T-Bone Steak Ta'maia Taaftun Bread Tabasco Tabasco Green Pepper Sauce Table Ace Squash Table Cream Table Grapes Table King Bush Acorn Squash Table Olives Table Queen Squash Table Water Crackers Tacos Taffy Tarts Tagale -- À la Taggiasca Olives Tagliatelle Tahina Tahini Tahiti Lime Tahitian Gooseberries Tai Cang White Garlic Tailed Cubebs Tailed Pepper Tailladées Olives Taillevent Tailor Fish Takoyaki Takrai Takuan Taleggio Cheese Talleyrand -- À la Tallman Sweeting Apples Talpahawkins Apples Tamago Nigiri Sushi Previous | Next | Mexican Chocolate© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced![]() Mexican Chocolate Mexican Chocolate looks a bit like a chocolate powder that has been pressed into blocks. You break pieces off the block to use, and chop them up finely, or grate them. Three of the larger brands made are Abuelita, Ibarra, Mayordomo, and Nestlé. All brands come sweetened with a bit of sugar, and flavoured with vanilla and cinnamon. Some brands also include almonds, though a few brands have dropped the almonds recently. It is used in making hot drinks and in making moles. Cooking Tips Other entries for: Cooking ChocolateBaking Chocolate, Chocolate Chips, Compound Chocolate, Couverture Chocolate, Mexican Chocolate, Unsweetened Baking Chocolate Other entries for:ChocolateBitter Chocolate, Bittersweet Chocolate, Carob, Chocolate Liquor, Cocoa, Dark Chocolate, Milk Chocolate, Seed Chocolate, Semisweet Chocolate, Sweet Chocolate, White Chocolate Other entries for:SpicesAjowan Seed, Allspice, Anardana, Anise, Annatto, Asafoetida, Caraway, Cardamom, Cinnamon, Cloves, Cream of Tartar, Cumin, Dried Lily Buds, Garlic Powder, Ginger, Juniper Berries, Kokum, Mustard, Nigella, Nutmeg, Paprika, Peppers, Pepper, Saffron, Salt, Sumac, Turmeric, Zedoary |
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