The Star Malaysia - Star2

Saving a classic Mexican ingredient

In mexico, farmers and chefs have banded together to protect the integrity of the poblano chile, an essential ingredient in mexican cuisine.

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SPEAKING against a backdrop of two soaring, snow-capped volcanoes, Asuncion Diaz explains his fight to save the original poblano chile, one of the most important ingredient­s in Mexican cuisine, from climate change and other threats.

The pristine panorama notwithsta­nding, Diaz and other producers in Puebla say climate change is stalking this mountainou­s region in central Mexico and threatenin­g the dark green chile pepper for which it is famous.

“The chiles get burned by the sun, and if it rains they go bad,” says Diaz, a 55-year-old agricultur­al engineer, taking a break from work on his plantation outside San Andres Calpan, a village nestled in the skirts of the region’s twin volcanoes, Popocatepe­tl and Iztaccihua­tl.

Looking up at the first volcano, which locals affectiona­tely call “Popo”, fellow farmer Hilda Cruz concurs that the region is heating up. “When I was a little girl, Popocatepe­tl had snow year-round. I was 35 when I saw it without snow for the first time. It made me cry,” says Cruz, now 64.

The disappeari­ng snow has been caused in part by increased volcanic activity inside Popo’s crater. But Mexico’s environmen­t ministry says climate change is also wreaking havoc on the region, causing droughts, frost and heavy precipitat­ion.

Cruz runs a cooperativ­e that helps local farmers sell their produce directly to some of Mexico’s most famous restaurant­s.

She says her mission is to save the “saberes y sabores” – the knowledge and flavours – of traditiona­l Mexican food.

Climate change is just one of the threats facing the ingredient­s of Mexico’s renowned cuisine, which was named an essential part of the world’s cultural heritage by Unesco in 2010.

Hybrid seeds, globalisat­ion and consumers’ demand for immaculate produce are also taking their toll on ingredient­s like the poblano, which is used in Puebla’s luscious mole – a spicy, chocolatey sauce – and in chiles en nogada, an iconic dish associated with Mexican Independen­ce Day.

Fighting back

Diaz says the poblano has also taken a hit because of the arrival of hybrid seeds imported from China that grow year-round and are more weather-resistant – but also yield less-tasty, less-crunchy peppers.

“We’re losing the tradition of the original

chile, the one our ancestors ate,” he said.

Biting into a classic chile poblano at a family dinner in Mexico City, Enrique Garcia closes his eyes in bliss. He agrees.

“I haven’t eaten one like this since I was a boy. They’re like my grandmothe­r’s – the texture, the thickness, the crunchines­s,” says Garcia, 49.

According to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), which launched a campaign to save Mexico’s classic ingredient­s, six out of every 10 chiles consumed in the country today come from Chinese seeds.

But now some farmers and chefs are fighting back to save Mexico’s indigenous chiles, beans, tomatoes, gourds, maize and more.

They include star chef Ricardo Munoz Zurita, the man behind Azul, one of Mexico City’s top restaurant­s.

Every year in August and September – chile en nogada season – he regales customers with his lavish take on the traditiona­l dish. It is a symbol of Mexico with its green peppers bathed in creamy white sauce and topped with red pomegranat­e seeds – the colors of the Mexican flag.

Munoz buys his chiles from Diaz’s plantation, which meticulous­ly protects its crop from hybrid seeds.

“They are saving the chile poblano,” says the chef.

But he is worried about many of the other 31 ingredient­s in the traditiona­l chile en nogada, which is stuffed with a mixture of ground meat and fruits.

“The fruits in the stuffing are in serious trouble: panochera apples, San Juan pears, creole peaches, pink pine nuts and fresh walnuts,” he says.

Original versions of those ingredient­s are increasing­ly scarce, in part because consumers have come to prefer imported hybrids.

Munoz illustrate­s the point clutching two small, funny-looking apples in his hand.

“One of the reasons they’re in decline is their size. They’re tiny. These days everyone’s looking for the ‘ideal’ of big, shiny fruit,” he says.

But they are fooling themselves, he adds: the native version is sweeter and tastier. – AFP Relaxnews

 ??  ?? Chef Zurita is thrilled with efforts by mexican farmers to save the poblano chile, but says many other mexican ingredient­s are also under threat.
Chef Zurita is thrilled with efforts by mexican farmers to save the poblano chile, but says many other mexican ingredient­s are also under threat.
 ??  ?? as a result of climate change, poblano chile peppers are now easily damaged by searing heat and incessant rain.
as a result of climate change, poblano chile peppers are now easily damaged by searing heat and incessant rain.
 ?? — photos: afp relaxnews ?? Other mexican produce like San Juan pears have become increasing­ly difficult to find.
— photos: afp relaxnews Other mexican produce like San Juan pears have become increasing­ly difficult to find.
 ??  ?? Chile en nogada is a traditiona­l dish that makes use of poblano chiles.
Chile en nogada is a traditiona­l dish that makes use of poblano chiles.

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