Mexican Recipes
252 recipes

Jalapeño Popper Bites with Pecan Crust

Poblano Pepper Chile Rellenos Casserole with Cheese

Baked Cod Tacos with Mango Avocado Guacamole

Slow Cooker Chicken Tortilla Soup with Quinoa

Gluten Free Chicken Bean Enchiladas with Green Chile Sauce

Homemade Gluten-Free Taco Seasoning Mix

Slow Cooker Salsa Chicken with Melted Cheddar

Beef and Black Bean Stuffed Arepas with Chipotle

Dulce de Leche Filled Churros with Cinnamon Sugar

Slow-Cooked Pork in Spicy Tomato-Serrano Chile Sauce

Sweet Potato Caramelized Onion Taquitos with Mole Sauce

Loaded Beef Enchiladas with Green Chiles

Crispy Baked Masa Sopes with Beans and Cheese

Beef and Cheddar Mexican Casserole with Tortilla Layers

Cauliflower Rice Burrito Bowl with Sriracha Tahini

One-Pan Black Bean and Corn Taco Pasta with Melted Cheese

Chorizo and Egg Breakfast Torta with Avocado

Grilled Corn and Avocado Guacamole

Mexican Hot Chocolate Arroz con Leche Rice Pudding

Sourdough Flour Tortillas: Fluffy, Tangy Homemade

Mexican Sugar Cookies with Colored Dough and Cinnamon Sugar

Quick Pickled Apples with Serrano for Tacos

Quick Mole Sauce with Chipotle and Cocoa

Mexican Kale Salad with Lime-Cumin Dressing
Mexican food is about balance. Acid cuts fat. Heat meets cooling dairy. Every dish plays with these contrasts.
The foundation starts simple. Dried chiles get toasted in a dry pan until they smell like raisins and smoke. You'll use 3 to 5 types in one sauce. Ancho brings sweetness. Guajillo adds fruity heat. Chipotle gives smoke. Toast them 30 seconds per side at medium heat, then soak in hot water for 20 minutes.
Corn shows up everywhere. Fresh corn kernels in salsa. Masa harina for tortillas and tamales. Hominy in pozole.
Most Mexican cooking happens between 325F and 375F. Low and slow builds flavor. Meat braises for 2 to 3 hours until it shreds with a fork. Beans simmer for 90 minutes with onion and garlic.
Lime juice appears in 80% of dishes. Not lemon. Always lime. You'll squeeze it over tacos, into salsas, over grilled corn. Buy 2 pounds when you shop. You'll use them.
Texture matters as much as flavor. Crispy tostadas under soft refried beans. Crunchy raw onion on tender carnitas. Fresh cilantro on everything.
This isn't the heavy, cheese-covered food from chain restaurants. Real Mexican cooking uses cheese sparingly. A sprinkle of cotija on elote. Some Oaxaca cheese in quesadillas. The focus stays on chiles, herbs, and slow-cooked meat.
Beginner cooks do fine here. Start with salsa verde. Roast 1.5 pounds tomatillos and 2 jalapeños at 425F for 15 minutes. Blend with half an onion, 3 garlic cloves, and a handful of cilantro. Add salt. You just made restaurant-quality salsa.
The spice level adjusts easily. Remove seeds and membranes from chiles to cut heat by 70%. Keep them for fire. Dairy calms burns better than water. Have sour cream ready.
Mexican recipes feed crowds well. Most dishes scale up without fuss. Double the meat for tacos. Triple the salsa. The ratios stay constant.
Good Mexican food takes time but not skill. Let the oven and slow cooker do the work while flavors develop.
Essential Ingredients
Key Techniques
FAQ
What's the difference between Mexican and Tex-Mex food?
Mexican food uses less cheese and more varied chiles. A typical Mexican taco has meat, onion, cilantro, and salsa on a soft corn tortilla. Tex-Mex adds yellow cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, and flour tortillas. Mexican enchiladas get topped with crema and a sprinkle of cheese. Tex-Mex versions drown in melted cheddar. Mexican rice cooks with tomatoes. Tex-Mex rice is often yellow from spices. Both are good, just different. Tex-Mex developed in the 1940s when Mexican immigrants adapted recipes to American ingredients.
How do I reduce the heat in Mexican dishes?
Remove seeds and white membranes from chiles to cut heat by 70%. Use poblanos instead of jalapeños for mild flavor. Add dairy like sour cream or Mexican crema to finished dishes. For salsas, increase the ratio of tomatoes to chiles. A 4:1 tomato to chile ratio makes mild salsa. Sugar doesn't help with heat. Dairy fat binds to capsaicin better than anything else. Keep whole milk handy when cooking spicy food.
What equipment do I need for Mexican cooking?
A blender makes salsas and chile sauces properly. Get one that handles hot liquids. A comal (flat griddle) or cast iron pan toasts tortillas and chiles. Buy a tortilla press for $20 if you want fresh tortillas. A molcajete (stone mortar) makes better guacamole than any machine but isn't essential. A slow cooker handles carnitas and barbacoa perfectly. Most Mexican cooking uses basic pots and pans you already own.
How do I get restaurant-style flavor at home?
Restaurants use more salt and fat than home cooks. Add 1.5 teaspoons salt per pound of meat. Use lard for refried beans. Toast spices before grinding. Char your vegetables for salsa. Cook low and slow. Carnitas takes 3 hours at 275F. Let flavors rest. Salsa improves after 2 hours. Meat benefits from overnight marination. Buy Mexican oregano and real cotija cheese. These small changes make huge differences.