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  2. Spice Up Taco Tuesday With These Homemade Salsas - AOL

    www.aol.com/spice-taco-tuesday-homemade-salsas...

    Restaurant-Style Salsa. A simple, red salsa like the kind in restaurants, what's not to love? It's a classic tomato-based dip with a nice balance of sugar, salt, herbs, and spices.

  3. 13 Brilliant Salsa Recipes That'll Impress People at Your ...

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    9. Yucatán-Style Hot Dried-Chili Salsa. This salsa is fruity, smoky, and hot. Look for the dried chiles de arbol and pasilla in the Hispanic section of your grocery store, or head to a Mexican ...

  4. 17 Classic Tex-Mex Recipes Your Family Will Devour - AOL

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    1. Restaurant Style Salsa. First thing's first: You've got to have great salsa, whether it's for chip dipping or topping tacos. This recipe for restaurant-style salsa includes both canned and ...

  5. Chipotle Mexican Grill's Tomato Salsa Recipe - AOL

    homepage.aol.com/food/recipes/chipotle-mexican...

    Roast the poblano chilies on a grill or BBQ and let cool. Dice the tomatoes, poblano chilies, onion, and jalapeños. Combine all the ingredients and season to taste.

  6. Pico de gallo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pico_de_gallo

    Pico de gallo can be used in much the same way as Mexican liquid salsas. Because it contains less liquid, it also can be used as a main ingredient in dishes such as tacos and fajitas. The tomato-based variety is widely known as salsa picada ('minced/chopped sauce'). In Mexico it is normally called salsa mexicana ('Mexican sauce').

  7. Salsa (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salsa_(food)

    The use of salsa as a table dip was popularized by Mexican restaurants in the United States. In the 1980s, tomato-based Mexican-style salsas gained in popularity. In 1992, the dollar value of salsa sales in the United States exceeded those of tomato ketchup. [6] Salsa made with jalapeños, mango, pineapple, red onion and cilantro (coriander)

  8. Mexican cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_cuisine

    Most large American cities host a Mexican diaspora due to proximity and immigration, and Mexican restaurants and food trucks are generally easy to find in the continental states. One reason is that Mexican immigrants use food as a means of combating homesickness, and for their descendants, it is a symbol of ethnicity. [38]

  9. Tostitos Restaurant Style Medium Salsa. Lizzy Briskin, Eat This, Not That! PER SERVING (2 tablespoons): 15 cal, 0 g fat (0 g saturated fat), 210 mg sodium, 3 g carbs (1 g fiber, 1 g sugar), 1 g ...