ENCHILADAS: Aztec to Tex-Mex (Trinity University Press, 2015, 239 pages,   ISBN 978-1-59534-751-0, $39.95 US hard covers) is by Cappy Lawton, who has   designed, developed and operated 29 restaurants in Texas. Today, with his wife   Suzy and his son Trevor, he actively owns three in San Antonio: La Fonda on Main   (in business since 1932), Cappy's and Cappyccino's. His co-author is Chris   Waters Dunn, a San Antonio food writer with a creative writing MFA and culinary   degree from CIA. Major log rollers include Mark Miller and Anne Lindsay Greer,   who have both written about southwest US food. The book collects a variety of   more than 60 regional enchiladas and 40 sauces and garnishes, from Baja to   Yucatan, ending up with Tex-Mex. Just about all of them are lavishly illustrated   with up close photos. The first 90 pages deal with a primer about ingredients   and the techniques of making tortillas, roasting chiles, making refried beans,   assembling, and some tips on garnishing and accompaniments. Then follows the   parade of contents: pork, beef, poultry, seafood, dairy, and vegetable. The   Tex-Mex section is entirely different, and has notes on brisket, chicken,   cheese, and gravies. Preparations have their ingredients listed in mostly   avoirdupois measurements with some metric, but there is no table of metric   equivalents. Source material at the back carefully explains the derivation of   each particular recipe (some are from books), including changes and   modifications and some updating. A lot of the recipes come from La Fonda on   Main, but even these have been changed a bit for the US home kitchen. At the   back there is a glossary of Spanish food terms. This was a recent winner at the   Gourmand World Cookbook Awards.
  Audience and level of use: those interested in Mexican food
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: enchiladas de atun (tuna),   enchiladas banderas, enchiladas de nayarit, enchiladas de langosta, enchiladas   nortenas,  de pato, enchiladas rojas, napa slaw, red rice, roasted tomato   salsa.
  The downside to this book: weight-wise, it is close to five pounds.
  The upside to this book: it does a good job of dissing the notion that   enchiladas are just rolled and smothered in some gravy.
  Quality/Price Rating: 90.
   
 

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