María “Mari” Santiago

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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15-Minute Guajillo-Seared Shrimp with Coconut Rice & Mango Salsa (The Coastal Tuesday Escape)

15-Minute Guajillo-Seared Shrimp with Coconut Rice & Mango Salsa (The Coastal Tuesday Escape)

This is your weeknight ticket to the Oaxacan coast without leaving your kitchen. We’re pairing a high-heat, smoky guajillo pan-sear with a juicy, bright mango salsa and a genius “Brooklyn shortcut” for silky coconut rice. It hits every texture and flavor note—hot, cold, creamy, crunchy, spicy, sweet—in under 20 minutes.

8 minutes4easy
20-Minute Blistered Calabacita Molletes (The Weekend Bodega Lunch)

20-Minute Blistered Calabacita Molletes (The Weekend Bodega Lunch)

Molletes are the ultimate open-faced Oaxacan comfort food, and this plant-forward version relies on a hard pan-char to turn everyday zucchini into something deeply savory. We're skipping the meat and letting aggressively blistered calabacita, smoky chipotle beans, and a heavy blanket of bubbling Oaxaca cheese do all the work.

17 minutes4easy
20-Minute Skillet Pollo Verde (The Rotisserie Rescue)

20-Minute Skillet Pollo Verde (The Rotisserie Rescue)

Listen, we all love a slow-braised green mole, but on a Tuesday at 6 PM? We need a rotisserie chicken and a blender. This one-skillet guisado uses my favorite cheat code—charring tomatillos fast and simmering shredded chicken until it soaks up every drop of that tangy, bright salsa. Toss in some creamy white beans, grab a stack of warm tortillas, and dinner is saved.

15 minutes4easy
20-Minute Arrachera y Poblano Alambre (The Tuesday Taco Party)

20-Minute Arrachera y Poblano Alambre (The Tuesday Taco Party)

Alambre is the ultimate weeknight rescue. We are talking high-heat blistered poblanos, violently seared skirt steak, and a blanket of melted cheese, all cooked in one heavy skillet. It eats like a messy, glorious taco party but comes together faster than you can convince your kids to set the table.

12 minutes4easy
20-Minute Skillet Chilaquiles Rojos (The Lazy Sunday Simmer)

20-Minute Skillet Chilaquiles Rojos (The Lazy Sunday Simmer)

Sunday afternoons are for slowing down, but we're not suffering for lunch. Instead of building a complex sauce from scratch, we’re utilizing a Brooklyn shortcut: a rapid-fire red pan sauce built on tomato paste, chipotles, and broth. We simmer it down into something rich and complex, then fold in the thickest tortilla chips you can find. It’s the ultimate lazy-day comfort bowl: saucy, slightly crunchy, heavy on the crema, and exactly what you need before a nap. This is a Sunday afternoon lunch, not a wedding mole.

15 minutes2easy
15-Minute Pan-Seared Chuletas with Ancho-Orange Pan Sauce

15-Minute Pan-Seared Chuletas with Ancho-Orange Pan Sauce

Thin-cut bone-in pork chops are the unsung heroes of the Tuesday night meat aisle. We're going to sear them hard and fast, then deglaze the pan with a smoky, bright mix of fresh orange juice, ancho chile, and a little apple cider vinegar to scrape up all those golden bits.

10 minutes4easy

Stories

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