Skip to main content

Mexican markets are the best in the world


Mercado de Flores San Angel, photo by Elias Zamora 

One of the greatest pleasures in my grandfather's life was to visit the market in Cannes, admire the variety and quality of the produce on offer and chat to some of the stallholders.
Covered markets in Spain are impressive. The food is relatively less expensive, there is less variety and there is somewhat less knowledge of the products on display, but the quality is fantastic.

A market in India has a wide variety of products, many more prepared foods than in France or Spain, but suffers from a lack of hygiene. You get extra in India, gold leaf with your fudge, tamarind on your puffed rice, masala in your tea, hepatitis with your gulab jamun, Delhi belly with your salt lassi, cholera with your Limca nimbu; cockroaches running around your rice, weevils in your bread and beer in your teacup.

In Africa markets are like wells. You go to the well to rest from the fields, to stay in the shade, to sit together and talk and if someone comes along and gives you money for what took you so long to grow, you buy soap for your family, tea and sugar, school uniforms, beer for your man: love is renewed. In famine the chickens are thin and the eggs fit coldly into your palm, in feast the chickens are fat and the eggs are warm and match your fist and you learn the meaning of the word exuberance.

The most impressive markets in Japan are fish markets. All the coastal incursions into other countries' territories, all the bribery and corruption of other countries' fishing boats seem worth it when you see the fleshy harvest. To watch the speed at which the Japanese market workers labour, in relative silence, and observe how a large fish is dealt with by two long knife wielding fishmongers. The large animal is slashed and slashed into lunchbox sized portions.

Chinese markets are deforming and fantastical. All edible protein and plant life is there. Crunchy spiders, a million glazed animals, there is dream-like plasticity of vegetable and meat, a moral to the story. Watch the House of the Spirits, how the parents gobble up the food of ghosts, Oh how many Chinese ghosts, and turn into pigs. The remedies for engorgement are disgorgement and loss.

But the best markets of all are Mexican markets. Let me Tell you about Mexican markets.
The reason why Mexican markets are the best is simple. The true greatness of Mexican culture wasn't its vast pyramids and cities; some pyramids so big, like the pyramid of Cholula, that the Spanish built on them mistaking them for hills. Mexican greatness didn't simply consist of its highly ordered, disciplined and meritocratic society, not it's free schools and public services. It wasn't demonstrated in calendars or through the windows of observatories. It wasn't present in the supreme skill of its craftsmanship or even in the glory and gore of its wars and religion.

Mexican culture greatness spoke through plants.

The arrival of the Spanish in Mexico was not a clash of civilisations but a destructive collision. The Spanish conquerors burned hundreds of thousands of Mexican texts. They burned at the least the equivalent of an Alexandrian Library full of Mexican knowledge, much of it agricultural knowledge. Later, they also orphaned Mexico's agricultural achievements, a crime blacker than the black legend.

The Spanish appropriated Mexico's agriculture and sent it parentless into the world.

All of our ancestors fall back into the wilderness in times of hunger to look for nourishment. We know this. The crops fail, your herds die and it's back to the roots and the grasses and the berries and the forest tree fruits.

Take maize for example. In the beginning corn was simply a fatly seeded stalk. The Mexicans brought it out of the wild and tamed it and even ended up calling themselves after it. The children of the maize. Long before the buffalo were slaughtered and the prairies turned into corn fields, Mexican farmers had already created many varieties of corn, selected the maize for its colour and shape.

So read these names as you would ten thousand books:

tomate, jitomate, aguacate, chocolate, chile, maiz, guayaba, papaya, hule, calabaza, frijol, vainilla, cacahuate, algodon, girasol, tuna, ajonjoli, jicama, mamey, chico zapote, cuitlacoche, pitaya, chaya, nopal, changunga, and so on.

And there was, among the many million herbal remedies, even the cure for cancer. Lost forever. Precious medical knowledge destroyed by the footloose, ricocheting younger sons of the Christian Spanish empire. But, if you look, you can still buy "Gobernadora" in the market. Quietly, on the packet, it whispers in small letters "Against cancer".

And the power of this Mexican agricultural inheritance continues to bite in and spread: Ambassador Poinsettia takes a decorative Mexican Christmas plant back to the US with bright red leaves. Mr Hass develops a new, creamier avocado. Mexican Peyote kick starts psychedelia and catalyses a cultural revolution. Lantana and jacaranda colonise foreign countries and farmers attempt to eradicate these tenacious Mexican plants as if they were triffids. Mexican Aloe is now used in a hundred cosmetic products and the Koreans and Japanese have even learned to drink it, (though they have never tried pulque). I am sure the the thieving drug companies will find many uses for the mysterious toloache.

Diego Rivera when he wanted to paint a mural on the glories of Mexico painted a picture. It was a mural of Tenochtitlan as market. You can go and see it in the Palacio Nacional in the Zocalo. And 600 years ago Nezohualcoyotl, and all the Nahuatl poets, thought of their poems as flowers. The highest Mexican poetic sentiment, higher than all the others was the symbol of flowering.


From the song of Nezaualcoyotl

"They may tear off our fruit,
They may cut off our branches,
They may burn the trunk,
But they will never be able to kill our roots."


And he was right of course. Listen to this poem:


On your feet!

On your feet my friends.
The princes are now paupers,
Yes, I am Nezahualcoyotl,
Yes, I am the singer,
I'm that parrot with a big head.
Go on! pick up your flowers and your feathered fans.
Go on! Dance with them.
Because you are my son.
You are Yoyontzin.
Drink up your chocolate,
The flower of the cocoa plant.
Now, drink it down and ready.
Do it. Dance.

This isn't our home.
We shan't be living here much longer.
We must all leave soon."

By Nezahualcoyotl.

And when he calls to his son Yoyontzin, to remember who he is, he tells him to drink chocolate, the flower of the cocoa plant, he knew what it was all worth. He knew what would happen, Yoyontzin, my son.



Phil Hall

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A warm welcome

. Why blog on ARS NOTORIA? I have set up this website,  ARS NOTORIA ,  (the notable art) as an opportunity for like-minded people like you to jot down your thoughts and share them with us on what I hope will be a high profile blog. . ARS NOTORIA is conceived as an outlet: a way for you to get things off your chest, shake those bees out of your bonnet and scratch that itch. The idea is that you do so in a companionable blogging environment, one that that is less structured - freer. Every article you care to write or photograph or picture you care to post will appear on its own page and you are pretty much guaranteed that people will read with interest what you produce and take time to look at what you post. Personal blogs are OK, but what we long for, if we can admit it, are easy-going, loose knit communities: blogging hubs where we can share ideas and pop in and out as frequently, or as seldom, as we like. You will be able to moderate and delete any of the comments made on 

Phil Hall: The Taleban are a drug cartel disguised as an Islamist movement

Truly the Taleban could have arranged as many bombings and terrorists acts as they liked in the UK. There are many Pashtun young men and women in cities in the UK who still have large extended families back in Afghanistan and who could be forced into doing something they should not. But guess what. So far there have been no attacks by Afghans on British soil. Why? It is a mystery. News comes from Afghanistan and the recent UN report that the Taleban and the drug trade are intertwined and that now the Taleban, who are mainly Pashtun, are officially in command of an international drug cartel.  News comes from Afghanistan that Taleban drug lords go to Dubai to live high on the hog and gamble and sleep with women and luxuriate in all the that the freedom to consume has to offer, while their footsoldiers, peasant fighters, are deluded and told that they are fighting a patriotic religious war.  And though they are told they are fighting a religious war what really matters to them in tr

Our Collective Caliban

At the risk of seeming digitally provincial, I’m going to illustrate my point with an example from a recent Guardian blog. Michel Ruse, who is apparently a philosopher, suggested that, whilst disagreeing with creationists on all points, and agreeing with Dawkins et al on both their science and philosophy, it might be wiser and more humane (humanist, even) not to vilify the religious as cretinous and incapable of reason. Which seems reasonable, to me. According to many below-the-line responses he is a ‘half-baked’ atheist, ‘one of the more strident and shrill New Apologists’ and, apparently, “needs to get a pair’. And that’s just from the first twenty comments. A recent article by a screenwriter at a US site was titled ‘Why I Won’t Read Your Fucking Screenplay.’ Tough guy. I wonder how his Christmas cards read. I’m going to sound like a maiden aunt dismayed by an unsporting bridge play and can perhaps be accused of needing to ‘get a pair’ myself (although, before you