Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
La Carta de Oaxaca is a Latino-owned [1] Mexican restaurant specializing in Oaxacan cuisine in Seattle's Ballard neighborhood. The menu has included tacos al pastor, [2] ceviche with pineapple, lamb birria, [3] mole negro over pork ribs, and tlayudas with chorizo, carne asada, cheese, and cabbage as toppings.
Los Danzantes Oaxaca serves Mexican food, mainly Oaxacan. The menu includes hoja santa with goat cheese and tomatillo sauce, as well as mole, salsa borracha with pork ribs, guava cheesecake, and mezcal. [5] The restaurant offers monthly options with seasonal ingredients. Reservations are recommended due to its popularity.
Pork Mole Negro, a 10 ounce pork flank topped with Oaxacan mole negro, truffle huitlacoche foam, and grilled peach chutney, apart of the Destination Oaxaca limited time menu at Toro Toro Fort Worth.
He is also a partner in Origen in Oaxaca, Mexico. [15] Ortega also helped create a menu for Mi Almita, [16] a concept opened by Chef Michael Mina in Honolulu in 2018 (now closed). In 2002, Ortega and Vaught opened Hugo's restaurant in the Montrose area of Houston, serving Authentic Regional Mexican Cuisine. [17]
Oaxacan cuisine is a regional cuisine of Mexico, centered on the city of Oaxaca, the capital of the eponymous state located in southern Mexico. Oaxaca is one of the country's major gastronomic, historical, and gastro-historical centers whose cuisine is known internationally.
In 1997, he created Casa Oaxaca, a small hotel with a restaurant and later two more restaurants in the city of Oaxaca. In 2008, his restaurant received the first Five Star Diamond Award as one of the 50 best restaurants in Mexico, an award he won in 2008, 2009 and 2010. [2] In 2011, one of his restaurants was named the best hotel restaurant at ...
Tlayuda con falda, a tlayuda folded in half and topped with grilled skirt steak. Tlayuda (Spanish pronunciation: [tɬaˈʝuða]), sometimes spelled clayuda, [1] [2] is a handmade dish in traditional Oaxacan cuisine, consisting of a large, thin, crunchy, partially fried or toasted tortilla [3] covered with a spread of refried beans, asiento (unrefined pork lard), lettuce or cabbage, avocado ...
For the uninitiated, mole (moh-lay) is a sauce that’s traditional in many parts of Mexico, including Oaxaca and Pueblo. These thick, pourable sauces come in many forms—mole negro, mole verde ...