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EntreDiversidades. Revista de ciencias sociales y humanidades
versión On-line ISSN 2007-7610versión impresa ISSN 2007-7602
Resumen
CASTILLO CISNEROS, María del Carmen. En mi mero mole: an Anthropological Review of the Video “Mole” in Chapters of Food. Entrediversidades rev. cienc. soc. humanid. [online]. 2021, vol.8, n.1, pp.164-185. Epub 04-Mar-2024. ISSN 2007-7610. https://doi.org/10.31644/ed.v8.n1.2021.a07.
In Chapters of food, Enrique Olvera, a trendy mexican chef, states that mole tastes like mole, not like the sum of its ingredients because when you mix them, they all renounce to their proper flavors. The mole, although it is mole, is just because all its ingredients cooperate with flavors and because it is enough to dip the fingertip in the mixture to repair in each of them. To say that mole tastes like mole is to abstract the complexity of its flavors and that includes the cultural flavors that its confection involves. In Oaxaca, moles are a crucial part of the food culture of their people and each one has a particular configuration that goes beyond the culinary. Therefore, a mole is the condensation of multiple social relationships that coexist beyond folklorisms that fetish, enchant and kill. In this text, based on my ethnographic work of almost two decades in Oaxaca, I provide an anthropological review of the “Mole” video, emphasizing the importance of commensality and textiles to highlight that, an ambiguous treatment of sociocultural content ends up being harmful to what we call our cultural heritage.
Palabras llave : Oaxaca; mole; heritage; indigenous peoples; traditional textiles.