Al ajillo

Al ajillo is a typical condiment in the cuisines of the Spanish-speaking world. In Mexico, it combines guajillo chili peppers and ajo (garlic).[1] In other Latin American countries the dish is similar, but using other chilies, for example the aji panca or aji mirasol in Peruvian cooking, dried forms of aji amarillo. The likely origin, through colonization, is the Spanish dish gambas al ajillo, prawns cooked in a garlic and hot paprika oil.

Chicken al ajillo

Camarones al ajillo

It is a dish made with shrimp that are fried in a pan with butter or vegetable oil, in which slices of garlic and guajillo chile have been frying. It is seasoned with salt, black pepper, lemon and parsley or coriander.[1]

Pescado al ajillo

It is a dish made with fish that is fried in a pan with butter or vegetable oil, in which slices of garlic and guajillo chile have been frying. It is seasoned with salt, black pepper, lemon and parsley or coriander.

gollark: Probably.
gollark: Ice Lake has it actually supported and then Tiger Lake gets AV1 decoding but not encoding.
gollark: Kaby Lake has VP9 hardware encoding but for some reason it's missing from some of the drivers?
gollark: Plus some other niche ones.
gollark: It has hardware decode for H.264, H.265, and VP8, maybe VP9 too.

References

  1. Nancy Zaslavsky (1997). A Cook's Tour of Mexico: Authentic Recipes from the Country's Best Open-Air Markets, City Fondas, and Home Kitchens. Macmillan. p. 201. ISBN 9780312166083. Retrieved 12 September 2018.

Bibliography

  • Bayless, Rick. Mexican Kitchen. (1996). ISBN 978-0-684-80006-6.
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