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Tamales 101: A Beginner's Guide to Making Traditional Tamales

Tamales 101: A Beginner's Guide to Making Traditional Tamales
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Tamales 101: A Beginner's Guide to Making Traditional Tamales

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2151549528

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Description:

Corn-husked bundles of fresh masa plump with wonderful combinations of sauces, meats, and vegetables—tamales are a simple and delicious staple of Mexican and Southwestern cuisine. Alice Guadalupe Tapp has perfected the art of tamale making, and in TAMALES 101 imparts her knowledge and passion for this comforting treat. TAMALES 101 will show beginners how to make masa dough as well as fold and steam tamales to perfection. Then, once you've mastered the basics, you'll be whipping up batches of Chicken Tomatillo, Chorizo Potato, Vegetable Curry, and Greek tamales in no time. With recipes for nearly 100 traditional, vegetarian, vegan, and specialty tamales and sauces, TAMALES 101 will send you on a culinary adventure that's sure to delight and impress your guests.• Includes 60 food and spot photographs and 15 illustrations showing, step by step, how to spread masa and wrap and tie tamales.• At Tamara's Tamales, Alice and her daughter, Tamara, sell hundreds of tamales a day—and have since 1996.Reviews"Graphically the book shouts ‘olé!' with its vibrant colors and fun type."—The Kansas City Star

Product Details:
Author: Alice Guadalupe Tapp
Paperback: 208 pages
Publisher: Ten Speed Press
Publication Date: November 12, 2002
Language: English
ISBN: 1580084281
Product Length: 8.02 inches
Product Width: 0.57 inches
Product Height: 8.0 inches
Product Weight: 1.18 pounds
Package Length: 7.9 inches
Package Width: 7.9 inches
Package Height: 0.5 inches
Package Weight: 1.05 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 27 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 27 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

75 of 75 found the following review helpful:

5Yes, you *can* become a tamalista!  Dec 21, 2003
By AZ Reader
A couple of weeks before Christmas, I found myself facing a luncheon for 15 foodie friends for which I'd promised fresh tamales--and my promised helper, the only person I knew who had made them before, came down with the flu! I was on my own.

Fortunately, I had Tamales 101 in hand. Got a few tips from a guy at the local Tamale Festival, but mostly I just devoured this book, took a deep breath, and started. My masa floated, the corn husks peeled off my tamales easily, and they were firm and delicious! I spent over three days cooking and ended up with a cornucopia of Red Chile Pork, Chorizo-Potato, Jalapeno and Cheese, and two kinds of dessert tamales, plus all the salsa and other trimmings. (I'd made enough to take to three other events, it turned out.) And I *enjoyed* myself doing it.

Making tamales is both harder and easier than you might think. What's hard is the amount of time and effort, but what's easy is the routine you get into after making a few. The day of the luncheon, I taught an early guest how to fill and fold them (using the very easy foldover method illustrated in the book), and she taught everyone else who wanted to try a few. As they say, a good time was had by all.

My tips and observations for those who want to give this a try:

Get *very* organized in advance: ingredients list, timetable, list of accompaniments, etc. A large steamer is a must (I used an oriental two-level steel one, but a Mexican one that looks like a canning kettle works well, too, and both are fairly inexpensive). An electric mixer is also a must. I used a hand mixer, but a stand mixer would have been easier. You *must* maintain several inches of boiling water in the pan (I just about burned mine out at one point), and it is possible to burn both hands at once if you use potholders instead of oven mitts to pick up the upper pan to check the water level.

From the festival tamale maker, I learned that it's important to use all the lard called for (part can be butter or margarine) and also all the salt called for. I read somewhere else that much of the lard is absorbed by the husks, and I hope this is true. From the book, I learned to use fresh masa (easily available here in the southwest) rather than dry, and to whip the lard for at least 5 minutes and then the worked-in masa and broth for another 10 to 15 minutes, and also to use an ice cream scoop to measure the right amount of masa onto the husks/leaves.

I won't be waiting until next Christmas to make more tamales, now that I know how easy and good they are. Just thinking of all the varieties in Tamales 101 that I haven't tried yet has me drooling. Give it a try!

47 of 47 found the following review helpful:

5Childhood Memories Reclaimed  Jan 12, 2003
By Veronica L. Miller
Tradition in my Mexican family is that tamales are made every Christmas Eve for Christmas day dinner. I have very fond memories of my grandmother, aunts, and cousins getting together and making unbelievable amounts of tamales from scratch. So this year I wanted to make tamales myself, but with the passing of my grandmother, her recipes went with her. Tamales are not the easiest thing to make (I remembered all the time and effort they require). Not all masas or fillings taste the same and everyone that makes them, has their own specail "touch". I wanted to be able to recapture the same texture and flavor of the tamales my Mama Luz (grandmother) used to make. So...in my quest for tamale guidiance, I turned to this book. I wasn't sure if I'd get good results, but decided to take the gamble. Well let me tell you, my tamales came out AMAZING!!! The recipe for the tomatillo salsa was a big hit! I paired this salsa with chicken and it was great! I also made the traditional sweet tamales and they tasted just like the ones my grandmother used to make. The recipes were easy to follow and the illustrations were very helpful. I'm a pretty avid cook but I had always been intimidated of tamales. Well nevermore! My childhood memeries of tamales will now not just left to be a yearly tradition in my household because I now know I can whip up a batch at a whim. I'm very happy that I found this book and glad that I took the gamble on this book now. Thank you Alice Guadalupe Tapp for helping me bring back a cherished tradition into my home.

20 of 20 found the following review helpful:

5Best that's out there on the subject...I love this book!  Jan 04, 2005
By Luminosa
I love this book. The author brings enormous experience from her own highly beloved tamalaria in S. Calif. and makes it possible to create excellent tamales on your own. Not as easy a subject as it might seem. I found her presentation thoughtful, with clear, thorough explanations and instructions that are well-presented. Her detailed description of the different types of masa and masa prep., of tamale wrappers and wrapping techniques, of ratio of filling to masa, of the tradition versus popular taste in saucing tamales, of all matters related to general preparation, cooking, storing etc. are all excellent, especially considering that it is a rather small book. Unlike another tamale book out now by a famous chef, these recipes are down to earth and wonderful, and span a wide range of tamales...including adaptations for vegetarians, special occasion tamales and much more. Great sauce recipes. Different versions of many recipes (such as mole sauces, chicken tamales, and much more). The author has a nice personable style, sharing customs and her own family lore along with her valuable insights from running a tamaleria in a trendy So. Cal beach town...and that is a really daunting challenge: to appeal to everything from a large solid Mexicano population to surfers to L.A.'s celeb-types etc. etc.

This is really a great recipe collection, well-presented for the experienced and novice tamale-maker (which I was...), and it is a really pretty publication - rich in colors and beautiful photos. I love this book...I have a very large cookbook collection that I use pretty extensively, and this little book has really endeared itself to me. I think it is a great value.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:

4Great recipes, but seems geared toward LARGE kitchens  Jun 21, 2008
By A. Gammill
As a couple of others have pointed out, the only real problem with Tamales 101 is that the recipes aren't always practical for those of us with limited resources. I was delighted to find a good recipe for traditional pork tamales, but had to really get creative when it came time to mix all the ingredients together.

I've always loved tamales, and I really appreciated the author's brief history lesson on this traditional food. My wife and I also enjoyed the simple tomatillo sauce recipe.

One thing to remember: PLAN AHEAD. Even relatively simple tamales take lots of preparation and work. Having a helper is almost essential; my wife and I made the above-mentioned recipe together, and it still took 2 days from start to finish.

Bottom line: A good book for beginners (like myself) who have always been a bit intimidated by the idea of making tamales from scratch.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:

3some good, some bad  Mar 30, 2008
By Mandy V.
I liked all the filling and suace ideas. Was very disappointed in the masa harina recipe. First, for the amount of ingrediants, not a chance it's all going to fit in my 5 qt stand mixer, second the proportions of liquid ingrediants to dry and so far off, I ended up adding at least 2 more, if not 3 more cups of water.

I did like the discussion and diagrams of all the different folding techniques, that is very helpful. I wasn't impressed that she provides a recipe for masa harina masa and then calls for fresh masa in all the tamale recipes. I've always used masa harina masa for my tamales since fresh masa is not easy to find. Would have been nice if she talked a bit more about using masa harina masa as a substitue for fresh masa.

Overall, an ok book, but could be confusing for beginer tamale makers.

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