Recipes By Rick A. Martínez

45 recipes found

Crunchy Tortilla Fried Chicken Cutlets
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Jun 12, 2025

Crunchy Tortilla Fried Chicken Cutlets

This dish may not exist in Mexico, but its heart is unmistakably Mexican. It celebrates three beloved staples of the cuisine: corn masa, fiery salsa and Milanesa-style fried cutlets. Here, chicken cutlets are coated in a crisp, golden crust made from masa harina and crushed tortilla chips and pan-fried until deeply crunchy. A smoky, just-spicy-enough salsa made with tomatoes and chiles de árbol adds brightness and bite, while a shower of queso cotija brings the salty finish. It’s comfort food rooted in tradition, but reimagined for an easy weeknight meal.

45m4 cutlets
Atole de Grano (Savory Corn Porridge With Chicken)
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May 16, 2025

Atole de Grano (Savory Corn Porridge With Chicken)

Atole is often thought of as a sweet, drinkable corn-based beverage, but in parts of Mexico, it also refers to this hearty, savory porridge made with masa harina and hominy. This version, inspired by the traditional atole de grano, is thick, creamy and deeply comforting — perfect for showcasing the variety of textures and flavors that different forms of corn can bring. Here, sweet corn kernels and chewy hominy add dimension to the velvety base, while a topping of roasted chicken and caramelized poblanos brings savory depth. A final flourish of lime, chicharrones and hot sauce adds brightness and crunch. Quick to come together and endlessly adaptable, this dish is a warm embrace in a bowl.

35m4 servings
Egg and Cheese Toasts With Salsa
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May 2, 2025

Egg and Cheese Toasts With Salsa

In Mexico, huevos ahogados (“drowned eggs”) typically refers to eggs gently poached in a vibrant salsa. This version flips the idea into a speedy, satisfying breakfast (or weeknight dinner) by layering crisp-edged fried eggs over cheesy, broiled bolillo toasts and smothering them in a bright, spicy tomato salsa. It's a dish built for flexibility: Use just one serrano for a mild sauce or three for serious heat, and swap in Monterey Jack if you can’t find queso Chihuahua. Finished with creamy avocado and a sprinkle of cilantro, it’s rich, hearty and perfect for sopping up every last bit of salsa.

30m4 servings
Tostadas de Tinga de Pollo (Shredded Chicken and Salsa Tostadas)
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Apr 28, 2025

Tostadas de Tinga de Pollo (Shredded Chicken and Salsa Tostadas)

Rotisserie chicken can be a secret weapon when you’re busy. If you have a flavorful salsa on hand, just pull the meat and warm it in the salsa to make a quick tinga. A typical tinga has a guajillo salsa, but don’t let that limit you. A salsa verde, or any chipotle salsa, would be wonderful, and if you use aguacate ahumado salsa, it will create a rich, creamy sauce for the shredded chicken. Homemade bacon-y refried beans offer a comforting contrast.

35m4 servings
Pure Jalapeño Salsa
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Apr 28, 2025

Pure Jalapeño Salsa

This fiery, minimalist salsa proves that even humble kitchen staples — like garlic powder and fresh jalapeños — can surprise you. Simmered until tender, then mashed by hand or blended to a coarse purée, the chiles become the perfect backdrop for garlic powder, which deepens as it sits, taking on a warm, almost toasty edge you’d never get from raw garlic. A short fermentation (if you let it) softens the salsa’s heat and introduces a subtle, tangy complexity (see Tip). It’s a salsa that evolves — bold on Day 1, balanced by Day 3 — making it perfect to spoon over pizza, tacos or anywhere you’d reach for a pickled chile.

15m1 cup
Aguacate Ahumado (Spicy Avocado Salsa)
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Apr 28, 2025

Aguacate Ahumado (Spicy Avocado Salsa)

Many salsas are fresh, raw and bright. But this pico de gallo turns a corner. A smoky corner. Finely chopped chipotles in adobo end up glazing the soft pieces of avocado, and it tastes deep and charred, even though it takes all of five minutes to make. It shouldn’t taste this good. But it does. Serve on sandwiches or tostadas, or with a bowl of plantain chips.

15m1½ cups
Chickpea Picadillo
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Apr 24, 2025

Chickpea Picadillo

This plant-based take on a Mexican picadillo trades the traditional ground meat for a deeply savory mix of mushrooms, tofu and chickpeas, simmered with tangy tomatillos, poblano and scallions until everything melds into a rich, comforting hash. A box grater gives the tofu a ground meat-like texture that crisps beautifully in the pan, while the tomatillos add a tart freshness that keeps each bite lively and light. This weeknight-friendly dish is flavorful and deeply satisfying — especially when served alongside rice and beans or made into tacos or burritos. Make a double batch and freeze the leftovers: This is the kind of comfort food whose flavor gets better with time.

40m4 servings
Salpicón de Pescado (Spicy Citrus-Marinated Fish)
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Mar 26, 2025

Salpicón de Pescado (Spicy Citrus-Marinated Fish)

In Mexican cooking, salpicón is a dish of fish, shellfish or meat mixed with chopped vegetables and tossed in an aromatic dressing. In the Yucatán, salpicones are flavored with sour orange juice and habaneros. In this version, quick-roasted fish fillets are tossed in lime and orange juice to mimic that tropical flavor. The fattiness of the fish and avocado tame the heat of the habaneros, but if you are sensitive to spice, use half of a habanero or look for habanadas, a chile that tastes just as sweet and floral as a habanero but with zero heat! You can serve this dish right away while the fish is still warm, or refrigerate the fish and pico de gallo separately for a few hours — the flavors only get better. Then mix together cold for parties, picnics or a day at the beach.

40m4 servings
Chorizo Patty Melt
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Feb 7, 2025

Chorizo Patty Melt

Imagine a patty melt, but made at a diner in Mexico. Instead of plain ground beef, you might find a spicy and tangy chorizo patty smothered in a melted blanket of creamy, slightly aged queso chihuahua and topped with sweet and hot caramelized onions, poblanos and serranos. Imagine no more because here it is: a classic, unctuous patty melt reimagined with a Mexican twist. In this recipe, fresh chorizo links made patties that held their shape better than bulk sausage. If you can’t find chorizo links, see the note below for a quick substitute.

45m4 servings
Pollo a la Piña (Pineapple Chicken)
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Jan 22, 2025

Pollo a la Piña (Pineapple Chicken)

Pineapples are grown all along the Pacific Mexican coast and are used in raw salsas as a condiment and in cooked salsas to give a sweet and tart counterpoint to spicy chiles and roasted meats and veggies. Pollo a la piña is a bright and savory dish with a smoky spicy kick from canned chipotle chiles in adobo and tropical sweetness from chopped pineapple and orange juice. This tender and juicy chicken makes a great taco filling. Or pile it on a bun with pickled jalapeños and shredded cabbage for a sweet, spicy and smoky sandwich reminiscent of the best BBQ but without firing up the grill.

55m4 servings
Tortitas de Espinaca (Spinach Fritters)
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Dec 18, 2024

Tortitas de Espinaca (Spinach Fritters)

Tortitas are Mexican fritters that are great as an appetizer or as a meal served with a vegetable side or salad and are always enjoyed with a spicy hot salsa to dip and pour over. They can be made with whatever you like or have: mashed potatoes, shredded chicken, chorizo, sautéed mushrooms, squash, greens. They’re a great way to use up leftovers; just throw them in a bowl with eggs, cheese and flour or bread crumbs and fry them up. These spinach and cheese tortitas are incredibly comforting and come together fast enough for a quick and easy weeknight meal.

50m4 servings (about 12 fritters)
Nutella Tres Leches Cake
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Dec 6, 2024

Nutella Tres Leches Cake

The dreamy, moist dessert is surprisingly light and airy thanks to the chocolate sponge cake. Cocoa powder bloomed in hot coffee gives the cake a rich, deep chocolatey flavor. Traditionally, tres leches cakes are made with a vanilla cake soaked with condensed and evaporated milks and heavy cream or whole milk. In this lush chocolate version, we replaced the condensed milk with chocolate hazelnut spread and whisked that into evaporated and whole milks and heavy cream for a big hit of chocolate and hazelnut flavor. The cake gets finished with a delicious and light chocolate hazelnut whipped cream with chocolate sprinkles.

8h 50m16 servings
Pavo al Pastor (Sweet and Smoky Shredded Turkey)
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Nov 22, 2024

Pavo al Pastor (Sweet and Smoky Shredded Turkey)

The iconic tacos al pastor (shepherd’s style tacos) — made and eaten across Mexico and in the US — are normally made with adobo-marinated pork steaks, flame-kissed on a vertical spit called a trompo and served with grilled pineapple and onion on corn tortillas. In this recipe, which takes advantage of leftover turkey, canned chipotles in adobo evoke the flavor of al pastor’s spicy adobo sauce, while the chipotles’ smokiness mimics the spit-roasted pork. Extra al pastor sauce can be used like a barbecue sauce to flavor cooked shredded meats like chicken or pork, or as a marinade for meat before cooking. For plant-based tacos, toss the sauce with roasted vegetables or brush over raw cauliflower, winter or summer squash, eggplant or mushrooms and roast or grill until charred and tender.

50m6 to 8 servings
Birria de Pavo (Turkey Birria)
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Nov 22, 2024

Birria de Pavo (Turkey Birria)

Originally, birria was developed as a way to tame tough and gamey goat meat by marinating it in a rich and spicy adobo sauce then slow cooking it until it was falling off the bones. The meat was shredded and served in bowls with the braising liquid (called consomé) ladled over top. The consomé-infused meat was put into tortillas with cilantro, onion and salsa and eaten with more consomé on the side or used as a dipping sauce. Because this recipe takes advantage of leftover turkey that is already cooked, the carcass is used to make a quick consomé flavored with canned fire roasted tomatoes, dried chiles and spices. Add the shredded turkey at the end to warm it up and let it soak up all the flavor. For the salsa, use leftover cranberry sauce; homemade or canned both work great. If using canned and you have a choice between whole-berry and jellied, choose the whole-berry sauce — the salsa will have even more texture.

2h 40m6 to 8 servings
Cornbread Stuffing With Esquites
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Nov 13, 2024

Cornbread Stuffing With Esquites

Esquites are a Mexican antojito, or snack, sold in local markets and by street vendors across Mexico and the United States. Corn is typically cooked with an herb called epazote, onion and chiles and is served in cups or corn husks and topped with mayonnaise, dried chiles, queso and lime. Here, esquites amps up the corn flavor of a southern-style cornbread stuffing. Half of the corn mixture is added, along with chorizo, to toasted cornbread to make the stuffing, and the remaining esquites is used to top the finished dish. A drizzle of crema and a sprinkle of queso fresco and chile de árbol accent this fun and festive Thanksgiving side.

2h 35m10 to 12 servings
Doughnut Shop-Style Apple Fritters
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Oct 25, 2024

Doughnut Shop-Style Apple Fritters

The joy of eating these doughnuts comes as much from the flavor of the apple and cinnamon in each bite as from the texture – the crunch of the sugar-glazed fried exterior and the soft, pillowy pull-apart pieces of a buttery, yeasted doughnut. One doughnut-shop secret to the perfect apple fritter: use a lot of cinnamon. It is going to seem like a mistake, but fried doughnuts (see Tip) require a lot more apple, cinnamon and salt for the flavor to punch through than if they were baked. The second trick, which achieves that crispy but melt in your mouth texture: chop the dough. It might seem a bit fussy but they don’t have to be exact cuts, you just need 1/2-inch pieces. The texture will be like monkey bread but in an amazing apple fritter doughnut.

3h8 doughnuts
Sopa de Verduras y Chochoyotes (Summer Vegetable Soup With Masa Dumplings)
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May 7, 2024

Sopa de Verduras y Chochoyotes (Summer Vegetable Soup With Masa Dumplings)

Chochoyotes, or corn masa dumplings, are commonly added to flavor and thicken soups and guisos (stews) across Mexico. They are also found in mole amarillo, the famous yellow mole from Oaxaca, and added to frijoles de olla because the corn flavor complements the regionally grown beans and herbs. In this soup, a summer vegetable medley, including fresh poblanos, corn and squash, is browned in olive oil to give the broth sweetness from the caramelized sugars in the vegetables. The chochoyotes slightly thicken the soup without any dairy or gluten added and contrast the flavor of the fresh, sweet corn.

50m4 servings
Piloncillo Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Apr 19, 2024

Piloncillo Chocolate Chip Cookies

Piloncillo, unrefined whole-cane sugar, is the key ingredient of these richly nuanced cookies. Known as piloncillo in Mexico; chancaca in Chile, Bolivia and Peru; or panela in other Latin American countries, it is commonly used in both sweet and savory dishes and is made by crushing, extracting and boiling down the juice from sugar cane to caramelize the sugars. It adds notes of caramel, butterscotch and molasses to everything from cakes to barbecue sauce. In this cookie, the grated piloncillo complements the bittersweet chocolate and mimics some of the nutty flavor of browned butter, but without any of the work. It is a bit of a chore to grate, but the flavor it adds is well worth it.

1hAbout 17 cookies
Roasted Broccoli and Chickpeas With Mole Verde
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Apr 18, 2024

Roasted Broccoli and Chickpeas With Mole Verde

Mole verde is one of the seven famous moles from the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. There are an almost infinite number of variations on this classic mole — the type of ingredients, the method of preparation, the length of time cooked and what is served with it. But what they have in common is their shade of green, from raw moles that are bright emerald green to the long simmered, charred vegetable mole that has a deep olive hue. This version gets its bright color from the spinach and cilantro, and its tang from the tomatillos with a little heat from the poblanos. It’s served topped with roasted broccoli and chickpeas for a vibrant vegan dinner but would complement a roasted chicken just as easily. 

50m4 servings
Sopa de Fideo y Frijoles con Chorizo (Fideo and Bean Soup With Chorizo)
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Apr 17, 2024

Sopa de Fideo y Frijoles con Chorizo (Fideo and Bean Soup With Chorizo)

This weeknight-fast soup — a common and comforting family meal in Mexico — is easy to prepare and uses ingredients typically stocked in the Mexican kitchen like beans, chorizo and fideo noodles. Puréeing the beans with chicken stock, tomatoes, oregano and spices gives the soup a rich and hearty finish, while bits of broken pasta and spicy chorizo add bite. Toasting the pasta adds a nutty depth to the flavor that, together with the fire-roasted tomatoes and stock, give the impression that this soup has simmered for hours, not 10 minutes.

40m4 servings
Crispy Cheddar Chicken Tacos
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Apr 16, 2024

Crispy Cheddar Chicken Tacos

These quick tacos use leftover or store-bought rotisserie chicken, and have a satisfying crispy Cheddar frico called a costra (crust) that is common both in taquerias in the northern half of Mexico and in the southwestern United States. In some taquerias, you can order a taco using only the costra as the shell without a tortilla. In this recipe, the tortilla and costra are layered together to wrap a simple but delicious shredded chicken and chipotle filling. 

35m8 tacos
Tamales
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Oct 26, 2023

Tamales

Tamales are a traditional Central and South American dish of masa, a corn dough, that is filled with meat, vegetables, cheese and seasonings, then wrapped in a corn husk or banana leaf and steamed. They have been around for thousands of years — the Aztec and the Maya people ate them — so there are innumerable delicious variations, but this Mexican version, which is known as rojos de puerco, is filled with braised pork and red chile sauce. Often served at special events like weddings, baptisms, first communions and the like, tamales are particularly important to Mexicans and Mexican-Americans at Christmas time during which tamaladas, or tamale-making parties, are hosted to divide the work, share the food and enjoy each other’s company. For convenience, this recipe calls for masa harina, a dried form of masa that can be found in most supermarkets and is reconstituted with water and fat, but if you can find fresh masa, use it for outrageously good, authentic results.

5h 45m16 tamales
Taquitos
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Oct 6, 2023

Taquitos

In Spanish, taquitos means “little tacos,” and depending on where you are in Mexico, they can refer to small tacos, breakfast tacos, or stuffed, rolled and fried tacos. If they’re the latter, as in this recipe, medium-size tortillas are typically used, whereas when larger tortillas are used, they are called flautas (or flutes). When choosing your tortillas, freshness is more important than size — they need to be soft and pliable so they won’t crack when rolled. Pick up the bag of tortillas at the store and gently bend the stack; if they are stuck together, stiff or you see any broken edges, they are probably old and will be difficult to roll. Conversely, if there is condensation inside the bag, that generally means the tortillas were packed warm, have a higher moisture content and are likely fresh.

45m4 servings
Arepas
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Oct 6, 2023

Arepas

These chicken and avocado-stuffed arepas, which are known as reina pepiada (or curvy queen), were created in honor of Susana Dujim, a Venezuelan beauty queen who was crowned Miss World in 1955. The 1950s also marked the invention of precooked corn flour, now known as masarepa, by a Venezuelan engineer. But arepas were around for hundreds of years throughout Latin America before that, the corn patties sometimes served whole or split, then filled with countless combinations. Preparing them used to be labor-intensive, but masarepa gives arepas a light and creamy texture without a lot of effort. Unlike cornmeal used for cornbread or muffins, which is ground dried uncooked corn, masarepa is ground from cooked corn and conveniently sold as dried corn flour. Masa harina is ground uncooked corn treated with other ingredients and is used to make tortillas and other dishes. Neither cornmeal nor masa harina can be substituted for masarepa, which is available online and in many supermarkets.

10m8 arepas