
María “Mari” Santiago
Oaxacan comfort, Brooklyn shortcuts, weeknight bright.
María “Mari” Santiago was born in Oaxaca, where her earliest kitchen memories are measured in scent: chiles toasting on a comal, cinnamon and chocolate blooming in mole, and the warm, nutty snap of a tlayuda folded in half for the walk home. She learned by watching—first her tías, then her abuela—picking up the small, practical rules that never made it into written recipes: how to tell when the garlic is *just* right, how to rescue a too-spicy salsa, and why you always taste the broth before you add the salt. Now in Brooklyn, Mari cooks the food she grew up on while raising two little kids and juggling real-life time limits. Her style is “real flavor, real life”: traditional Oaxacan and everyday Mexican dishes—moles, caldos, frijoles, enfrijoladas, salsas, and crispy tlayudas—made weeknight-friendly with smart shortcuts, brighter salsas, and more vegetables without losing the soul of the dish. She’s not precious about rules, she’s big on swaps, and she’s on a mission to prove that you can cook deeply flavorful Mexican food with what you can actually find at a normal grocery store (and still get dinner on the table before a meltdown). Mari’s recipes read like a friend texting you from the produce aisle: clear, funny, and unpretentious, with a side of abuela wisdom. If there’s a hard-to-find ingredient, she gives you a realistic alternative, tells you what will change (and what won’t), and keeps the focus where it belongs—on food that tastes like home, even when home is a small Brooklyn kitchen.
Recipes
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20-Minute Lazy Sunday Chilaquiles Verdes (The One-Pan Savior)
Traditionally, chilaquiles mean frying old tortillas and dirtying three different pans. Not today. This is my lazy weekend hack: we blister a quick salsa verde, poach the eggs right in the bubbling sauce shakshuka-style, and tuck sturdy bodega chips in at the last second. It’s tangy, rich, retains that crucial crunch, and leaves you with exactly one pan to wash before your second cup of coffee.

25-Minute Picadillo Verde Bowl (The WFH Comfort Braise)
Listen, a good braise doesn't have to take all afternoon. This green picadillo bowl takes ground pork—an unsung hero of the weeknight kitchen—and bathes it in a quick, charred tomatillo salsa. We toss in calabacitas and corn, let it bubble until the pork is impossibly tender, and serve it over whatever rice you have in the fridge. Real flavor, real life, and absolutely zero sad desk lunches.

12-Minute Broiled Black Bean & Blistered Tomato Cazuela (The WFH Lunch Scoop)
It is 12:45 PM, you have exactly fifteen minutes before your next meeting, and the sad desk-salad is not going to cut it. We are doing a quick-broil cazuela. By blistering tomatoes and scallions under the broiler, we build a smoky, deep base in minutes. We blend half of that jammy veg with canned black beans, top it with cheese, and broil it into a molten, scoopable dream. Real flavor, real life, no sad lunches.

15-Minute Broiled Chipotle Totopos (Friday Night Couch Nachos)
Listen to me: we are not suffering for dinner, even when dinner is actually just snacks on the couch at 8 PM. By blasting sturdy tortilla chips, creamy black beans, and an instant chipotle drizzle under the broiler, we give hand-pulled Oaxaca cheese the spotlight it deserves. It melts into gooey, blistered perfection, giving you those crispy little cheese edges (the costra) that you’ll fight your partner for.

20-Minute Blistered Seta Dobladas (Friday Night Folded Tacos)
Listen, by Friday at 6 PM, nobody wants to cook, but nobody wants to wait an hour for delivery either. Enter the doblada: a crispy, folded taco stuffed with hard-blistered oyster mushrooms and melted Oaxaca cheese. Tearing the mushrooms and blistering them fast gives you this incredible, meaty chew that hits all the right comfort notes.

10-Minute Soft-Scrambled Chorizo Tacos (Because We Don't Do Rubbery Eggs)
A Brooklyn-Oaxacan morning rescue that fixes the classic huevos con chorizo. By crisping the meat first and gently soft-scrambling the eggs in the rendered red fat, we get shatter-crisp savory bites suspended in creamy, glossy eggs. Smeared over warm tortillas with bright lime-avocado, this is proof we're not suffering for breakfast.
Stories
View all20-Minute Lazy Sunday Chilaquiles Verdes (The One-Pan Savior)
We are not suffering for breakfast today. These one-pan chilaquiles use sturdy bodega chips and a blistered blender salsa to save your Sunday morning.
May 23, 2026
25-Minute Picadillo Verde Bowl (The WFH Comfort Braise)
Listen, a good braise doesn't have to take all afternoon. Bridge Oaxacan flavor and Brooklyn timeframes with this ground pork and tomatillo bowl.
May 21, 2026
12-Minute Broiled Black Bean & Blistered Tomato Cazuela (The WFH Lunch Scoop)
Skip the sad desk salad. This smoky, cheesy, 12-minute black bean cazuela is your ultimate Work-From-Home lunch savior, bringing Oaxacan comfort straight to your Tuesday.
May 19, 2026
15-Minute Broiled Chipotle Totopos (Friday Night Couch Nachos)
We are not suffering for dinner, even when dinner is just snacks on the couch at 8 PM. These blistered, cheesy totopos take 15 minutes and will save your Friday night.
May 17, 2026