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Holy Mole
 
Spicing up life with Mexico’s saucy dish

Executive summary by darmansjah

Mole Poblanco, a complex mixture of chocolate, chilies, nuts, and spices, is among the most revered dishes in Mexican cooking. Nearly every grandmother in Puebla, the dish’s hometown, has her own rendition of the semisweet, earthy sauce, typically made with more than 20 ingredients. Mole poblano’s disputed origins may date to either a 17th-century nun at the city’s famed convent of Santa Rosa de Lima or to the pre-Columbian Aztecs, whose Nahuatl word for sauce is molli. The purest experience of this classic fare is the most traditional: in an abuela’s kitchen, ladled over a roasted turkey drumstick. For those without a poblana grand mother, the best alternative is the no-frills Fonda La Mexicana, a 56-year-old institution in Puebla’s downtown, where a single chicken leg is served with rice, radishes, and a lake of dark mole poblano sprinkled with sesame seeds. On weekends, families sit beneath paper flags as waiters deliver cold cervezas and extra tortillas for sopping up the sauce. Contemporary chefs are showcasing mole poblano in the country’s inventive haute cuisine. Try the four-course tasting menu at El Mural de los Poblanos, which has one of Pueblas’ best mescal liquor selections. Better yet, let the restaurant’s chef, Liz Galica, teach you to make your own mole poblano. For a deeper educations, take Eat Mexico’s mole tour, which includes a trip to the market.

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