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February 2007: Susana Trilling’s Seasons of My Heart![]() Having had the opportunity to eat, travel, and cook with Susana Trilling, I am of course biased, but after returning from Oaxaca last month where I spent a few days with her, I reexamined her book, which came out in 2000 as a companion tome to her PBS series. Trilling, along with Rick Bayless, Zarela Martinez, and Diana Kennedy, is a passionate ambassador for Mexican cooking, but Trilling’s viewpoint and focus is almost exclusively Oaxaqueño. Her cooking school is worth a visit for anyone looking for a cooking vacation or just something to add to an itinerary if you are swinging through the Land of Seven Moles.La cucina oaxaqueña is a mystery to even the most devoted Mexican food freaks and Trilling’s expertise with navigating local markets, the countryside, and the outlying areas of the region are without peer. After all, she lives and works there, and her book's amazing recipes reflect her experience. Just give her mole recipes a shot, or her traditional tamales, and you’ll be cooking them for years to come. While we toured Oaxaca’s markets, street vendors, and restaurants, Trilling got me hooked on soups for Almuerzo, the daily Oaxacan second meal usually taken between 9 and 10 a.m., and she has several soup recipes in the book that I plan on sipping in memory of her inspiration!
Read Trilling's recipe for Mole Negro Oaxaqueño, Oaxacan Black Mole, from Seasons of My Heart. Buy Seasons of My Heart at Borders.
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