|   Mole (pron. mole-a) is a series of Mexican sauces that contain ground  chiles, spices, nuts, often chocolate, sometimes raisins, ground  seeds, etc.   There are three basic types of moles:   1.  Mole Poblano (the most famous type, and the one that ALWAYS  contains chocolate) was originated in Pueblo during Colonial times  dish for a visiting Archbishop.  The sauce contains ground dried  chile peppers, ground nuts, ground raisins, broth, chocolate,  sometimes ground corn tortillas, a small amount of sugar, and various  spices. It is traditionally served over turkey, with a side dish of  unfilled tamales (just the cornmeal masa steamed in corn shucks.)  It's one of those dishes that rarely finds its way out of the country  of origin, and you either passionately love or passionately hate. I'd  post a recipe if I could find one (Have recipes for all three  versions floating around SOMEWHERE, but never got the time to enter  'em into the computer, so they're a little tough to find). It may  also be purchased pre-made (something I recommend, as the bottled  version is excellent, and this is NOT something you'd want to attack  from scratch on even a semi-regular basis). If Shirley is interested,  I'll pick up a jar and ship it your way.   2.  Mole Verde (green mole) contains green chiles, broth, ground  pumpkin seeds, various herbs and spices.  It's usually served over  chicken or pork. Nice stuff, and much easier for the beginner to like  than the Mole Poblano.   3.  Mole Roja (red mole) is a sauce that contains red chiles, herbs  and spices, ground nuts or seeds, ground corn tortillas, usually no  chocolate. I THINK it comes from the region around Oxaca.  Again,  it's marginally easier to like than the more well-known version. It's  usually served over chicken or pork.   All of these dishes are virtual throwbacks to the complex (and to our  palates unusual) combinations of ingredients that were common in that  part of the country before the arrival of the Spaniards.  None of the  dishes is particularly hot, they have a complex, haunting flavor that  speaks of cultures long gone, but not entirely forgotten.   Don't know if you'd like 'em or not, Unka Burt (I do), but if you  want just a hint of what I'm talking about, throw a square of  unsweetened chocolate in your next batch of Left-Handed Chili, and  let us know what you think.   From: Kathy Pitts, Bryan, TX   From: Kathy Pitts                     Date: 12 Jan 96 Your About Mole is ready. Bon appetit! Related recipes: Pitts, Info, Mexican
 
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