tepary beans around the Sonoran Desert area located at the base of the Tucson Mountains.[5]

Local dishes include raspado, huevos rancheros and tamales. The Sonoran hot dog is an Arizona specialty served with pinto beans, guacamole, jalapeños, salsa and layered with other southwestern flavors.[6]

Tucson, Arizona became the first American city to receive the designation of "City of Gastronomy" by UNESCO.[citation needed]

Restaurants use local ingredients, many grown with heirloom seeds distributed by non-profit organizations like Native Seeds/SEARCH.[5] Salads and salsas are made with cholla cactus, gathered and dried at the San Xavier Indian Reservation.[7]

California Edit

 
Tri-tip on the grill, with a saucepan of beans and loaves of bread.

Santa Maria-style barbecue is a regional traditional cuisine rooted in the Santa Maria Valley in Santa Barbara County on the Central Coast of California. It originated during the mission era of California when local rancheros and vaqueros would host Spanish-style feasts during spring.[8] They barbecued meat over earthen pits filled with hot coals of local coastal live oak.[citation needed] Meals are often accommodated with pinquitos, small pink beans that are considered endemic to the Santa Maria Valley.[9]

Colorado Edit

The traditional Cuisines of Colorado is similar to the cuisine of New Mexico: being influenced by its ties to the colonial Spanish, Mexican, Native American and the American Chuckwagon.[10][11] Emphasis on wild game such as Bison, Elk, Trout, and Rocky mountain oyster accompanied with local products such as Paliside peaches and Olathe sweet corn sets them apart from the cuisine of New Mexico.[12][13] Furthermore, varietal differences between the heirloom crops of local Hispano populations in southern Colorado also exist, with the Garcia bolita beans (as opposed to the New Mexican bolita)[14] and the New Mexico chile pepper from Hatch, New Mexico, as well as peppers from Pueblo, Colorado.[15] Due to this there exists a friendly rivalry between Colorado and New Mexico over who grows the best chile.[16] The Pueblo chili tends to accompany itself to traditional dishes like that of the Slopper and Coloradoan green chili.[17]

Nevada Edit

The indigenous cuisine of Nevada is mainly New Mexican as well as Utah influenced Mormon foodways, these remain popular with Nevadans. New Mexican restaurants have success in the state, take for example the Las Vegas Valley area with Carlito's Burritos and former Garduño's locations, like Carlito's Burritos offer New Mexico green chile roasts in early Autumn.[18][19] This native food style is also greatly influenced by the myriad of buffets and global restaurants in the Las Vegas area, leading to a distinctive culinary scene.[20]

Other foods such as Basque cuisine also have a presence in the area, with many Basque restaurants in Las Vegas, and a Basque festival in Elko. There are some California influences, like the Picon Punch beverage not often found outside Nevada in modern times.[21]

New Mexico Edit

The most prevalent cuisine type of New Mexico is that of the cuisine originating in the historical region of Santa Fe de Nuevo México, with New Mexican cuisine continuing to be a blend of traditional foods of the Puebloans and Hispanos of New Mexico with modern American and Mexican influences.[22]

Texas Edit

Tex-Mex cuisine was first created from the early Tejano people in Texas. This type of southwestern cuisine is heavy in cheese, beans, and meat. Dishes include heavy usage of the Chiltepin pepper. Popular dishes include enchiladas, King Ranch casserole, menudo, and chili con carne.[citation needed]

Utah Edit

 
Fry sauce with french fries at a restaurant in Utah

Potatoes were the first crop planted by the pioneers when they arrived in the Salt Lake Valley in 1847 with seeds from the eastern states. According to William Clayton the first settlers in Utah also planted turnips, oats, corn, buckwheat and beans. Peach pits and apple seeds were planted at the insistence of Brigham Young.[citation needed]

Veterans of the Mexican–American War brought back seeds from California, introducing club wheat and the California pea to the state.[23]

In modern times Utah is not noted for its culinary traditions except its fry sauce, a mix of ketchup and mayonnaise that is served with nearly everything.[24]

Southwestern dishes Edit

 
Cactus fries with a side of prickly pear sauce
 
A burrito with red chile, often referred to as a "smothered burrito"

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Native Americans." (cached version). Ed101.bu.edu 2011-08-24 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed July 2011.
  2. ^ Neudorf, Samantha (January 4, 2014). "America's 15 best Tex-Mex chain restaurants". USA Today. from the original on May 21, 2022. Retrieved December 1, 2022.
  3. ^ Fergusson, Erna (1934). Mexican Cookbook. University of New Mexico Press.
  4. ^ a b "A Cheat Sheet to Southwestern Food". Eater. 23 January 2019.
  5. ^ a b "What Makes Tucson Deserving of the Title of the United States' First Capital of Gastronomy". Smithsonian Magazine.
  6. ^ Mercuri, Becky (2007). The Great American Hot Dog Book:Recipes and Side Dishes from Across America. Gibbs Smith. p. 115. ISBN 9781423600220.
  7. ^ "Tucson Becomes an Unlikely Food Star". The New York Times. August 23, 2016.
  8. ^ "Santa Maria Style Barbecue". Pinquito Bean Recipes. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  9. ^ "Advantages Of Custom Homes". santamariavisitor.com. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  10. ^ "Journeying through a History of Colorado Food". History Colorado. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  11. ^ Ryan. "Colorado Cuisine: From Traditional Food to Porno-Molecular Gastronomy". Savage Minds. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  12. ^ "9 Colorado Famous Foods". Rocky Mountain Food Tours. 2021-09-01. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  13. ^ Annie (2015-06-04). "11 Foods And Drinks Everyone in Colorado Absolutely LOVES". OnlyInYourState. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  14. ^ "Garcia Bolita". Native-Seeds-Search. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  15. ^ "The Heart of Pueblo Chile". Colorado Country Life Magazine. 2019-08-31. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  16. ^ "Hatch or Pueblo? New Mexico Fires up Chile Rivalry with Ad Blasting Colorado". 4 September 2019.
  17. ^ "Old Fashioned Colorado Green Chili". Denver Green Chili. 2014-01-30. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  18. ^ Rinella, Heidi Knapp (August 6, 2020). "Sprouts won't roast Hatch chile this year, but Carlito's Burritos will". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  19. ^ "Garduños at Fiesta Rancho". Thrillist. October 5, 2017. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  20. ^ Arrascaeta, Christina (February 5, 2020). "Three Nevada Restaurants Are Among The Top 100 Places To Eat In America This Year". OnlyInYourState. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  21. ^ "The origin of the Picon punch, a quintessential Western cocktail". Reno Gazette-Journal. August 10, 2017.
  22. ^ Galloway, Lindsey (February 27, 2012). "The backbone of New Mexican cuisine". BBC Travel. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
  23. ^ Cheney, Brock. Plain by Wholesome: Foodways of the Mormon Pioneers. University of Utah Press. p. 26.
  24. ^ "Utah ranks 47th for states with the best food scenes, travel site says". KUTV. November 6, 2020.

Further reading Edit

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cuisine of the Southwestern United States news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The cuisine of the Southwestern United States is food styled after the rustic cooking of the Southwestern United States It comprises a fusion of recipes for things that might have been eaten by Spanish colonial settlers cowboys Native Americans 1 and Mexicans throughout the post Columbian era there is however a great diversity in this kind of cuisine throughout the Southwestern states citation needed A pot of chili con carne with beans and tomatoesSouthwestern cuisine is similar to Mexican cuisine but often involves larger cuts of meat namely pork and beef and less use of tripe brain and other parts not considered as desirable in the United States citation needed As with Mexican cuisine Southwestern cuisine is also largely known for its use of spices particularly the chile or chili pepper citation needed A number of casual dining and fast food restaurants specializing in Southwestern cuisine have become popular in the United States 2 New Mexican cuisine is the most popular in the states of New Mexico Colorado Northern Arizona Southern Nevada and Utah It is known for its dedication to the New Mexico chile the majority of the crop is grown in Hatch New Mexico Part of New Mexican cuisine is smothering each dish with either red chile green chile or both mixing of both is referred to as Christmas and usage of pork or beef Beyond just chile it also includes flavors such as pinon and dishes such as breakfast burritos biscochitos and sopapillas Texan cuisine has a Southwestern cuisine called Tex Mex while Arizona s style of Southwestern cuisine is often called Sonoran since the Sonoran Desert covers a third of the state Contents 1 History 2 Characteristics 3 States 3 1 Arizona 3 2 California 3 3 Colorado 3 4 Nevada 3 5 New Mexico 3 6 Texas 3 7 Utah 4 Southwestern dishes 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingHistory EditWhen New Mexico was still part of New Spain and the Republic of Mexico regional ingredients were more limited with few imports supplementing locally grown food This gave New Mexican cuisine its unique palate citation needed All cooking was done at home by women who toasted whole spices and ground corn by hand using metates Hunters made jerky in the style of New Mexican carne seca with game meats fish and wild birds Fruits and vegetables were sun dried in preparation for the winter citation needed Food was slow cooked in iron or copper pots over open fires and the only imported items were non perishables from New Spain coffee sugar and spices citation needed The expansion of the railway system allowed the importation of milled flour and corn meal sugar lemons oranges and other ingredients from the States clarification needed Traditional ways of cooking were eventually replaced by iron stoves The basic chile beans and corn dishes from Mexican cuisine evolved over time and in modern form often substitute extremely hot peppers and condiments for the subtle balanced spicing of authentic Mexican cuisine Native Americans and Hispanos developed the earliest forms of New Mexico chile to supplement this taste citation needed By the early 20th century tostadas chile joints and home cooked chile suppers and tamale vendors had become part of the cultural landscape 3 Characteristics EditThe staple ingredients of Southwestern cuisine are corn squash and beans Called the three sisters they have been staples of North American agriculture since ancient times Beans are served whole or refried and both styles can be used as filling for tostadas tacos burritos and similar dishes Many bean varieties are consumed but the pinto bean is the most iconic bean of southwestern cuisine 4 Southwestern food is distinguished by the use of chile peppers as the primary seasoning first brought to Santa Fe with the arrival of the Spanish from Mexico citation needed Chile peppers are used as a topping for virtually every dish from pizza to bagels or just fried tempura and eaten whole Most dishes from burritos to scrambled eggs are served with plentiful amounts of chile sauce 4 States EditArizona Edit nbsp A Sonoran hot dog topped with pinto beans and tomatoesThe cuisine of Arizona is influenced by its location and proximity to Mexico and reflects a blend of Hispanic Native American and pioneer culinary traditions The O odham peoples cultivated crops like maize and tepary beans around the Sonoran Desert area located at the base of the Tucson Mountains 5 Local dishes include raspado huevos rancheros and tamales The Sonoran hot dog is an Arizona specialty served with pinto beans guacamole jalapenos salsa and layered with other southwestern flavors 6 Tucson Arizona became the first American city to receive the designation of City of Gastronomy by UNESCO citation needed Restaurants use local ingredients many grown with heirloom seeds distributed by non profit organizations like Native Seeds SEARCH 5 Salads and salsas are made with cholla cactus gathered and dried at the San Xavier Indian Reservation 7 California Edit Main article Santa Maria style barbecue nbsp Tri tip on the grill with a saucepan of beans and loaves of bread Santa Maria style barbecue is a regional traditional cuisine rooted in the Santa Maria Valley in Santa Barbara County on the Central Coast of California It originated during the mission era of California when local rancheros and vaqueros would host Spanish style feasts during spring 8 They barbecued meat over earthen pits filled with hot coals of local coastal live oak citation needed Meals are often accommodated with pinquitos small pink beans that are considered endemic to the Santa Maria Valley 9 Colorado Edit The traditional Cuisines of Colorado is similar to the cuisine of New Mexico being influenced by its ties to the colonial Spanish Mexican Native American and the American Chuckwagon 10 11 Emphasis on wild game such as Bison Elk Trout and Rocky mountain oyster accompanied with local products such as Paliside peaches and Olathe sweet corn sets them apart from the cuisine of New Mexico 12 13 Furthermore varietal differences between the heirloom crops of local Hispano populations in southern Colorado also exist with the Garcia bolita beans as opposed to the New Mexican bolita 14 and the New Mexico chile pepper from Hatch New Mexico as well as peppers from Pueblo Colorado 15 Due to this there exists a friendly rivalry between Colorado and New Mexico over who grows the best chile 16 The Pueblo chili tends to accompany itself to traditional dishes like that of the Slopper and Coloradoan green chili 17 Nevada Edit The indigenous cuisine of Nevada is mainly New Mexican as well as Utah influenced Mormon foodways these remain popular with Nevadans New Mexican restaurants have success in the state take for example the Las Vegas Valley area with Carlito s Burritos and former Garduno s locations like Carlito s Burritos offer New Mexico green chile roasts in early Autumn 18 19 This native food style is also greatly influenced by the myriad of buffets and global restaurants in the Las Vegas area leading to a distinctive culinary scene 20 Other foods such as Basque cuisine also have a presence in the area with many Basque restaurants in Las Vegas and a Basque festival in Elko There are some California influences like the Picon Punch beverage not often found outside Nevada in modern times 21 New Mexico Edit Main article New Mexican cuisine The most prevalent cuisine type of New Mexico is that of the cuisine originating in the historical region of Santa Fe de Nuevo Mexico with New Mexican cuisine continuing to be a blend of traditional foods of the Puebloans and Hispanos of New Mexico with modern American and Mexican influences 22 Texas Edit Main article Tex Mex Tex Mex cuisine was first created from the early Tejano people in Texas This type of southwestern cuisine is heavy in cheese beans and meat Dishes include heavy usage of the Chiltepin pepper Popular dishes include enchiladas King Ranch casserole menudo and chili con carne citation needed Utah Edit Main article Mormon foodways nbsp Fry sauce with french fries at a restaurant in UtahPotatoes were the first crop planted by the pioneers when they arrived in the Salt Lake Valley in 1847 with seeds from the eastern states According to William Clayton the first settlers in Utah also planted turnips oats corn buckwheat and beans Peach pits and apple seeds were planted at the insistence of Brigham Young citation needed Veterans of the Mexican American War brought back seeds from California introducing club wheat and the California pea to the state 23 In modern times Utah is not noted for its culinary traditions except its fry sauce a mix of ketchup and mayonnaise that is served with nearly everything 24 Southwestern dishes Edit nbsp Cactus fries with a side of prickly pear sauce nbsp A burrito with red chile often referred to as a smothered burrito Albondigas de pollo Arizona California burrito Arizona cheese crisp Burrito Cactus fries Chili con carne Chili con queso Chile relleno Chimichanga Enchilada casserole Enchiladas Fajitas Flan Huevos rancheros Jalapeno poppers King Ranch chicken Menudo Nachos New Mexico breakfast burrito Pozole Quesadilla Rice and beans Rocky Mountain Oysters Salsa Slopper Sopapillas Tacos Tamale pie Taquitos TostadasSee also EditElia Aboumrad Jackie Alpers author of the Taste of Tucson cookbook Jane Butel author on the subject Susan Feniger author television host and co proprietor of the famed Border Grill Mary Sue Milliken author television host and co proprietor of the famed Border Grill Stephan Pyles author and restaurateur Aaron Sanchez Marcela Valladolid New Mexican cuisinePortals nbsp Food nbsp Wine nbsp Beer nbsp DrinkReferences Edit Native Americans cached version Ed101 bu edu Archived 2011 08 24 at the Wayback Machine Accessed July 2011 Neudorf Samantha January 4 2014 America s 15 best Tex Mex chain restaurants USA Today Archived from the original on May 21 2022 Retrieved December 1 2022 Fergusson Erna 1934 Mexican Cookbook University of New Mexico Press a b A Cheat Sheet to Southwestern Food Eater 23 January 2019 a b What Makes Tucson Deserving of the Title of the United States First Capital of Gastronomy Smithsonian Magazine Mercuri Becky 2007 The Great American Hot Dog Book Recipes and Side Dishes from Across America Gibbs Smith p 115 ISBN 9781423600220 Tucson Becomes an Unlikely Food Star The New York Times August 23 2016 Santa Maria Style Barbecue Pinquito Bean Recipes Retrieved 2021 11 10 Advantages Of Custom Homes santamariavisitor com Retrieved 2021 11 10 Journeying through a History of Colorado Food History Colorado Retrieved 2021 11 10 Ryan Colorado Cuisine From Traditional Food to Porno Molecular Gastronomy Savage Minds Retrieved 2021 11 10 9 Colorado Famous Foods Rocky Mountain Food Tours 2021 09 01 Retrieved 2021 11 10 Annie 2015 06 04 11 Foods And Drinks Everyone in Colorado Absolutely LOVES OnlyInYourState Retrieved 2021 11 10 Garcia Bolita Native Seeds Search Retrieved 2021 11 10 The Heart of Pueblo Chile Colorado Country Life Magazine 2019 08 31 Retrieved 2021 11 10 Hatch or Pueblo New Mexico Fires up Chile Rivalry with Ad Blasting Colorado 4 September 2019 Old Fashioned Colorado Green Chili Denver Green Chili 2014 01 30 Retrieved 2021 11 10 Rinella Heidi Knapp August 6 2020 Sprouts won t roast Hatch chile this year but Carlito s Burritos will Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved October 9 2022 Gardunos at Fiesta Rancho Thrillist October 5 2017 Retrieved October 9 2022 Arrascaeta Christina February 5 2020 Three Nevada Restaurants Are Among The Top 100 Places To Eat In America This Year OnlyInYourState Retrieved October 9 2022 The origin of the Picon punch a quintessential Western cocktail Reno Gazette Journal August 10 2017 Galloway Lindsey February 27 2012 The backbone of New Mexican cuisine BBC Travel Retrieved April 6 2023 Cheney Brock Plain by Wholesome Foodways of the Mormon Pioneers University of Utah Press p 26 Utah ranks 47th for states with the best food scenes travel site says KUTV November 6 2020 Further reading EditNusom Lynn 1999 Authentic Southwestern Cooking Western National Parks Association ISBN 1 877856 89 4 Curtis Susan 1995 The Santa Fe School of Cooking Cookbook Spirited Southwestern Recipes Gibbs Smith ISBN 0 87905 619 3 ISBN 0 87905 873 0 Sedlar Rivera John 1994 1 ISBN 978 0 671 61162 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cuisine of the Southwestern United States amp oldid 1171243633, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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