Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
There are also two international distribution centers, one each serving North America and Europe; products are also sold by independent and chain groceries throughout the world. There are three Mexican production plants (in State of Mexico, San Luis Potosí and Guasave [4]) creating the brand's products for the various distribution centers. [2]
A significant subgroup of Mexican restaurants in San Diego serves burritos described as "no-frills" and, in contrast to Mission-style burritos, the assembly line is not used. [ 24 ] : 165 [ 34 ] In the early 1960s, Roberto Robledo opened a tortilleria in San Diego and learned the restaurant business.
San Luis Potosí, [a] officially the Free and Sovereign State of San Luis Potosí, [b] is one of the 32 states which compose the Federal Entities of Mexico. It is divided in 59 municipalities and is named after its capital city, San Luis Potosí .
San Luis Potosí, commonly referred to as San Luis, or by its initials SLP (Otomi: Nmiñ'u), is the capital and the most populous city of the Mexican state of San Luis Potosí. It is the municipal seat of the surrounding municipality of San Luis Potosí. The city lies at an elevation of 1,864 metres (6,115 feet).
Canel's is a Mexican confectionery company founded in 1925 in San Luis Potosí, Mexico. [1] The company's main product line is chewing gum, but it also manufactures soft and hard candies, gummies, cremes, fresh breath products, fruit chews, milk caramel chews, toffees, lollipops, jelly beans, and more.
Typically, left over tortillas are the basis of the dish. [2] Green or red salsa is poured over the crisp tortilla triangles. [3] The mixture is simmered until the tortilla starts softening.
Taco Temple, a California Mexican fusion restaurant with two locations in San Luis Obispo County, permanently closed one of its establishments Dec. 31, after four years in business.
In Mexico, most go to Mexico City, Tampico and Monterrey to work as household help but they also go to work in mines in Pachuca and farms in San Luis Potosí, coffee plantations in Huauchinango and the United States. [1] Like most rural indigenous, the economy is based on agriculture, especially the growing of corn.