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The Eight Best Gorditas in Mexico City

​As you roam the verdant boulevards of Mexico City, you’ll find yourself unable to resist the enticing aroma of fresh masa on warm comales. Follow your nose toward any one of many small street stands, where vendors turn simple dough into antojitos.. These “little cravings”—folded quesadillas, filled tlacoyos, and delicately pinched sopes—are tempting, but the gordita, a stuffed pocket of crisped masa, generous and delightfully messy, stands alone. While other antojitos are shaped from plain masa, gordita dough boasts a little something extra. The masa is often mixed with chicharrón prensado, a flavor bomb made from bits of fried pork. The resulting dough has a hearty texture, crispy chunks, and a deeper, more savory flavor than its counterparts.. Once browned on a hot comal or fried in oil, these “little fatties” puff up into a pocket. They’re then sliced open and filled with nopales, onion, cilantro, queso fresco, and a splash of salsa. But that’s just the beginning. Gorditas are a blank canvas for a myriad of creative fillings: stringy quesillo, spiced chorizo, or even a whole fried egg.. What we know today as a casual street food is, in fact, part of a centuries-long culinary legacy. The Codex Borgia, one of the most important surviving Indigenous manuscripts, describes a society in which masa dishes shaped daily life. Among these dishes were round, stuffed patties we’d now recognize as a progenitor. When the Spaniards introduced pork into the Mexican diet in the early 16th century, the gordita transformed into its next iteration.. Today, they come in countless forms, from refined restaurant versions to extra-decadent street food. These eight spots show the impressive range of this beloved antojito.. Campeche & Medellín. The Peña Miramón family have made a name for themselves for their quiet mastery of masa. Watching them transform a ball of dough into tlacoyos, sopes, and quesadillas, each carefully cooked on a charcoal-fired comal, is reason enough to pay a visit. At their family-owned stand outside Medellín Market in the Roma neighborhood, you’ll find the gordita in its most classic form: blue corn masa mixed with bits of pork crackling, cooked until lightly crisp on the outside and soft within. It’s then sliced open and filled with the traditional fillings. But the final step, a choice between their red or green salsa, is up to you. The spice level changes every day, so start with a few drops, then build your way up if necessary.  

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Food

Bone Broth Soup and More Recipes We Made This Week

​It’s well known that Bon Appétit editors do a lot of cooking for their jobs. It’s no surprise that we also do a lot of cooking in our free time. Here are the recipes we’re preparing this month to get dinner on the table, entertain friends, satisfy sweet cravings, use up leftovers, and everything in between. For even more staff favorites, click here. A party app worth repeating. I’m highly predictable at parties. If asked to bring an appetizer, I’ll bring crudités: typically endive cups, cucumber spears, and radish halves (not popular, but I love them). The dip is usually the same: a romesco I whip up in a personal blender in minutes. I’ve never measured this, but it goes roughly like this: Drain a jar of roasted peppers and pat them dry.  

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Food

Listen to BA Bake Club’s Podcast on Guinness Cake

​This month, Bon Appétit’s Bake Club is reimagining a classic. Tune in as Jesse Szewczyk analyzes his popular Chocolate Guinness Cake recipe. “The cake came to me quite easily.” I experienced a vision. “I’m fortunate,” Jesse tells cohost Shilpa Uskokovic. However, the challenge arose when it came time to develop the frosting. “I felt like everyone in the Test Kitchen had an opinion on what it should be… I definitely tried at least 10 different frostings.” In the end, Jesse settled on brown butter frosting as the ideal topping—not only for its flavor but also because it evoked the creamy head of a perfectly poured Guinness. “It’s fortified with a touch of Guinness—just two tablespoons,” Jesse says.  

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Food

Inside Hong Kong’s Ever-Evolving Eateries

​Horlicks, the well-known UK malted milk beverage, is a staple as comforting as a rich, creamy milk tea. Flaky egg tarts sit among a broad array of bakery favorites—fluffy pineapple buns, sweet-savory pork floss buns, and crispy buns drizzled with sweetened condensed milk. A variety of baked rice dishes completes the savory lineup. The pork chop rice, a Cantonese dish built on fried rice and finished with a Western touch—a layer of tomato sauce topped with melted cheese.

Brewing milk tea for a group evokes the midcentury origins of these cafés. Cuisine, like language, evolves over time: sharp edges soften, and before you know it, a fresh cooking style emerges. Thus Hong Kong’s cha chaan tengs arose in the wake of World War II, as Western influences began reshaping the city’s culinary landscape.

Samuel Dic Sum Lai, a PhD candidate at the University of London, has dedicated his research to documenting the hazy history and culture of these eateries.  

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Food

Ceramic Cookware From Around the Globe

​Pottery employed for preparing and serving food dates back to the world’s earliest civilizations, illustrating that humans have congregated around meals for nearly as long as they’ve had fire for cooking. Today, when these items—bowls, baking dishes, serving vessels—grace our tables, they carry this legacy along with them. Shards from 20,000-year-old clay pots have been discovered in China. During the excavation of Pompeii, archaeologists uncovered kilns containing unfired terra-cotta vases buried under vast piles of ash. Ceramic cooking implements discovered in present-day Ecuador, from the fifth millennium BCE, represent some of the few surviving remnants of a long-forgotten ancient civilization. Similar to those artifacts, these five culinary tools from around the world depict the tales of the creators bringing their ancestral cooking traditions into the present day. Kyūsu, Japan. Photo credited to Hugo Yu, with prop styling by Andrea Bonin. Taisuke Shiraiwa, a Japanese kyūsu (teapot) artist, refined his pottery wheel techniques under the guidance of master craftsman Konishi Yohei in Tokoname, Japan—a renowned ceramics hub. His wood-fired, salt-glazed teapots, made for New York City’s Tea Dealers, shimmer with hues like lavender blush, sea foam, and volcanic ash; features such as flower-shaped lids and fiddlehead-curved ushirode handles ground the pieces in nature’s playful motifs.  

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Food

How I Became a Breakfast Person Through Travel

​I’m an early riser who usually forgoes breakfast. Coffee and a lengthy walk are all I require to kick off the day—then I’m set until midday. Even on typical weekends, I usually just have a green juice along with a bowl of berries and yogurt. Occasionally toast.. But when traveling, I seek out hotels that include breakfast. I pile up pancakes and home fries, sample every sausage with poached eggs. In recent years, I’ve observed that buffets are prioritizing local dishes over standard omelets, pastries, and fruit salad. I was delighted by the vast breakfast buffets in Dubai and Abu Dhabi offering couscous, tomato and green shakshukas, curries, and stews. The laminated pastries were stuffed with chocolate and pistachio cream, while the baklava was soaked in local honey. In Seoul, the Dutch ovens held wobbly eggs, fried rice, and dumplings. I’ve seen other hotel guests bypass the French toast sticks, opting instead for tamales and tacos in Mexico and callaloo with saltfish in Jamaica. Hotel breakfasts’ variety shows how chefs accommodate tourists’ familiar preferences while linking them to local traditions, turning the hotel into a draw for non-guests. Last year, I visited The Inn at Little Washington in Virginia, the eccentric 48-year-old restaurant operated by chef Patrick O’Connell, brimming with antiques and George Washington memorabilia.  

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