Happiness in a Seafood Shack

Happiness in a Seafood Shack

Some of Mexico's most delicious dishes come from Veracruz. The emphasis is on pescado (fish) and mariscos (shellfish). Some of the best places to eat in the region are the family-run seafood shacks you often find lining the beaches. Just ask for the platillo del día. This "dish of the day" is always fresh and served with a flourish.

Many specialties show the influence of the Spanish and African communities of nearby Cuba, including the state's signature dish, huachinango a la veracruzana (red snapper in the Veracruz style, which means it's simmered in tomatoes, onions, garlic, green olives, and capers). Another dish with a similar influence is salpicón de jaiba, a spicy crabmeat salad usually prepared with tomatoes, capers, and peppers. Other dishes reflect African ties in their use of beans, plantains, yucca, taro, white sweet potatoes, and especially peanuts, which appear in the classic puerco encacahuatado (pork in peanut sauce) and the bracing salsa macha, made by grinding peanuts with garlic, chiles, and olive oil.

You'll find peanut ice cream all over the state, as well as other nieves made with mangos, papayas, and other local fruits. Another sweet-tooth tempter is buñuelos veracruzanos, golden doughnuts that are dipped in a sugar and cinnamon mix. Look out for the charge of toritos (little bulls), a heady alcoholic punch made with cane liquor, milk, and tropical fruit pulp or peanuts.

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