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20170501 130612
20170501 130612
Recipes

A Brief History of Cinco de Mayo and How to Make Horchata

This article is written by a student writer from the Spoon University at USASK chapter.

Tequila and avocado sales are on the rise which can only mean one thing: Cinco De Mayo is almost here. Cinco De Mayo, or May the 5th for those whose Spanish is a bit lacking, is neither Mexican Independence day (which is September 16th) nor a large Mexican holiday. In fact, it marks the end and victory of the small Battle of Puebla in 1862. This was between France and Mexico in the aptly named Franco-Mexican War, fought from 1861-1867.

You may be asking, “Well then why is it one of the biggest drinking holidays of the year?” We can thank President Franklin Roosevelt for that. On May 4, 1933, Roosevelt enacted the “Good Neighbour Policy”, which was meant to improve the relations between North America and Latin America. The drinking part came from North Americans’ love for all things alcohol. 

Now I’m going to teach you how to make horchata: my way. I am not claiming this is the right way—or even the traditional way—but it is mighty tasty, cheap, and simple.

Horchata

Difficulty:BeginnerPrep time:4 hours Cook time: 10 minutesTotal time:4 hours 10 minutesServings:4 servings

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Salina Wall

    There are two options here:

    1) AKA the u0022Lazy Routeu0022—take the rice and soak it in the water for at least 4 hours. The longer it soaks the easier it is to blend, so I usually leave it overnight.

    or…

    2) Grind the rice in a food processor or coffee grinder and then soak it for 2-3 hours.

  2. Salina Wall

    Add the cinnamon. Cinnamon sticks are the proper way but I’m broke so I use the ground stuff. Season to taste.

  3. Salina Wall

    If using the first method, blend the rice mix for about a minute. If you went the second route this step is not needed.

  4. Salina Wall

    Strain the blended mix using a cheesecloth that’s been folded a few times.

    I didn’t have any on hand, but luckily a piece of paper towel works just as well. Moisten the cloth or paper towel and then just drape it over your container to strain. The wetness will keep it from absorbing a lot of the liquid. Although the paper towel will need to be changed multiple times, it totally works.

    #SpoonTip This method also works for things like cold brew coffee

  5. Salina Wall

    Taste to see how much sweetener and vanilla you want to add. Keep in mind: this is literally just cinnamon and rice milk, which is a little strange. I added about 5 tsp of granulated sugar and roughly 1 tsp of vanilla.

  6. Salina Wall

    Mix it on up, pour over ice, add some cinnamon for garnish and enjoy. Salud!

For a little bonus recipe, freeze your leftover horchata and use them as ice cubes in iced coffee.