Sunday, October 12, 2025

In San Luis Potosí, these brothers champion Mexico’s traditional liquors — and find new ones

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Tomas Solares and Carlos Nava in San Luis Potosi at Solares' farm
Carlos Nava at Don Tomás Solares' farm just outside of San Luis Potosí city. The Navas' interest in promoting Mexican-made liquor started with mezcal and with Solares' pulque.

Tomás and Carlos Nava just might be the future of alcoholic beverages in San Luis Potosí, and it all started by reviving one of their old hangouts.

La Piquería calls itself a pulque and mezcal bar, but it is really a full-service establishment, with all kinds of beverages and bar food. Located in an old mansion in the historic center of San Luis Potosí, its backstory makes the place special.

Twenty or so years ago, they frequented a bar called El Delirio Azul (Blue Delirium). It was an alternative kind of place, with a large portrait of Che Guevara and frequented by people wanting to change the world.

The bar ran into problems when one owner became involved with resistance to the opening of a mine on San Pedro Mountain by a Canadian company. In the end, this owner became a political refugee, ironically in Canada, and the business withered and disappeared.

germinating cacahuatzintle corn to make whiskey in Mexico
Germinating 300 kilos of cacahuatzintle, a Mexican corn variety used to make pozole. The Navas are searching for the best native variety to make whiskey.

The building came up for rent in 2010. The brothers’ fond memories of Delirio Azul prompted them to reestablish a bar in the building, which opened in 2011. At first, the bar was mostly a beer joint, but that would soon change. The business was successful enough, but they wanted to do something distinctive, so they looked to mezcal, which had been very traditional in San Luis Potosí but had fallen out of favor many years ago. Even as late as the early 2010s, it was considered far inferior to vodka and whiskey.

They researched local mezcal as well as those from Oaxaca and Durango. Their city was a little behind the times, but when mezcal’s popularity saw a resurgence, the Navas were ready.

Success with mezcal inspired them to try yet another out-of-favor alcoholic beverage — pulque. San Luis Potosí’s pulque is made from the maguey plant that Mesoamericans brought here in the early colonial period, but the flavor is a bit different than other pulques elsewhere, likely because of the local soils and more arid conditions.

“If we were considered insane for selling mezcal, we were considered raving mad for selling pulque.” Carlos says. The beverage was considered to be something only for the lowest of the low classes, served in places that rival any dive bar in the world.

Undeterred, the brothers found a good, authentic source for pulque in one Tomás Solares, who at nearly 80 still makes it how he learned as a small child on the land he grew up on.

It took a little time, but in a couple of years, the bar went from selling 5 liters a week to over 200 before the pandemic. It’s back up again to over 100 now.

The Navas’ success is not in making or improving mezcal or pulque but rather in offering a bit of the area’s history in an environment that is more comfortable for more kinds of people. Carlos admits it is a kind of “gentrification,” but they are proud that their establishment attracts everyone from the guy who needs bodyguards to the guy working construction.

Going on year 12, La Piquería is now the brothers’ bread and butter, and just the start of their entrepreneurship.

La Piqueria mezcaleria in San Luis Potosi, Mexico
Carlos and Tomás Nava’s mezcalería in San Luis Potosí.

Research into mezcal and pulque has inspired Tomás to try his hand at production. A local family, the Navarros, was instrumental in helping him get a feel for their method of making mezcal, which is distilled in large, heavy clay pots.

But he also gained an appreciation for the values behind their work. For that reason, he did not try to take on mezcal production with them.

In 2019, a friend in the fruit export business found that a client in California was distilling alcohol from prickly pears and asked Tomás if he could do that. He told him, “Give me six months” and bought a small still the next day. This was the start of El Gran Tunal (The Great Prickly Pear Fruit), what he calls an experimental distillery.

Quickly, his attention also turned to Mexico’s heirloom corn varieties. He has joined with other craft and experimental Mexican whiskey makers to not only figure out which corn varieties are best for distilling but also how to define and protect a new and rapidly growing industry.

Nava wants people like him to define what “Mexican whiskey” is before some large international concern does it.

Thanks to an Australian mother, the Navas are native English speakers. This has allowed him to contact and get mentored by craft whisky and moonshine makers in the United States, who are more than happy to work with someone south of the border. From them, Tomás has gained access to new technology and techniques, such as electric coils for heating, which he integrates with what knowledge he has acquired in Mexico.

I learned a LOT about the process of turning Mexican corn into whiskey. Mexican corn holds many promises, especially in flavor profiles, as well as challenges. One challenge is its low alcohol-by-volume (ABV) content. For this reason, 300 kilos of corn at most produces 90 liters of whiskey.

Tomás’ experimentation is not limited to corn. While I was there, his first still was pumping out a delicious gin variant flavored with cardón cactus fruit instead of using juniper berries. He also had batches of spirits made with mango, beetroot and sugar cane. He no longer distills pulque, however, as it produces too little distillate and ruins a lot of pulque in the process.

Distilling pots
Old-fashioned clay distilling pots sit near newer metal ones. Both types of pots have their advantages and disadvantages.

The Navas are modern businessmen, but both have the social consciousness that drew them to the original bar. They worry about balancing the economic needs of producers with preserving Mexico’s beverage traditions and the threats posed by the modern world.

With two years and a lot of money invested in his small distillery, the concern is not simply altruistic. He says that at any time, someone could come to his door to “ask him what his price is,” and he knows he needs an answer.

Leigh Thelmadatter arrived in Mexico 18 years ago and fell in love with the land and the culture in particular its handcrafts and art. She is the author of Mexican Cartonería: Paper, Paste and Fiesta (Schiffer 2019). Her culture column appears regularly on Mexico News Daily.

Discover chorizo’s world of possibilities

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chorizo
Chorizo on the grill — it doesn't get any better than this.

Chorizo is essentially an unassuming pork sausage. But all you need is one bite to taste its spicy Hispanic roots and realize the world of possibilities for using it in the kitchen.

Chorizo’s bold, zesty chile flavor is complemented by the warmth of cinnamon and cloves and balanced by herbs and spices like oregano, paprika and garlic. And pork — ahhh, pork! — imparts its unparalleled richness and depth of flavor.

First things first: there’s Mexican chorizo and Spanish chorizo, and they’re completely different things: Mexican chorizo is raw, made with fresh pork, herbs and spices. It must be cooked before eating. On the other hand, Spanish chorizo is smoked and can be eaten as-is, sliced like salami and often sold chilled. This is an important distinction, so be sure you know what you’re buying.

(The spicing is different too.) We’ll be talking about Mexican chorizo here.

tacos with chorizo
Tacos with chorizo is a classic dish for a reason — because it’s delicious!

Mexican chorizo is sold in sausage-like tubes or links; they can be sauteed or grilled whole, like any other sausage, but another more versatile option is to cut open one end, squeeze out the filling and sauté it. Then the crispy, zesty crumbles can be used in a myriad of ways: mixed into any pasta dish or sauce where you usually use ground beef — like lasagna, Bolognese or Carbonara; added to scrambled eggs, omelets or frittata; crumbled atop papas locas (ask your local street food vendor) or nachos; added to quesadillas or tacos; or mixed into chili.

Chorizo is a simple “secret” ingredient that adds pizazz to any dish and turns “ho-hum” into “wow!” And it’s easy to keep in the fridge so you always have some on hand.

In the grocery store or market, you’ll find many brands of chorizo, all with different spicing. It may take some trial and error to find a couple that work for you. Butcher shops will often make their own as well. You’ll also find vegetarian chorizo, made with soy protein and traditional flavorings and even lower-fat chicken or turkey chorizo.

Feel like making chorizo yourself? Check out this recipe, head to the butcher and have at it. Let me know how it turns out!

Black Bean-Chorizo-Sweet Potato Tacos

Substitute regular white potatoes if you like.

  • 1 Tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 medium sweet potato, peeled, in ¼-inch dice
  • 1 lb. fresh Mexican chorizo, removed from casing
  • 1 (15-oz.) can black beans, drained
  • Salt and pepper
  • For serving: corn tortillas, crema, pickled red onions, cilantro, queso fresco, salsa

Heat olive oil over medium heat in large skillet. Add sweet potato. Cook, stirring, 4–5 minutes. Push sweet potatoes to edges of the skillet; add chorizo.

Brown chorizo for 4–5 minutes, breaking it into bite-sized crumbles as it cooks. Once the chorizo is browned, mix with sweet potatoes. Add black beans to skillet, stirring to combine with chorizo/sweet potato mixture. Cook until heated through, about 2 minutes. Taste and season with salt or pepper as needed. Spoon into tortillas, add toppings and serve.

Rachel Ray’s Chorizo Sloppy Joes (meat and veggie versions)

For Sauce:

  • 1 (8-oz.) can tomato paste
  • ½ cup beef stock
  • 2 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 Tbsp. hot sauce
  • 2 Tbsp. cider vinegar
  • 2 Tbsp. brown sugar or grated piloncillo
Chorizo Sloppy Joe sandwich
Who knew you could make a Sloppy Joe sandwich with chorizo?

For Joes:

  • 2 Tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 large onion, chopped
  • 1 red bell pepper, chopped
  • 1 big jalapeno, seeded and chopped
  • 1 rib celery with leafy top, finely chopped
  • Salt and pepper
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced or grated
  • 1½ lb. 85% ground sirloin (or plant-based beef substitute)
  • ½ lb. fresh beef or pork chorizo (or soy-based chorizo substitute)
  • For serving: Soft burger rolls, chopped white onion, pickles

Heat oil in cast-iron skillet or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add onions, peppers and celery, season with salt and pepper; stir and cook a few minutes. Stir in garlic.

Add beef and chorizo. Cook till browned and crumbly.

Stir in the sauce, reduce heat to low. Simmer a few minutes to combine flavors. Serve with rolls and toppings.

Grill-Pressed Chorizo Tortas

  • 4 links Mexican chorizo
  • 2 poblano peppers
  • 1 large red onion, cut into 1/2-inch rounds, skewered horizontally
  • 2 avocados, cut into ½-inch slices
  • 6 oz. Oaxaca, Chihuahua or Mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced or grated
  • 4 bolillos (sandwich rolls)
  • 1/3 cup chipotle mayonnaise
  • For grill cooking: 4 bricks wrapped in heavy-duty aluminum foil

If using a grill, prepare the fire and grate for cooking. (If using a griddle, follow same instructions for chorizo; char poblanos over an open flame using tongs; sauté onions in skillet or on griddle.)

Place chorizo, poblanos and onions on grill. Cook chorizo until browned all over, about 8 minutes; transfer to cutting board. Cook poblanos until charred all over, about 10 minutes; transfer to bowl, cover with plastic wrap. Let rest until cooled.

Cook onions until softened and charred on both sides, about 5 minutes per side; transfer to cutting board, remove skewers. Place bricks on grill and cover.

Remove charred skin from poblanos; stem, seed and cut peppers into long strips. Halve chorizo lengthwise.

Place 1 chorizo link on bottom half of bolillo, top with poblano strips, onions, avocados and cheese. Spread chipotle mayonnaise on other side of roll; place on top of sandwich. Repeat with remaining rolls.

chorizo torta
Regular sandwiches don’t hold a candle to tortas stuffed with chorizo and all the fixings.

On grill: place prepared sandwiches on grill. Wearing well-insulated grilling gloves, carefully place one brick on top of each sandwich, gently pushing down to press. Cover grill and cook until sandwich has flattened and bread has crisped, 5–10 minutes.

On griddle or skillet: place prepared sandwiches on preheated griddle sprayed with cooking oil. Use foil-covered bricks, cast-iron pan or other heavy, heatproof object to press down sandwich, cooking at medium-high heat until cheese melts and bread crisps, 5–10 minutes.

Serve immediately.

Janet Blaser is the author of the best-selling book, Why We Left: An Anthology of American Women Expatsfeatured on CNBC and MarketWatch. She has lived in Mexico since 2006. You can find her on Facebook.

After 20 years in Mexico, I love my life more than ever before

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young woman in Mexico
Sarah DeVries when she first came to Mexico.

I first came to Mexico almost exactly 20 years ago, and I’ve been here, off and on (mostly on), ever since.

Leigh Thelmadatter’s piece on those of us who would count ourselves long-time immigrants (intentional or not) — as well as Mexico News Daily’s recent survey asking people why they’ve moved their families to Mexico — has got me thinking about these past 20 years of my life that I’ve been a permanent immigrant in this country.

With this 20-year milestone upon me, I’d like to take this week’s column space as an opportunity to reflect on my time here so far, which now (officially) accounts for half of my life.

That summer of 2002, before I left for Mexico in my junior year of college through a program called Brethren Colleges Abroad, my mom was worried: “You’ll fall in love and not want to come back!” she said.

“Oh, come on,” I responded, sure that I would return to the United States for good after my year in Mexico.

Alas, she was right: I fell in love with Mexico, and I fell hard.

The first couple of months were tough: our small group of study-abroad students spent the first month at an intensive language school in Cuernavaca, which involved a homestay with several children who thought it was hilarious to speak to me as rapidly as possible and then ask if I’d understood what they said. My Spanish was barely recognizable as Spanish in those days, and it would take me about 10 seconds to get out a four-word sentence — even so, it was usually incorrect.

I did a lot of crying that first month — it’s a humiliating experience as an adult to not be able to speak any better than a two-year-old — but by the end of the month, I was finally getting by. The immersive experience without the benefit of cell phones or easily-accessible internet (trips to the internet cafe happened maybe once a week) meant that I had no choice but to use Spanish constantly, and I got good at it quickly.

By the end of the academic year, I didn’t want to leave. Though I had assured my mother it absolutely would not happen, I had a serious boyfriend by then that I didn’t want to break up with. I returned to finish my degree in the U.S. and then went straight back to Mexico, where I started working as an ESL teacher at an English institute.

As most people my age know, life as a student and life as an adult worker are very different. That first year was quite lonely for me: even though I lived with my boyfriend, we had trouble getting our schedules to match.

Most English institutes (this was before they were online and “computers” were a major feature) were split-schedule in those days, so I typically worked from 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. and then again from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m., meaning much of my free time was spent alone while everyone else was at work. But in those days, there wasn’t much of a way to earn a living in Mexico as a foreigner unless you were a teacher, so that’s what I did.

Eventually, I got another job at a high school that I enjoyed much more, and that had a more normal schedule. An international school in Querétaro, it meant that I got to know people from all over the world.

Suddenly, Mexico had a more international feel: I had a cell phone and internet at my house and access to other foreigners.

In 2011, I married my longtime boyfriend, and we moved to Xalapa, where I got my first online job with Open English. Since then, I’ve only worked online and imagine I will keep doing so for the foreseeable future. We had our daughter in 2013, and a couple of years ago made the difficult decision to separate.

Even after that painful period (which happened to coincide with the beginning of the pandemic – oh, boy!), I’ve never thought of returning to the United States to live permanently. The obvious reason is that I would not ever want to separate my daughter from her dad. But even if we hadn’t had a child, I might have stayed.

Mexico is my home now. This is where I’ve “grown up” into a grown-up, and I often say that at this point, I have no idea even how to be a grown-up in the U.S.

I’m also very aware that the kind of lifestyle I have is one that would likely not be possible in the United States, which now seems to me from down here a somewhat strange and scary place. I appreciate the (remote) job opportunities made possible by U.S. citizenship; I very much don’t appreciate having to continue paying taxes to the U.S. as if I lived there, but what are you going to do?

Tomorrow, I board a plane to visit my country for the first time in two and a half years. It will be good to see my family and to speak English with a few more people than usual. But I won’t be staying.

We do a lot for love, and I’m more in love now — with my partner, with my daughter, with my adopted home, with my life — than I ever was before.

Sarah DeVries is a writer and translator based in Xalapa, Veracruz. She can be reached through her website, sdevrieswritingandtranslating.com and her Patreon page.

A song to dance the USMCA: the week at the morning news conferences

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President López Obrador at his Tuesday press conference. Presidencia de la República

President López Obrador demonstrated his capitalist credentials last weekend, inaugurating a Nestlé coffee factory in Veracruz.

Monday

AMLO opened the week with a dedication to “the best president in the history of Mexico,” referring to Benito Juárez and announced a post-conference ceremony to commemorate 150 years since the death of Mexico’s first indigenous leader.

“These autonomous bodies were created in the neoliberal period … they came up like mushrooms in the rain,” said the president, responding to a journalist’s charge that judges on an independent court were earning vast sums. “A kind of golden bureaucracy was created with very high salaries and all kinds of privileges,” the president continued, before pledging a one-off “Who’s who in the salaries” section, to reveal the earnings of public servants.

The president pays tribute to former leader Benito Juárez on Monday.
The president paid tribute to former leader Benito Juárez on Monday. Presidencia de la República

Fresh from his visit to Washington, D.C., López Obrador said the arrest of cartel leader Rafael Caro Quintero was unrelated to his meeting with U.S. President Joe Biden and insisted that U.S. security forces played no part in the arrest, despite their claims to the contrary.

However, the tabasqueño was ardent that another criminal case had been addressed: “I left a letter to President Biden about [Julian] Assange … explaining to him that Assange did not commit any serious crime, he did not cause the death of anyone, he did not violate any rights. He exercised his freedom, and that stopping him was going to mean a permanent affront to freedom of expression … I explained that Mexico is offering protection and asylum to Julian Assange,” he said of the long-imprisoned WikiLeaks founder, who is fighting extradition from the U.K. to the U.S.

Tuesday

The president confirmed a trade deal was in the making with Ecuador, but assured that shrimp and banana sellers in Mexico wouldn’t be compromised. He complimented the country’s center-right leader, Guillermo Lasso, before noting “it hasn’t been easy for him … facing protests and violence in prisons.” Another deadly prison riot in Ecuador left 13 inmates dead on Monday.

The safety of citizens was top of mind for the president, who endorsed an all inclusive strategy on the domestic security front. “It’s been decided that it is a matter of national security,” he said of section 5 of the Maya Train, adding that construction had resumed a week previously, despite a definitive suspension order from the courts. With the definitional change, responsibility for construction has passed to the Interior Ministry and the Security Ministry, although it is being managed by the National Tourism Promotion Fund (Fonatur).

It is not entirely clear what security threat emanates from a lack of train tracks in the country’s southeast.

“Doesn’t that argument have to be formally presented before the judges?” a journalist inquired, only to be met with a highly effective combination of denial and ambiguity.

Wednesday

Security Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez emphasized the downward trend in homicides in her report on Wednesday.
Security Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez emphasized the downward trend in homicides in her report on Wednesday. Presidencia de la República

In the monthly security report, the corresponding minister, Rosa Icela Rodríguez, celebrated only 15,400 murders in the first five months of the year, which she said was a 9.1% decrease in annual terms.

Tipping discourse in favor of truth, Ana Elizabeth García Vilchis addressed media wrongdoing in her “Who’s who in the lies of the week” section. García falsified a story “sung in chorus” by journalists that claimed U.S. President Joe Biden ordered AMLO to put up US $1.5 billion for security on the northern border. García also assured that the president wasn’t informed of the location of Caro Quintero by U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris.

Later in the conference, López Obrador found a novel way to demonstrate that Mexico wasn’t taking orders from the U.S. Responding to criticism that his energy policy violates the USMCA trade agreement, he ordered a song. “We can explain the energy policy of our country … Let’s see if you can find my countryman, Chico Che,” he said. Chico Che’s song “¡Uy, que miedo!” (“Ooh, how scary!”) was played for journalists and viewers.

Thursday

The USMCA returned to the conference on Thursday after U.S. and Canadian officials announced they were seeking trade dispute talks over the government’s favoring of state energy companies. “There is no violation of the treaty … our policies are defined in Mexico and have to do with our Constitution and laws,” the president said.

López Obrador added that separate dispute proceedings related to USMCA were previously initiated against the U.S. and Canada, and that Mexico had 70 days to respond before the matter would be referred to an international tribunal.

“What is our agenda? It’s not to privatize education or health, nor to privatize oil … our agenda is the well-being of the people,” the president insisted.

Later in the conference, another conflict surfaced. A journalist complained in a lengthy speech that she hadn’t been granted access to the conferences and accused the president of preferring flattery to hard questions. When another reporter interrupted the tirade, he was swiftly dismissed. “Shut up, palero … Sorry, when you have your moment, I don’t interrupt. You’re a palero,” she said, accusing him of being a pawn of the government.

The press corps at Thursday's conference.
The press corps at Thursday’s conference. Presidencia de la República

“Love and peace, love and peace,” the tabasqueño implored, raising a peace sign with both hands.

Friday

The president was in the tourist city Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, on Friday. He wished President Biden a speedy recovery from COVID-19.

López Obrador presented his evidence from the text of the USMCA to prove there had been no violation of the treaty. Reading from chapter 8, which he said was inserted as a revision at the government’s insistence, he cited: “‘Mexico has the direct, inalienable, and imprescriptible ownership of all hydrocarbons … in the subsoil of the national territory.'”

The president added that the previous agreement was tantamount to treachery and blamed “the conservatives” for ceding more than half of Mexico’s territory to the U.S. in 1848. He later called out U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken for criticizing Mexico’s record for violence against journalists, amid the U.S. pursuit of Assange, whom he called “one of the best, if not the best journalist of our times.”

Before signing off on another week of conferences, AMLO conceded that security in Mexico was no piece of cake. “Of course it is complicated, it is difficult. It’s not tortas ahogadas or tamalitos de chipilín, but we have to address the causes where the violence originates,” he said, naming a couple of Mexican dishes to stress the futility of simplistic solutions.

Mexico News Daily

AMLO predicts at least 3 more months of high inflation as rate hits 8%

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The president at his Friday morning conference in Puerto Vallarta.
The president at his Friday morning conference in Puerto Vallarta. Official Website of López Obrador

Inflation – which rose to 8.16% in the first half of July – will start coming down in three or four months, President López Obrador predicted Friday.

National statistics agency INEGI reported Friday that inflation increased 0.43% in the first 15 days of July compared to the second half of June, leaving the annual rate at a level not seen in more than two decades.

Prices for potatoes, eggs and oranges all rose by more than 6% in the space of just two weeks, while onions were 5.9% more expensive in the first half of July. The cost of air travel also increased, going up by more than 6%, tourism packages were up 4.4% and electricity rose 1.4%.

In annual terms, inflation — currently the product of a range of factors including pandemic-related supply chain problems, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, coronavirus restrictions in China and drought — was more than 17% for fruit and vegetables, over 16% for meat, almost 12% for processed food, beverages and tobacco, almost 8% for non-food goods, nearly 5% for energy products and 3% for housing and school fees.

Items in the canasta básica — a collection of basic foodstuffs and household items — rose 8.86% over the past year, a figure 0.7% higher than the annual headline rate, which is well over double the central bank’s 3% target.

The high inflation rate will give the central bank added incentive to raise interest rates again when its board meets on August 11. The Bank of México raised its benchmark interest rate by 75 basis points to 7.75% in late June. It was the first time since the introduction of a new monetary policy regime in 2008 that the bank had lifted its key rate by three-quarters of a percentage point.

Speaking in Puerto Vallarta at his regular news conference, López Obrador predicted that inflation will begin to ease in October or November. “That’s my forecast because international conditions are going to start to change,” he said.

The president highlighted that inflation in Mexico is lower than that in the United States, where it reached 9.1% in June, and the European Union, where it hit 9.6% last month. The federal government subsidizes gasoline, helping to keep energy prices down, but López Obrador acknowledged that authorities are struggling to keep a lid on food prices – despite the announcement in May of an agreement with the private sector to ensure fair prices for 24 products in the canasta básica.

The price of the <i>canasta básica</i>, an index that includes a variety of basic food items, has registered even higher inflation than the economy as a whole.
The price of the canasta básica, an index that includes a variety of basic food items, has registered even higher inflation than the economy as a whole.

“That’s why we’re now promoting all productive activity because the formula is to be self-sufficient in energy and self-sufficient in food,” he said. “That’s what we’ve proposed for many years, in contrast with the neoliberal model,” López Obrador said.

“… We’re now strongly promoting production for one’s own consumption, the production of corn, beans. And we’re strengthening our fertilizer production plants and the plan we have is to distribute free fertilizer to 2 million producers starting this year.”

López Obrador declared that the government is doing its bit so that high inflation is brought under control soon. “With optimism, without falling into triumphalism, I can tell you that we’re going to be fine, we’re going to control inflation soon,” he said.

“… We’ve endured two calamities that have brought us a lot of pain [and] suffering: the pandemic and this inflation, which is global, … exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, because the economy was already in bad shape, it was complicated by the pandemic and ended up worse with the war. They’re external factors that could improve, could change. … There may be opportunities for a fix, that’s what I believe,” López Obrador said.

With reports from El Economista and Milenio

Oaxaca’s new gastronomy center celebrates state’s culinary diversity

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Governor Alejandro Murat and his wife (center) at the opening festivities of the Gastronomic Center of Oaxaca.
Governor Alejandro Murat and his wife (center) at the opening festivities of the Gastronomic Center of Oaxaca. Twitter @alejandromurat

Oaxaca Governor Alejandro Murat officially opened on Thursday a new culinary center that will promote the traditional food and cooking methods of the southern state and educate new generations of local chefs.

Located in a former convent in the historic center of Oaxaca city, the Gastronomic Center of Oaxaca (CGO) has 12 establishments that will sell and promote the traditional cuisine of the state’s eight regions, Murat said.

An initiative of the state government, the center will also function as a cooking school affiliated with the Technological University of the Central Valleys of Oaxaca.

In addition to 12 different businesses that will offer typical food from regions such as the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and the Sierra Sur and host culinary events, the 69.8-million-peso (US $3.4 million) CGO has an events hall and an area where aguas y nieves oaxaqueñas (fruit-flavored beverages and shaved-ice treats) as well as mezcal cocktails, craft beer and coffee will be sold.

Chefs prepare to serve food at the CGO on Thursday.
Chefs prepare to serve food at the CGO on Thursday.

“This gastronomic center is a gift all the oaxaqueños are giving ourselves because it’s a project that was carried out collectively to celebrate the greatness of our state and also to continue writing the best pages of the history of a Oaxaca with well-being, governability and development,” Murat said.

The governor predicted that the CGO will directly and indirectly generate revenue of 50 million pesos (US $2.4 million) a year. It is expected to attract locals as well as domestic and international tourists.

Alejandro Ruiz, a renowned local chef, said the idea for the CGO came from a visit Oaxaca chefs and officials made to the Basque Culinary Center in San Sebastián, Spain.

“That project had an impact on us,” Ruiz said, adding that it was used as a reference to develop the CGO, in which “local cuisine will be the protagonist.”

He described the building where the CGO is housed – the Convento del Carmen Alto – as a “unique and emblematic space.”

The director of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) also attended the opening ceremony, during which he remarked that the project had helped to rescue one of the historic edifices of the Oaxaca capital. Diego Prieto also said that the CGO, via its culinary offerings, will promote the customs and traditions of Oaxaca’s different indigenous communities.

“This is a great event because Oaxaca now has another space to celebrate the local food culture,” he said of a state famous for its moles, chapulines (grasshoppers), tlayudas, chocolate, coffee and mezcal, among many other foods and beverages.

“… It’s an honor for me to be present at the inauguration of the center, which without a doubt will become one of the most important [culinary hubs] in the country,” Prieto said. INAH will move into new offices in the convent precinct once additional restoration has been completed, he added.

With reports from El Universal 

San Miguel de Allende: known for art, culture, history and … hiking?

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Puente San Rafael, ATV Extreme Tours, Mexico
Remains of the old San Rafael Bridge, on San Miguel de Allende's Rio Laja hiking and biking trail.ATV extreme tours

Travel + Leisure magazine calls San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, “Mexico’s hidden treasure,” and everyone I’ve spoken to agrees it’s as close to paradise as you’re likely to find on this little old planet.

It is, however, a “town,” and those sanmiguelenses who occasionally get a hankering for “country” may appreciate the advice of local resident Randy Kremlacek, who is one of the leaders of the San Miguel Hiking Group.

“The group has been doing this for at least 20 years,” Kremlacek told me. “In the beginning, hikers showed up at a local gas station at 8 a.m. on Sundays. I joined them because I thought it would be a good way to meet people and to get to know el campo, the countryside. I had zero experience hiking.

“The first time I went with them, we were walking along, and suddenly they started climbing up this mountainside — and I thought: it’s perfectly flat to the left; why are we doing this? So, it took me a while to learn what hiking is all about.”

San Miguel Hiking Group, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
San Miguel de Allende hiker Randy Kremlacek climbing a fissure at Las Cabras, in search of petroglyphs.

Below are descriptions of several hikes listed in San Miguel Hiking Group’s Guide to Walks and Hikes near San Miguel de Allende. You can download the guide from their English-language website for links to maps, GPS tracks and contacts for local guides.

El Charco del Ingenio

This place is named for a swimming hole near what are claimed to be the ruins of the first mill on the American continent, built in 1561.

“This,” Kremlacek told me, “is a botanical garden located in town, but somehow separate from town because it’s up high and you must cross pasture land to reach it. It’s more of a walk than a hike to me, but it’s a great place for people to get to know the flora and fauna of this area.”

Charco del Ingenio garden San Miguel de Allende
A glimpse of the beauty inside the El Charco del Ingenio, declared a Peace Zone by the Dalai Lama in 2004. LaMorenitaMia

“The botanical garden,” says the unnamed author of an article on the Mexico Desconocido website, “covers 67 hectares and has one of the most complete collections of Mexican cacti and succulents in the world. Many of these have been rescued from little-known areas of Mexico’s deserts and are often rare, threatened or in danger of extinction.”

This collection exists thanks to cactus aficionado Charles Glass, who settled in town in 1993 and then toured the country searching for plants to bring back to El Charco.

In 2004, the Dalai Lama visited the botanical garden and declared it a Peace Zone, a space free of violence and arms.

Parque Landeta

View from Tres Cruces, Guanajuato, Mexico
The view from Tres Cruces, a moderate hike of 7 or 8 kilometers. Randy Kremlacek

This is an ungroomed pastoral park, located adjacent to El Charco del Ingenio.

“It makes for a nice loop around the wetlands in the rainy season,” says Kremacek. “In my opinion, it’s more of a dog walk, but it offers a bit of a break from city life because it’s completely wild. It’s nothing spectacular like you’d find outside of town, but you will be getting peace and fresh air. And you almost feel like you are out in the campo (countryside).”

Tres Cruces (Three Crosses)

“This hike,” says Kremlacek, “is also called the Suspension Bridge Hike. When you leave town and head south, there’s a big hill topped by numerous antennas. You have a spectacular view of the city from up there, but if you proceed on to the suspension bridge and zipline area, you cross over that hill, and now you have a view of the presa (the dam) and the Guanajuato mountains in the distance. At first, it’s pretty steep, so it’s a moderate, not an easy, hike — perhaps 7 or 8 kilometers.  You’d never know that you are so close to town.”

La Joyita campsite, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
View from the La Joyita campsite, where you can spend the night under the stars. Randy Kremlacek

La Joyita (The Little Jewel)

Kremlacek says this is a beautiful camping area located about 15 kilometers from town. The first 11 kilometers are paved, and the remaining four are what hikers would call “good road,” but what others might consider challenging.

“There’s a family that lives here,” he says, “that has worked with foreigners and has developed a campsite. It’s a great place to spend the night: quiet, little light pollution and there is no music. They have both rough camping and two or three cabins, as well as old Airstream trailers. They also have a rustic full kitchen. Here you have an absolutely stunning view.

“It’s also the only place we hike where you have marked trails. This means you’ll find arrows: red for one trail, blue for the other, nothing fancy. To hike, you just show up and go for it. For camping, it would be a good idea to call and make a reservation: 415 153 7092.”

Sunken chapel at Allende dam, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
A chapel inside the Allende dam. This is also a great place to see water birds. Randy Kremlacek

Presa Allende (Allende Dam)

The dam was built in 1967 to provide water for irrigation and is fed by the Laja river. A small community of indigenous Otomí was forced to relocate, their houses swallowed up by the artificial lake.

Says Kremlacek: “One thing people go to see is the Capilla, or Sunken Church. Depending on the water level, it’s barely visible to totally accessible. Unfortunately, it’s brown water, polluted by runoff from the agribusinesses, and right now, it’s half covered with water hyacinth.”

It’s possible to walk to the ruins, says Kremlacek, but a beginner hiker would need someone to lead him to the spot. “If they are familiar with programs like Wikiloc or Alltrails, they can do it,” he says, “but otherwise, they’re going to need someone to show them where it’s at.”

San Miguel Hiking Group, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
Members of the San Miguel Hiking Group doing what they love to do on Sundays.

The land is perfectly flat, however. “The challenge here is that in the wet season, there’s a lot of growth,” he says, “but it’s beautiful, and there are lots of birds to see. The presa is just full of them, and it’s very green all year long.“

Río Laja (The Laja River)

The Rio Laja Trail is a walking and biking trail that follows the banks of the Laja river from the Allende dam for a distance of 51.9 kilometers. The trail is based upon footpaths that have been established by rural residents over many years.

It’s a great place for getting exercise, enjoying the peace and beauty of nature and viewing birds. It’s such a nice place, in fact, that the Audubon Society has published a Río Laja Trail Guide consisting of 12 printable PDF files with descriptions, waypoints and photos of each stretch of the route.

Tres Cruces, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
Detail of a picturesque stream at Tres Cruces. Randy Kremlacek

After a long day of hiking, you are bound to work up quite an appetite. Knowing that Randy Kremlacek is co-owner of  Venencia Restaurant in San Miguel de Allende, I asked him what from his menu he would recommend to a hungry hiker.

“We are the authentic Oaxacan restaurant in San Miguel,” Kremlacek told me. “After a hard day of hiking, people might enjoy our tlayuda (also called clayuda).”

Here is Kremlacek’s description of a tlayuda “for the ears of a foreigner.”

“Imagine the thinnest pizza crust possible, with only Mexican ingredients on top. So it’s a paper-thin tortilla, griddled until it’s brittle, covered with black-bean paste and then a variety of toppings. It comes to your table in a big flat comal, or griddle pan, and you just snap pieces off. It’s an ideal communal food. Four of you can eat out of the same dish.”

Entrance to Charco del Ingenio garden San Miguel de Allende
The entrance to the Charco del Ingenio botanical garden, which boasts one of the world’s best collections of Mexican cacti and succulents. Linkogecko

This may be the perfect way to end a day hiking outside the gates of paradise.

What do you think? Have you hiked any of these trails? Any you would you recommend? Let us know in the comments.

The writer has lived near Guadalajara, Jalisco, since 1985. His most recent book is Outdoors in Western Mexico, Volume Three. More of his writing can be found on his blog.

14 grandmothers find it’s never too late for 15th birthday celebration

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The abuelitas in their limo on the way to the party.
The abuelitas in their limo on the way to the party. Facebook / Hada Madrina Ari Falcon

A group of grandmothers in Reynosa, Tamaulipas, had a dream come true this past week when they celebrated the quinceañera, or 15th birthday party, that they were unable to have when they were younger.

The women, who came from poor backgrounds and whose families were unable to provide them with this traditional celebration when they were teenagers, were able to fulfill the dream of dressing like a princess and dancing the night away thanks to Ariana Falcón.

Falcón, now known as Reynosa’s “fairy godmother,” has been organizing quinceañeras for girls whose families either don’t have the money for a big, fabulous party or are unable to for a different reason. Many of the young girls she has worked with have serious chronic or terminal illnesses.

It started with Falcón’s own quinceañera, which she said was possible only with the collaboration of friends and families who donated food, music, and even make-up and hair services, as her family wasn’t able to afford it on their own. She later loaned her quinceañera dress — known for their elaborateness and fairy princess-like esthetic — to another girl that didn’t have one, then later she gave it away to a different girl.

Falcón has been working the last 10 years to organize parties for girls who wouldn’t get them otherwise and has helped to host over 200 events.

This past week was the opportunity for 14 older women who were never able to fulfill their dream to enjoy the splendor of a 15th birthday party.

A television news channel shared footage of the festivities.

“I woke up so excited for something marvelous, it’s truly like a fairy tale movie. I mean at this age, none of us would have imagined having a party like this,” said Oralia González, one of the women celebrating.

The party included food, music, gifts and even a limousine, all donated by members of the community within Falcón’s network of “fairy godmothers.”

“Each one of them has a history of something hard, like diabetes, leukemia, so today is the moment to have fun, I believe each of them deserves to be treated as a queen,” said Falcón.

With reports from TV Azteca and Hoy Tamaulipas

Tesla has its own vehicle lane at Nuevo León border crossing

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tesla border crossing lane
No waits for Tesla.

The automotive manufacturer Tesla has struck a deal with business-friendly Nuevo León to have its own private lane at a Mexico-U.S. border crossing. A bit like a fast track security checkpoint at the airport, the lane is solely for companies that work with Tesla and the automaker’s employees.

Tesla now has six different companies providing parts for its vehicles in Mexico, including EnFlex Corp., Quanta Computer, Faurecia SE, ZF Friedrichshafen AG and APG Mexico. State authorities say the new exclusive lane will make border crossings more efficient and faster, even though there is no similar exclusive lane on the U.S. side of the border.

Neither Tesla nor the state of Nuevo León seem to think a lane for a single company is a problem, with Economy Minister Ivan Rivas adding that in the future “… maybe there will be lanes for other companies …”

Tesla’s private lane is at the Colombia Solidarity International Bridge, a lesser known crossing north of the Laredo, Texas, crossing (which is one of the busier ones). Bloomberg News reports that neither Tesla nor state officials responded to requests for comments so it’s unknown what the manufacturer offered in exchange. But Nuevo León is building its electric vehicle industry, which Rivas says will provide 5-7% of the state’s investments this year.

Despite a heavy presence in Mexico, Tesla founder Elon Musk continues to insist “Teslas are the most made-in-USA vehicles.” The company is No. 1 on the Cars.com 2022 American-Made Index that ranks car companies on how much of their production and manufacturing takes place inside the United States.

With reports from Xataka, Bloomberg News and Electrek

Teenage extortionists murder 16-year-old in Mexico City

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The incident took place at a convenience store in the San José Aculco neighborhood of Iztapalapa.
The incident took place at a convenience store in the San José Aculco neighborhood of Iztapalapa. Google Maps via Noticias Iztapalapa

When three teenagers went to a store in Mexico City to collect 2,500 pesos (US $122) in protection money this week, things turned ugly and a 16-year-old boy tending his family’s convenience store ended up getting shot and killed.

The tragic story was reported in the newspaper El Universal and on the digital media site Plumas Atómicas.

Monday evening, according to the reports, the juvenile henchmen arrived by motorcycle at the abarrotes store in the CDMX borough of Iztapalapa, in the San José Aculco neighborhood adjacent to the Central de Abastos market.

At the counter was Daniel, 16, a high school student who often helped out in his spare time; his mother was nearby.

When the young hoodlums demanded he hand over the money and showed a weapon to emphasize their point, a frightened Daniel ran to get away, either toward the backyard or into the house, depending on which report is to be believed. However, the teens chased after him and fired indiscriminately, hitting Daniel, his 65-year-old grandmother and his uncle.

The grandmother, who was hit by a bullet in the leg, and the uncle survived, but Daniel died Tuesday at 4 a.m. in the Moctezuma Pediatric Hospital.

The assailants fled by motorcycle to an awaiting Renault car with license plates from México state. Images captured by security cameras helped the police arrest the alleged perpetrators: Azael, 14; Darwin, 15; and Yosvani, 16. Two of them were said to be residents of Nezahualcóyotl in the state of Mexico, while the oldest reported he lives in Iztapalapa.

According to Plumas Atómicas (Atomic Pens) which deems itself a community of  young writers writing for young readers none of the arrested youths go to school or have a legitimate job, and all were carrying firearms. El Universal reported that Azael and Darwin were released because they’re too young to be charged, and Yosvani was taken to the prosecutor’s office for juvenile crimes.

Azael allegedly told police that an acquaintance had sent them to collect money from the store. He also allegedly said that his mother has been in prison in the state of Hidalgo for six years for robbing a pharmacy.

With reports from El Universal and Plumas Atómicas