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A little about Playa Zipolite, The Beach of the Dead . . .

Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, on the Pacific Ocean. A little bit about my favorite little get-away on this small world of ours.

Zipolite, a sweaty 30-minute walk west from Puerto Angel, brings you to Playa Zipolite and another world. The feeling here is 1970's - Led Zep, Marley, and scruffy gringos.

A long, long time ago, Zipolite beach was usually visited by the Zapotecans...who made it a magical place. They came to visit Zipolite to meditate, or just to rest.

Recently, this beach has begun to receive day-trippers from Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido, giving it a more TOURISTY feel than before.

Most people come here for the novelty of the nude beach, yoga, turtles, seafood, surf, meditation, vegetarians, discos, party, to get burnt by the sun, or to see how long they can stretch their skinny budget.

I post WWW Oaxaca, Mexico, Zipolite and areas nearby information. Also general budget, backpacker, surfer, off the beaten path, Mexico and beyond, information.

REMEMBER: Everyone is welcome at Zipolite.

ivan

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

RABBIT MEAT: A MEXICAN DELICACY?

https://theeyehuatulco.com/2022/12/24/rabbit-meat-a-mexican-delicacy/?fbclid=IwAR1kIqkVGHrc5U0AWU0WVYT1lwm-tVriXwRLTIWVS6xwOqghnVDor6c-JHs 


RABBIT MEAT: A MEXICAN DELICACY?

By Marcia Chaiken and Jan Chaiken

Over forty years ago, we read about and decided to visit a family-run, highly-rated Quintana Roo restaurant in the jungle off the road from Cancun to Playa Carmen. We pulled off the road at the designated kilometer post into an area cleared for parking, and wandered down a narrow path to find a charming cottage in a clearing on the bank of a lagoon. Near the cottage was a rabbit hutch with sweet roly-poly bunnies – we thought them to be pets of the family’s children.

When we were presented with the menu and saw the offering of conejo, we were sure it must be a misspelling of cangrejo (crab), but suddenly realized that the dish was indeed conejo (rabbit), and the sweet little bunnies were not pets. Although this was the first time we saw rabbit on a menu in Mexico, it should not have come as a surprise. In France, lapin (rabbit) is a relatively common feature on menus, along with frogs’ legs and snails. And in China, we visited live animal meat markets where cages of rabbits were placed near chickens, ducks, puppies and monkeys – yes, monkeys.

So after our initial encounter, we were prepared to find rabbit on more menus in Mexico. This turned out to be a misconception. Not that we were disappointed. One of us sticks pretty closely to Jewish laws spelled out in the Hebrew Scriptures (aka Old Testament) that forbid certain animals to be eaten including pig, camel … and rabbit. There are many traditional delicious Mexican dishes made with meat from permitted animals, but the experience did raise our curiosity about the place of rabbit in Mexican cuisine.

Although a vegetarian diet has for millennia been the main form of food consumed in Mexico, rabbit, as archeologists have found, was considered a delicacy in preHispanic cuisine. In excavations around present-day Mexico City, artifacts and animal bones from a butcher shop indicated that the business specialized in selling rabbit meat. As historians have made clear, there was no need to supplement the daily diet with rabbit since the food consumed by the indigenous residents was nutritionally complete – so the supposition would be that rabbit was eaten as a special delicacy.

The same is true in Mexico today. As compared to other Latin American countries, Mexico ranks highest in percent of the population that sticks to a vegetarian diet. Nonetheless meat, especially beef, chicken or pork, is the preferred meal of the vast majority of Mexicans. Not rabbit. According to a 2022 paper in Meat Science, “The annual per capita consumption of meat in Mexico is 72.8 kg, of which 34.9 kg correspond to chicken, 20.3 kg to pork, 14.8 kg to beef, 1.3 kg to turkey, 0.8 g to sheep and goat, 0.6 g to horse, and [a minuscule] 0.1 g to rabbit.”

Part of the reason for rabbit being an uncommonly eaten source of protein may be the lack of availability. Unlike beef cattle, chickens, turkeys, pigs, goats, sheep or other sources of more commonly used meat, rabbits are not raised on large corporate farms or ranches that produce thousands of animals for food. Rabbit farms are most numerous in the central states in Mexico; but a study of the characteristics of cuniculture (rabbit-raising) in that area showed that the vast majority (87%) are either small-scale or medium-scale family farms. There are other rabbit farmers scattered around the country, especially in areas where there is a substantial foreign rabbit-eating populace, such as the Happy Rabbit Farm in Rancho Loco Chapala in the state of Jalisco. These small farms tend to produce a limited number of rabbits, sold directly for consumption; the availability of rabbit meat in butcher shops or food stores is limited.

Another barrier to a thriving market for rabbit meat may be the taste. Most people who have tried eating rabbit compare the taste to chicken – particularly chicken thighs – but comment on the gamey flavor. This may be why rabbit dishes are usually prepared with assertive spices. There are four primary ways of cooking rabbit meat in Mexico: adobo (marinated in spices including chilis), al ajillo (cooked with garlic), estofado (stewed), and fried in the same manner that chicken is fried. These dishes may be easily sampled in the small restaurants that line the highway that leads from Mexico City to Toluca. Within Mexico City in the Coyoacan area, the restaurant El Morral, specializing in “Mexican Heritage Food,” also served rabbit before the covid pandemic, but their reduced menu may no longer feature conejo.


In the interior of state of Oaxaca, a dish prepared with corn and rabbit in a mole sauce, segueza, is the preferred preparation. It is true that rabbit meat, as chicken, is nutritionally sound; low in fat and cholesterol and high in protein. Thus, the question remains: If rabbit tastes like chicken, and is prepared like chicken, why not simply use easily attainable and less expensive chicken?

But perhaps the most important factor that prevents people from hankering for rabbit stew and other dishes is the adoration developed in childhood for those cute roly-poly soft-fur bunnies that one can cuddle and stroke, along with the rabbits that are featured in children’s books. Just as children north of the border love to hear the Beatrice Potter stories of Peter Rabbit, children in Mexico hear tales of Pedrito, El Conejo Travieso (Little Pedro, the Naughty Rabbit – actually a translation of Beatrix Potter’s 1902 classic Peter Rabbit). More recently, Duncan Tonatiuh, a Mexican-American author of children’s books, has bolstered admiration of our furry friends with a new Mexican character, Pancho Rabbit.

So … although rabbits were served as a delicacy by ancient Aztecs, and a small number of Mexicans still find rabbit meat to their liking, we remain in the camp of most Mexicans who would rather pet them than eat them.

Sunday, July 23, 2023

#beach #vacaciones #zipolite #playadelamor #trip #viaje #behappy | TikTok TikTok 20 me gusta,Video de TikTok de Héctor Seda (@hectoritito81): «#beach #vacaciones #zipolite #playadelamor #trip #viaje #behappy».sonido original ...


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Rincones de Oaxaca/ Mazunte, lugar mágico de Oaxaca - Ciudadania Express Ciudadania Express En Mazunte también se encuentra el Centro Mexicano de la tortuga , que presentaré en otra entrega , y cerca , otros bellos lugares como Zipolite y ...

https://www.ciudadania-express.com/2023/noticias/rincones-de-oaxaca-mazunte-lugar-magico-de-oaxaca

Rincones de Oaxaca/ Mazunte, lugar mágico de Oaxaca - Ciudadania Express
En Mazunte también se encuentra el Centro Mexicano de la tortuga , que presentaré en otra entrega , y cerca , otros bellos lugares como Zipolite y ...
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Corners of Oaxaca/ Mazunte, magical place of Oaxaca

Corners of Oaxaca/ Mazunte, magical place of Oaxaca
Thursday July 20, 2023.
10:34 a.m.
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Text and photos: José Pérez Camacho.
 
Oaxaca.-Without a doubt, our state, as I have already indicated, and continuing the tour through the "Rincones de Oaxaca" is privileged for its diversity of climates, ecosystems, nature and cultures, which offer tourists a natural and incomparable experience. 
Another example of these natural beauties is undoubtedly Mazunte - which belongs to the municipality of Santa María Tonameca - and its beautiful beaches. The sand is golden with a medium grain, the water is warm and crystalline with green and blue tones. The slope and the waves are moderate, and that tranquility makes it a favorite for tourists. 
 
Some of the first inhabitants of the town say that the name of Mazune was awarded, rather due to the abundance of a crab known by that name and that for a long time occupied an important place in the diet of the population.
 
A sanctuary for meditation and fun can be found on Mazunte beach, which stands out for enjoying beautiful sunrises and sunsets and where it is possible to watch the olive ridley turtle spawn, as well as being a spiritual site since pre-Hispanic times.
A paradise is undoubtedly, Mazunte, with colorful sunsets and highlights the beauty of Cerro Sagrado, also called Punta Cometa.
 
For decades, in my Corners of Oaxaca, I have pointed out Mazunte as a magical place. Since ancient times it was a reason for admiration and veneration. Numerous pre-Hispanic vestiges have been found. The hill is protected by a very old stone wall. rarely spread and unknown, which we observe in my photo. Undoubtedly, the "old stone path", known by the inhabitants of the region, is impressive. I appreciate the attention of Max Ramírez Reyes, a resident of Puerto Ángel, in taking me to that mystical place. It can be reached by a cliff or by the path of the pantheon.
 
Mazunte, in addition to its main beach, has other very attractive ones, such as Rinconcito and Mermejita beaches and near these, the beaches of Aragón, San Agustín and Ventanilla.
Undoubtedly, no visitor should miss climbing Punta Cometa, a hill located fifteen minutes walk from the beach and considered, along with Mermejita beach, cosmic places.
In Mazunte there is also the Mexican Turtle Center, which I will present in another installment, and nearby, other beautiful places such as Zipolite and Puerto Ángel, all of them are, without a doubt, "Rincones de Oaxaca" worth visiting and even more so, as a pretext for our Guelaguetza festivities. 
 
Corners of Oaxaca by José Pérez Camacho 


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