http://www.mexgrocer.com/2708.html
"Jugo sazonador" is Maggi seasoning sauce with salt, spices and
pepper. Nestle's famous Jugo Maggi.
This recipe calls for "jugo sazonador", but I didn't know what it was.
CAMARONES EN AGUACHILE (Shrimp ceviche with onion, chiles and sliced
cucumbers)
Botana riquisima...
Ingredientes:
1 kg de camarones
2 pepinos grandes y pelados
Cebolla morada finamente picada en rodajas
Cilantro finamente picado
6 chiles serranos picados
2 tazas de jugo de limon verde sin semilla
Tostadas
1 cucharada de jugo sazonador
Sal y Pimienta al gusto
Modo de preparacion:
Pelar y desvenar los camarones, partirlos a la midad, limpiarlos y
escurrirlos muy bien, poner en un sarte y agregar una taza de jugo de
limon. (Tratar que el jugo de limon cubra los camarones). Esperar 10
minutos y agregar el jugo sazonador esperar otros 5 minutos.
Escurrirlos y agregar sal y pimienta, 1 1/2 pepino picado, 2
cucharadas de cilantro y la cebolla.
Licuar el chile picado, 2 cucharadas de pepino, 1 cucharada de
cilantro, una taza de jugo de limon y sal. Agregarle esta salsa a los
camarones y mezclar y servir con tostadas o totopos.
I know from bitter experience that shrimp and pepinos (cucumber) do not mix
well in the human stomach. It produces way too much gas and burping is an
immediate result.
But then... not every human stomach works the same.
Shrimps are hard enough to get, I'd really think twice before combining
them.
Oh, well.
> > What's in the "secret sauce"? Does anything else come close?
> I know from bitter experience that shrimp and pepinos (cucumber) do not mix
> well in the human stomach. It produces way too much gas and burping is an
> immediate result.
Each diner's lower g.i. tract mileage may vary, but that doesn't
explain what's in jugo sazonador that makes it unique enough to mail
order.
Nothing you can't do yourself when boiling a chicken down to a brth with
your own inventiveness.
Fun!
Wayne
>
> The jugo sazonador that I buy comes in a packet to be disolved in whatever
> you are cooking. They are what you would call 'memorable' flavors packaged
> by one manufacturer or the other with their unique recipe for flavoring
> whatever it is you are making. Nothing but seasonings in different
> combinations to make you by their advertised product.
So. What's your favorite brand of pre-packaged powdered Mexican
seasonings that you add to whatever you're cooking?
I don't buy combinations of Mexican powders, I buy canned and bottled
sauces, or Knorr sauces in tin foil lined cartons.
>
> Nothing you can't do yourself when boiling a chicken down to a brth with
> your own inventiveness.
The only Maggi product on the shelves at the local Food 4 Less is
their chicken broth powder which contains monosodium glutamate.
I added a tablespoon of that powder to my chipotle peanut butter mole,
which I poured over partly fried chicken thighs. I finished the
chicken by simmering the mole for another half hour.
Oh, yes, it was certainly memorable. I couldn't get enough of the MSG.
But it seemed to have transient effect in the mole, as it didn't taste
special at all the next day when I finished the leftovers.
The usual case with spices is that they make leftovers taste better
the next day.
I have tried a few of the little sazone packages and didn't really like any
of them. So I'm back to doing the seasoning myself.
For Texas chili I use a lot of cumin. But not for anything south of the
tropic.