mobile logo
  • Home
  • About Me
  • Books
    • Broken Series
      • Broken By Truth
      • Broken by Birth
      • Broken by Evil
      • Broken by Madness
      • Broken by Men
      • Broken by Kings
      • Broken “The Prequel”
    • Haunted Family Trees
    • Book Web Minis
      • Are You Endangered? Well-being in the Age of Climate Change
      • Is Your Wonton Soup Endangered?
      • Paranormal Is My Normal
      • Soaring
      • Timepieces: Yesterday’s Stories Today
      • Selfies: Picture Perfect
      • The Old Lady Who Went To Sleep and Woke Up Young
      • Pocket Cash: Your Happy Money
      • Is There A Psychopath in Your Life?
  • Photography
    • Macro
    • Abstracted Reality
    • Nature
    • Street
  • Blogs
    • Photo Psychology
    • Haunted Family Trees
    • Linked In Blogs
  • All About Climate Change

WANT EXPLOSIVE FLAVOR? Grab a taco.

December 13, 2022
by Dr. Jeri Fink
1 Comment

Mexican food Taco on a white background

The taco has a very humble beginning. Some believe it was around well before the sixteenth century Spanish conquistadors arrived in Mexico. According to Unocasa, “indigenous cultures viewed corn as the foundation of humanity or the seed of life.” They perfected the process of nixtamalizing – treating corn with lime and water, then drying, grounding, and producing flour. The nixtamalized corn was used for breads and tortillas.

The infamous Montezuma was known to use corn tortillas to scoop out his food. Perhaps that made it easier to fight Spanish Conquistador Hernán Cortéz?

How did this humble food lead to Americans consuming nearly 4.5 billion tacos each year?

The Spanish looked down on corn – they associated it with native gods and pagan rituals. Wheat was used for the Christian Eucharist and for Europeans who believed they were superior to the natives.

Dr. Jeffrey M. Pilcher, noted food historian, author, and University of Toronto professor, maintains that tacos emerged directly from Mexican silver mines like the one below.

Old Valencia Silver Mine, Guanajuato, Mexico. This mine is mostly abandoned. Resubmit-In response to comments from reviewer have further processed image to reduce noise and sharpen focus.

According to Katy June Friesen in the Smithsonian Magazine, Mexican silver miners “likely invented the taco [and] Mexican-Americans in the southwest reinvented it.”

In eighteenth century Mexican silver mines a “taco” was a small explosive made of paper filled with gunpowder. The charges were put into drilled holes to excavate the silver. Friesen writes, “when you think about it, a chicken taquito with a good hot sauce is really like a stick of dynamite.”

No surprise that one of the first edible tacos was called tacos de minero – miner’s tacos.

Then things changed. The taco got its green card.

By the late 19th century, many Mexicans migrated north of the border looking for better lives. Most found work in mines or railroad construction. Los Angeles soon boasted a large Mexican population. The streets were filled with “chili queens” – women street vendors who sold tacos from carts.

This “fast food” caught on. A small restaurant owner watched McDonald’s and Burger King grow. His name was Glen Bell and he would change the fast food industry forever (yes, he is the “Bell” in Taco Bell). Bell switched from serving burgers to tacos.

Bell saw that Americans preferred tacos served in a fried, hard, u-shaped shell instead of soft tortillas. The hard shells lasted longer and could be prepared faster. Bell owned a taco stand called Taco Tia. In 1962 he started Taco Bell, introducing Mexican Fast Food.

Today there are almost eight thousand Taco Bells in thirty-one countries. Ninety-four percent of them are franchises. Taco Bell has forty-six million customers and an annual revenue of over thirteen billion dollars. Some of its biggest competitors are Chipotle, Taco John’s, Del Taco, and thousands of popular Mexican restaurants that serve the not-so-humble-anymore tacos.

Orlando, Florida - February 6, 2022: Horizontal Wide View of Taco Bell Restaurant Building Exterior.

Tacos now have many different fillings from vegan to steak, roast pork to pineapple, onion, and cilantro. According to HowStuffWorks, you can “fill a taco with anything.”  There are some out-of-the-box fillings like fried avocado and spaghetti-and-meatballs. Check out breakfast tacos (such as sausage & egg topped with potatoes).  Grab some dessert tacos with fillings from churros and strawberry cheesecake to ice cream.

The next time you eat a taco think of the world’s largest one at three-hundred-thirty-five feet long or the world’s most expensive at twenty-five thousand dollars. Plan for next year’s National Taco Day (October 4), find a good taco truck, or think about how half of the U.S population goes to a Taco Bell once every eleven days. Celebrate Taco Tuesday with explosive flavors and cheaper prices.

Go for it, amigo.

A vector illustration of taco food truck

About the Author
We live in crazy world. It's hard to guess what comes next. I thrive on change, people, and ideas. I've published 37 books and hundreds of blogs and articles. As an author, photographer, and family therapist, my blogs combine the serious, the funny, and the facts. Each blog is a story that informs and entertains readers. Please join me!
Social Share
One Comment
  1. Craig Oldfather January 5, 2023 at 11:16 pm Reply

    I love tacos! I love your article! So it’s double love! Thanks for another great history lesson on an everyday item that has much more pedigree than I would have thought. Excellent!

Leave a Reply to Craig Oldfather Cancel reply

*
*

Recent Posts

  • Does Your Coffee Have Superpowers?
  • Does Your Coffee Have Superpowers?
  • FOOD FIGHT!
  • Where’s Your Beef?
  • WHERE’S YOUR BEEF?
  • WHERE’S YOUR BEEF?
  • WHAT’S IN A MEAL?
  • ARE FRENCH FRIES REALLY FRENCH?
  • ARE FRENCH FRIES REALLY FRENCH?
  • LIVE BY YOUR FORK!
  • FOOD FUNNIES
  • HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
  • DOES A BUFFALO HAVE WINGS?
  • SMOOTH OR CHUNKY, WITH JELLY OR A SPOON. What’s your pleasure?
  • A PICKLED HISTORY
  • FEAST ON A WIN-WIN
  • ARE POLITICS IN YOUR PANCAKES?
  • ARE POLITICS IN YOUR PANCAKES?
  • WHAT’S YOUR FORTUNE?
  • FROM CAMPFIRE TO HILLBILLY HASH: What’s the oldest snack food in history?
  • HAVE YOU EVER SWALLOWED A CLOUD?
  • IS FRIED CHICKEN MORE AMERICAN THAN APPLE PIE?
  • HUSH, PUPPY
  • A BROWNIE BY ANY OTHER NAME
  • What’s your fancy – brownie points, an old camera, or ugly mythical creatures that love to clean house at night? They’re all brownies but not the yummy chocolate treat we love today. Americans chow down 1.4 billion edible brownies a year in different flavors, shapes, and sizes. Where did it begin? In the case of brownies no one knows for sure. Fortunately, fiction is often more fun than fact. Which brings us to the question – were brownies a mistake, an accident, or a special treat for wealthy, turn-of-the-nineteenth-century ladies? Let’s start with a mistake and an accident. Chocolate was very popular in the nineteenth century. Many people believe that an absent-minded chef was mixing batter for a cake and mistakenly left out the flour. Oops. Others say a housewife was out of baking powder and accidently ended up with “flattened cakes” that her guests loved. In both cases, the results were delicious, unplanned fudgy confections. The most popular story comes from celebrated socialite Bertha Palmer (see below). Bertha was married to Potter Palmer, a business tycoon who, on their wedding day, gave her the Palmer House Hotel in Chicago (now a Hilton Hotel). Nice gift. In 1893 Bertha wanted to do something special for
  • CHOUX DOWN!
  • A CHEESEY STORY: Part I
  • A CHEESY STORY: PART 2 The Best, The Fakes, and The Stinkiest
  • DOES IT REALLY MELT IN YOUR MOUTH AND NOT IN YOUR HAND?
  • WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME YOU ATE 100-YEAR OLD COMFORT FOOD?
  • From One Penny to Two Billion Dollars
  • WHAT’S FOR LUNCH? From Hillel to The Earl and Beyond
  • KE-TSIAP TO HEINZ – Where Did Ketchup Come From?
  • SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW – Married in Tex-Mex
  • SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW – Married in Tex-Mex
  • TWISTED BILLIONS
  • ARE YOU A COOKIE MONSTER?
  • TWINKIE – The Gourmet Junk food
  • SUSHI TONIGHT?
  • SUNDAE WARS
  • SLICED IN CHILLICOTHE
  • CHICKEN FEED FOR PEOPLE
  • DEEP ROOTS: Meet the Sweet Potato
  • ARE BLUE PUMPKINS SAD?
  • ARE BLUE PUMPKINS SAD?
  • ARE BLUE PUMPKINS SAD?
  • ARE BLUE PUMPKINS SAD?
  • ARE BLUE PUMPKINS SAD?
  • ARE YOU AS UN-AMERICAN AS APPLE PIE?
  • ARE YOU AS UN-AMERICAN AS APPLE PIE?
  • FROM KINGS TO KIDS: The Sticky Story of Marsh-Mallows
  • FROM KINGS TO KIDS: The Sticky Story of Marsh-Mallows
  • WHAT’S YOUR RAMEN?
  • WHAT’S YOUR RAMEN?
  • FROM LONGHOUSE TO YOUR HOUSE
  • WHAT’S YOUR RAMEN?
  • FROM INDIANS AND CONQUISTADORES TO SOUL FOOD, KICKSTARTER, AND YOUR TABLE
  • “Traditional” potato salad probably goes back to the 1700s. Frederick the Great of Germany, ordered that potatoes should be cultivated. The wheat crop had failed and he needed to feed his army. It wasn’t long before kartoffel (potatoes) became kartoffelsalat (potato salad). The salad was made by boiling potatoes in wine or a mixture of vinegar and spices and served warm. Sometimes they added bacon and sugar. German immigrants brought the recipe to the New World, and the American, Amish, and other regional potato salads were born. The recipe was also adapted by French, Greek, Polish, Israeli, and Austrian cooks. Eventually Japan, Korea, Vietnam, China and others created their own versions. Today potato salad is an American icon. There are countless variations related to community, history, family, and location. Culinary historian and author, Michael Twitty, noted that “like a child raised to believe that my church is the only true one, I have had to suspend the idea that I or my culture owns the sole, true potato salad.” There are so many recipes that it fills hundreds of cookbooks, websites, and family ¬recipe boxes. There’s Amish style, drizzled sweet creamy dressing over potatoes, celery, boiled eggs, onion, and sweet pickle relish How about soul food where Rosalind Cummings-Yeates in The Takeout explained that southern cooks prefered mayonnaise and sweet relish while northerners prefered dill and sour cream. Dr. Jon Paul Higgins declared in The Kitchen that his mother’s potato salad was the best, calling it “pure black joy.” Mama used mustard, relish, Lawry’s seasoning salt, and mayonnaise. Doesn’t sound very fancy. That’s all before your grandma’s recipe is added to the mix – along with celebrity chefs like Bobby Flay, Ina Garten, Martha Stewart, and Pioneer Woman’s “perfect potato salad.” Then there are the infamous potato salads – the ones that get attention for things other than their recipes. Guinness World Records awarded the largest serving of potato salad to Spilva Ltd, Latvia. It used over 1,102 pounds of mayonnaise, 2,072 pounds of boiled potatoes, 749 pounds of sausage, 6,000 pounds of boiled eggs, 440 pounds of canned peas, 310 pickled cucumbers, and 33 pounds of salt. That’s quite a mouthful. Not to be outdone, Ohio native Zach “Danger” Brown tried to raise $10 on Kickstarter to make his potato salad. He got $5,500 instead. He used the extra money to throw a party called “Potato Stock” where hundreds of pounds of potatoes were served. Don’t forget Mr. Potato Head or gag books like Always Be Yourself Unless You Can
  • STUMP FOODS: MUNCHING FOR VOTES
  • DEEPER ROOTS

Send Me a Message

Cleantalk Pixel