A pastry brought to Mexico by British miners is still popular after 200
years
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[October 15, 2024]
By INDIA GRANT
REAL DEL MONTE, Mexico (AP) — Isabel Arriaga Lozano carefully fills a
small pastry with a savory mix of meat, potatoes and chili pepper. She
is crafting a “paste” (pronounced PAH-stay), a beloved Mexican snack
with a rich history.
Originating in the mining town of Real del Monte, in the Mexican central
state of Hidalgo, the “paste” was introduced by British miners in the
1820s and has since become a local culinary tradition. Each year, food
enthusiasts converge on Real del Monte to celebrate the International
Paste Festival, honoring its delicious heritage.
Pastes are popular across Mexico, with fillings ranging from spicy
Mexican mole to sweeter concoctions like pineapple or blueberry with
cheese.
And although many are unaware of their surprising origin, a graveyard at
the top of a cobbled hill holds the clue: around 700 graves sit covered
in moss and lichen with distinctly English names. These are the graves
of the hundreds of miners who traveled to Mexico in 1824 to work in Real
del Monte, extracting silver, copper, zinc, gold and mercury.
The miners came from Cornwall, a region on the southwest of England
which had a similar strong mining community in the 19th century. They
brought with them this iconic snack, known in England as a “Cornish
pasty.”
Cornish pasties date from the 13th century, when they were the food of
nobility and the upper crust. By the 19th century, they became popular
with working class Cornish families. A simple shortcrust pastry case was
filled with cheap cuts of meat alongside potatoes, rutabaga and onion.
The pastry was then crimped at the side, sealing the ingredients and
giving the eater something to hold onto.
The crimped side would serve as a sort of handle, meaning that the
miners could hold onto their lunch without getting the rest of the pasty
dirtied with mud and grime from working in the mines.
Arriaga said she has made pastes for 30 years. She married into a
paste-making family and took over the business when her husband passed
away. Pastes, she said, have become a crucial part of life in the
“magical town” of Real del Monte. “I think around 50% of us here make a
living from this,” she said, highlighting a very special ingredient that
goes into every snack. “It’s, above all, the love we put into every
paste that makes it a good product."
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A basket of Mexican pastes sit on a patron's table before they are
eated for lunch at the 16th International Paste Festival in Mineral
del Monte, Mexico, Saturday, Oct. 12, 2024. (AP Photo/India Grant)
She said pastes have persisted
thanks to the “mexicanization” of the ingredients. Compared to
Cornish pasties, she said, "in Mexico (...) we always look for that
spicy flavor ... we add pepper, we add parsley.”
Pastes are such an iconic snack in Real del Monte that they have
their own museum.
“The paste arrived in the year 1824, with the English miners from
Cornwall who came to Real del Monte to start working in the mines,"
said Epifanio Garcés Torres, director of the town's Paste Museum.
"The first Englishwoman to bake (one) here in Real del Monte was
Mary Jenkins in 1824.”
Visitors at this year's paste festival tried an array of treats.
Where pastes in the U.K. have adopted fillings such as “full English
breakfast,” “steak and ale” or “lamb and mint,” the Mexican
influence on the pastry here is clear: Frijoles (beans); spiced mole
sauce or Mexican style tuna — with the obligatory chili pepper — are
on the menu.
“They’re delicious," said one festival goer.
The festival featured colorful banners and signs displaying the
Mexican, British and Cornish flags, highlighting a unique connection
between Mexico and Britain that goes back 200 years — and linking
the towns of Real del Monte and Cornwall, which sit more than 5,300
miles (8,530 kilometers) apart.
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