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Cahuamanta in taco form. Caguamanta is a typical Mexican seafood dish made with ray (often confused with Manta Ray) and shrimp.It is usually prepared as soup, containing ray, shrimp and vegetables.
Encarnación Pinedo published El cocinero español (The Spanish Cook) in 1898 in California and included recipes for chilaquiles tapatíos a la mexicana, chilaquiles a la mexicana, and chilaquiles con camarones secos (chilaquiles with dry shrimp). [5]
Mexican cook and author Josefina Velázquez de León wrote more than 140 cookbooks in her lifetime. [1] This bibliography, which may not be complete, is based on Velázquez de León's works in the Mexican Cookbook Collection at The University of Texas at San Antonio Libraries Special Collections [2] and works listed in WorldCat. [3]
It combines ingredients and cooking methods from Spain and from pre-colonial Mexico. [2] The use of olives and capers give something of a Mediterranean flavor to the dish, and shows the Spanish influence. [3] [4] Traditionally, a whole red snapper is used, gutted and de-scaled and marinated in lime juice, salt, pepper, nutmeg and garlic.
Caldo de siete mares (in English, "seven seas soup"), also known as caldo de mariscos ("seafood soup") is a Mexican version of fish stew, [1] popular in coastal regions in Mexico. [2] It is typically made with tomato , fish , or seafood broth with local fresh seafood ingredients and, like other Mexican soups, cooked quickly in a thin broth .
Huachinango a la Veracruzana (Snapper Veracruz style) The cuisine of Veracruz is the regional cooking of Veracruz, a Mexican state along the Gulf of Mexico.Its cooking is characterized by three main influences—indigenous, Spanish, and Afro-Cuban—per its history, which included the arrival of the Spanish and of enslaved people from Africa and the Caribbean.
Tortillitas de camarones are shrimp fritters from the province of Cádiz in Andalusia, Spain. They are made with a batter of wheat flour, chickpea flour, water, onion (alternatively shallot or scallion), parsley, shrimp, salt and pepper. The batter is then fried on both sides in a pan with plenty of olive oil. Usually it is served with small ...
Romeritos is a Mexican dish from Central Mexico, [1] consisting of tender sprigs of seepweed (Suaeda spp.) which are boiled and served in a mole sauce seasoned with dried shrimp blended into the mix. Typical additional ingredients include boiled potatoes, nopales and re-hydrated shrimp.