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| Flower of Mexican pepper leaf |
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| Branch with young flower |
The spice is much used in the cuisines of tropical México. The leaves are a fragrant decoration or can be wrapped around some stuffing and steamed, baked or broiled. A famous recipe from the Veracruz province (where the spice is particularly popular) is Pescado en Hoja Santa, fish wrapped in pepper leaves, baked and served with a spicy tomato sauce. In Central México, pepper leaves are used to flavour chocolate drinks (“Aztecs' chocolate”, see Vanilla).
Last, Mexican pepperleaves are an essential ingredient for mole verde, one of the famous “seven sauces of Oaxaca” (los siete moles, see paprika about mole in general and sesame about mole Poblano).
Mole verde differs from other kinds of mole by being composed mostly of fresh herbs; it does not
contain any ground nuts or seeds (there are, however, versions that contain
pumpkin seeds both for flavour and for a deep
green colour). As other moles,
it is made of several spices (cloves, cumin, green jalapeño- or
serrano-chiles, garlic), herbs (thyme, marjoram, parsley) and
tomatillos, which are boiled in chicken stock and then pureed; the liquid is
then thickened with masa harina (corn flower) and seasoned
with ground pepper leaves and, if desired, a couple of sprigs of epazote. Mole verde goes well to
poultry; it tastes best when fresh, unlike other moles.


