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Mexican Tacos al Pastor

📍 Mexico
⏱️Prep: 30 min
🔥Cook: 30 min
Total: 60 min
🍽️4 servings
Difficulty: Medium

Tacos al pastor have Lebanese origins (from shawarma), adapted by Lebanese immigrants in 20th-century Mexico. Their unmistakable signature is the marinade of guajillo and ancho chiles with pineapple.

🛒 Ingredients

4 servings
  • 600g pork loin or shoulder, thinly sliced
  • 3 dried guajillo chiles
  • 2 dried ancho chiles
  • 1/4 fresh pineapple
  • 1/2 onion
  • 3 garlic cloves
  • oregano, cumin, cloves
  • 3 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
  • salt
  • small corn tortillas
  • To serve: onion, cilantro, lime, green salsa

👨‍🍳 Step-by-step instructions

  1. Rehydrate the chiles in hot water for 20 minutes. Blend them with onion, garlic, pineapple, spices, and vinegar.

  2. Marinate the pork in this adobo for at least 2 hours (overnight is better).

  3. Grill the pork in batches on a very hot griddle or skillet.

  4. Finely chop the grilled meat.

  5. Warm the tortillas on the griddle. Serve the meat with chopped onion, cilantro, grilled pineapple, and green salsa.

💡 Chef's tip

The original trompo is cooked vertically with direct heat. At home, the key is a well-prepared adobo and searing the meat over high heat.

📝 Our take

Tacos al pastor have Lebanese origins: shawarma arrived in Mexico with Levantine immigrants in the 20th century and evolved with guajillo chile and pineapple. The pineapple isn't a modern flourish—it's a constitutive part of the marinade: bromelain tenderises the meat and balances the acidity of the chile. Without it, the pastor loses its identity.

🍷 Wine & food pairing

Fresh hibiscus water or horchata. For those who prefer alcohol: a cold Victoria beer or a young mezcal with a smoky edge that plays well with the chile adobo.

Suggested wine: Michelada or hibiscus iced tea

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