La Casa de los Sabores Cooking School
Alvin Starkman, M.A., LL.B.
If visitors to Oaxacan cooking school La Casa de los Sabores
came away with nothing more than great recipes and a gastronomic
meal rich in unique herb- and spice-accented flavor combinations
that are the hallmark of Oaxacan cuisine, they would leave
fully satisfied. But a visit with owner and chef extraordinaire
Pilar Cabrera also inspires and sates travelers with a sensual
day-long immersion into sights, sounds, smells and, yes,
tastes and time-tested recipes of southern Mexico.
As always, a recent culinary odyssey with Pili, as she is
known, began at La Casa de los Sabores first thing in the
morning – at 9:30 a.m. Over the next few hours, she
introduced me and the others in the class to the wisdom
and experience of her great matriarchal culinary tradition.
Pili learned the basics and the subtleties, including the
mysteries of the famed seven moles, from her grandmother,
who learned from her grandmother before her. She is a Oaxaca-born
master of southern Mexico cookery as well as international
epicurean trends, capable of sharing the secrets of preparing
the most multifarious meal with novice and expert alike
– in English and in Spanish.
Our day began with Pili's informal talk about the menu and
the foods she was going to introduce us to in one of Oaxaca’s
colorful markets. The extra attention to the key ingredients
of Oaxacan cuisine kept us spellbound. “What we will
achieve today with the chilis," she told us, "is
hot and tropical … with the Chile de agua, you will
see we use it not only for flavor but color as well, and
I will teach you how we keep this beautiful, brilliant green.”
Once prepared with this knowledge, we all embarked on
a shopping trip to the well-known marketplace, Mercado de
La Merced, armed with multhued bolsas – market bags
– to carry the compras – purchases. Pili had
readied a partial shopping list, but, she advised us, she
always adds "surprises," such as fresh foodstuffs
which peasant women from the mountains sometimes bring down.
“When you have a chance to find something real special
or unusual, you buy and incorporate into the comida,"
she explained. "Today, for instance, we look for mushrooms,
because they grow so beautifully in the rainy season. Also,
we will see what kind of fresh fruit we can use for the
dessert.”
Her insights into the unique stores and small factories
enriched the short walk to the market. A rich bouquet drew
us into a mill that was making chocolate from scratch. As
Pilar told us about the ingredients – cacao, cinnamon,
almonds and sugar – the owner welcomed us with, “do
you want to taste?”
The lesson began in earnest when Pilar began methodically
searching through the indoor and outdoor portions of the
marketplace and exchanging pesos for its plethora of fresh
produce.
“Look at that lady sitting there, what she has in
those bowls," she said. "She just brought those
raspberries and blackberries from the Sierra Juarez. We
can use them for the dessert. Notice how fresh and beautiful.
The mushrooms beside them, see the size, how big and the
bright orange color … this is the time of year, but
not for our recipe today … Over here, we don’t
buy the big green tomatillos. I prefer the little ones grown
locally because they are not acidy like the others, and
they have much more flavor, perfect for the salsa we are
preparing today.”
She encouraged us to smell the herbs as she explained their
use in particular Oaxacan dishes. “Today we use this
yierba santa for the mole,” she said as she was examining
samples of the fragrant leaf until she'd found the best
and freshest for storage in one of our bolsas. “But
we also use it to wrap fish and make tamales."
Andrea who had been in Puerto Escondido on the Oaxacan
coast for six months, expressed the wish of many as she
lamented, “I wish I’d been in this class at
the beginning of our trip.”
Our enthusiasm and our appetites grew once we returned
to Doña Pili’s well-equipped, spacious kitchen.
Its wide counters, food preparation island and eight-burner
gas stove opening onto the lush courtyard dining area made
this cocina into an ideal classroom.
While we were reviewing printed recipe sheets for the dishes
we were about to prepare, she displayed our purchases in
baskets filled with the components of each recipe to help
us learn why we bought what. Then we spent the next two
hours preparing a sumptuous four-course meal.
Mary, her sous-chef, did preparatory work such as halving
limes, slicing chilies and preparing chicken stock and poultry
for the mole, freeing Pili to teach us the rituals and secrets
of Oaxacan culinary seduction. Sparks from Pilar’s
hearth of experience ignited even the most learned in the
class as she pointed, touched, and passed around each item
we purchased, telling us how it would be incorporated into
the meal.
Once the actual cooking began, she put her bilingualism
to good use, giving instructions and asking questions in
one language, then repeating it in the other, as required
by some of her visitors. “Necesito otro ayudante para
quesillo, I need another helper for the cheese.” Pilar
might as well be a Maestra de Español, a Spanish
teacher to boot.
Everyone learned each task and participated in the preparation
of virtually all menu items. And as the group peeled, diced
and sautéd, Pili's gems of information flowed on.
We learned much more than how to achieve flavor. Pilar taught
us techniques on how to attain desired tones and textures:
“A lot of people ask me about cleaning mushrooms,”
she said at one point, demonstrating the correct technique.
“Now watch to see how we clean and seed this kind
of chili,” she pointed out while preparing chile guajillo
for the mole. “Once we start cooking these chile de
agua, we need to remember to always check them and turn
them constantly.”
“Look for the hot part of the comal … now this
is when you know when to turn it over,” she said while
demonstrating the art and science of making tortillas.
Every once in a while a new recipe rolled off the tip of
her tongue as we worked … other dishes we could prepare
with this particular mole; different fillings for the quesadillas
such as potato, chorizo or huitlacoche, the exotic corn
mold ... the texture we would want for the corn masa if
we were making tamales rather than tortillas.
Soon, aprons removed, we were ready to feast. But first
– “now before we sit down, remember in the market
I told you there were two types of gusano worm? Here they
are, so who wants to try?" she asked. “Now know
about mezcal. Taste this one Alvin brought, and tell us
how it seems to you. Here’s another kind. What do
you think is different about this one?”
We sat down at a table exquisitely set with local hand-made
linens, dishes and stemware. Bottles of Mexican and Chilean
red wine were already breathing. The fine music of Oaxacan
songstress Lila Downs serenaded us in the background.
Pilar reminded us that her grandmother and other relatives
usually prepare their comidas with meat and all vegetables
mixed together in the mole, a plate of rice on the side,
and a bowl of broth. But our meal, like all the recipes
she prepares with visitors at La Casa de los Sabores, would
be her modern take on all the elements and flavor combinations
of the best that contemporary Oaxacan cookery has to offer.
It was a celebration of every ingredient. We began with
wild mushroom, onion, tomato, chili and cheese stuffing
in the quesadillas de champiñones (mushroom quesadillas),
complemented perfectly by smoky salsa verde asada (green
sauce from the grill) served in its molcajete. Then it was
time to calm our palates with bright yellow crema de flor
de calabaza (cream of squash blossom soup), garnished with
a drizzle of real cream, toasted calabaza seeds and indeed
fresh squash blossoms. The main course or plato fuerte was
mole amarillo – tender slices of chicken breast atop
a sea of aromatic deep saffron-colored mole, accompanied
by a medley of crunchy-fresh steamed vegetables. To conclude,
arroz con leche (rice pudding), speared with a length of
wild vanilla bean and crowned with berries that had been
picked only the day before.
I left convinced that the grandest chefs at the most trendy
Manhattan beaneries would be hard-pressed to compete with
this petite Oaxaqueña's ability to marry the region’s
complex cooking with post-modern attention to color, texture
and flare. For Pilar Cabrera, it comes naturally. For the
rest of us, it comes with a visit to her home.
La Casa de los Sabores Cooking School is located at Libres
205, in downtown Oaxaca. Maximum class size is 8, with private
lessons available upon request. You can register for Pilar’s
classes by calling (951) 516-5704 or e-mailing her at: bbsabores@prodigy.net.mx.
( Website: http://www.laolla.com.mx )
Alvin Starkman together with wife Arlene operates Casa Machaya
Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast ( http://www.oaxacadream.com
). Alvin received his masters in social anthropology in
1978, and his law degree in 1984. Thereafter he was a litigator
in Toronto until taking early retirement. He and his family
were frequent visitors to Oaxaca between 1991 and when they
became permanent residents in 2004. Alvin reviews restaurants,
writes about life and cultural traditions in Oaxaca, and
tours couples and families to the villages.
Alvin Starkman together with wife Arlene operates
Casa Machaya Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast . Alvin received
his masters in social anthropology in 1978, and his law
degree in 1984. Thereafter he was a litigator in Toronto
until taking early retirement. He and his family were frequent
visitors to Oaxaca between 1991 and when they became permanent
residents in 2004. Alvin reviews restaurants, writes about
life and cultural traditions in Oaxaca, and tours couples
and families to the villages.