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Matters of Taste: Elote Café in Sedona showcases Mexican street food

Corn—Mexico’s diet was built upon it. Cultivated as a staple crop by the Mayans and Aztec, they bred early, inedible ears into the delicious vegetable we relish today. As masa for tortillas, it undergirds a mainstay menu from tacos to enchiladas and tamales. Corn has been cooked by various means, but grilling cobs over an open fire predominated, and since then, a few condiments were added, and elote evolved as Mexico City’s favorite street food.

Elote Café finds its roots a bit farther south on the map. Chef-owner Jeff Smedstad polished his professional skills at Scottsdale Culinary Institute and with Susana Trilling at Seasons of my Heart Cooking School in Oaxaca. There, the chef spent time cooking on ranches with locals. To hone his craft, Smedstad spent 20 years traveling the back roads of Mexico, Veracruz, Puebla and his native Arizona shopping markets, sampling restaurant cuisine and engaging families.





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