Today is International Day of the Nacho, so declared under somewhat murky
circumstances and murkier authority for this date in 1975 after the tragic
death of the delicacy’s inventor, Ignacio
“Nacho” Anaya at the age of 81.
I know. It comes as a stunning surprise to gourmets
and foodies that the dish is not
steeped in traditional Mexican cuisine.
The story goes that Anaya was
laboring as the maître d’hôtel—although I am relatively certain that no one
ever called the front house manager
by that title—at El Moderno Café in Piedras
Negras, Coahuila, a border town just
across the Rio Grande from Eagle Pass, Texas in 1943. One evening
the restaurant was closed when it
was besieged by a gaggle of soldier’s
wives from Ft. Duncan in Eagle
Pass. The women had escaped the boredom
of camp life for a day of alleged shopping. But one more than suspects the junket
included more than a bit of the drinking
and carousing that is the main
attraction of border towns.
The creator--Ignacio "Nacho" Anaya.
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Whatever they were doing, the ladies
were as ravenous as they were raucous and demanded something to
eat. The kitchen staff had already left so Anaya rustled up what he
could. He cut several corn tortillas into wedge shaped
quarters and fried them in deep fat.
He melted left-over shredded cheddar
cheese, poured the resulting sauce over the chips and sprinkled on sliced pickled jalapeños.
The ladies devoured the platters and
enquired what the new dish was called.
Anaya shrugged and for lack of a better name stammered out Nacho’s especiales. Their ravenous approval began another
tradition—chowing down on the dish after bouts of serious drinking. On their return to Texas the ladies raved
about them and soon others were asking for them.
A menu from El Moderno in the 1950's.
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El Moderno put Nacho’s especiales on
the regular menu. Other joints on both sides of the river soon
followed. It didn’t take too long until
the name was shortened to just plain nachos.
Anaya himself gained such local notoriety
that a few years later he was able to open his own place, Nacho’s Restaurant and went into competition with his former
employer as the official home of the nacho.
Nachos were first noted in English print in a 1950 book A
Taste of Texas but it was not until 1954 that Anaya’s original recipe was published in St.
Anne’s Cookbook, one of those local
fundraiser cookbooks.
In 1959 Carmen Rocha, a waitress at El
Cholo Restaurant in San Antonio was
sent to Los Angeles to open up a franchise of the restaurant there and added nachos to the menu,
introducing the dish to the West Coast.
The invention of a nacho cheese dispenser made "stadium nachos" ubiquitous as a snack that could be sold almost anywhere.
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But nachos did not really take off
until entrepreneur Frank Liberto,
owner of Rico’s Products developed nacho sauce that could be easily
applied to pre-fried chips from heated dispenser and a newer version called stadium
nachos really took off. He began
vending his new product at sporting events at Arlington Stadium in Arlington,
Texas where sportscaster Howard Cosell sampled them and
mentioned them repeatedly on broadcasts of Monday Night Football.
After such an impressive culturally
significant endorsement, nachos went
viral. The creation of dispensers in which bladders
of nacho sauce could be kept piping hot for days, maybe even weeks, meant that
the delicacy could be served for school
lunches or by bartenders,
teenagers with acne behind the counter of movie
concession stands, or self-dispensed
by drunks in gas stations at 3 am.
These days at American dining
establishments like Chili’s enormous platters
of nachos are served and can are garnished with embellishments like salsa, chili, sour cream, black olives,
ground beef, chopped onions, and re-fried
beans. This form of nachos supreme have
even gone international and can now be found from Helsinki to Hong Kong.
Loaded Nacho Supremes are practically meals in themselves or can be shared by a table.
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You can now even enjoy nachos at
home by heating 12 ounce, jars of
nacho sauce in the microwave and
pouring the contents over a plate of bagged
tortilla chips.
El
Moderno was one of the few places that still served the original recipe just as concocted by Anaya who was commemorated
there by a brass plaque. But the fabled eatery closed in 2009. A fast
food operation now operates in in the city but it is safe to say they don’t
serve the original recipe.
A contender--since surpassed--for World's Largest Nachos.
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The
epicenter for the celebration of the
International Day of the Nacho remains in Piedras Negras. The celebration, however, is city-wide and now stretches over a three day weekend closest to October
21. Festivities include the annual
recreation of the World’s Largest Nachos
as certified by the Guinness Book of World Records and
by an annual nachos competition which was judged by Ignacio Anaya Jr. until his death in 2010.
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