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Plate with fresh guacamole with avacado pit and tortilla chips

Guacamole

My most vivid impressions are of meals I’ve eaten with friends. When you’re surrounded by good people, good vibes and good food (as Matthew McConaughey might say) everything is heightened. There is science to suggest that by eating and laughing together we are creating endorphins which, in turn, may promote our ability to make memories. Lived experience tells me that is absolutely true.

So we get to guacamole. In my mind, this is Dave’s guacamole because he brought a bowl of it to a potluck BBQ one summer and from that day forward I have only ever made it his way. There were no avocados in my house growing up because the US banned importation of them from Mexico until 1997. I don’t think I bought one until I was deep into my twenties. It wasn’t until I was living near a Mexican grocery store in Chicago that I started to buy them regularly. Even then though, guacamole wasn’t really on my radar as something you made for yourself. You got it on the side when you ordered a burrito but it wasn’t for home.

Until that party when Dave came in. He had a huge bowl of the most brilliantly green, fresh looking thing I’d ever seen. When he took the cover off the smell was phenomenal. It smelled like summer. Limes, coriander, there was a touch of black pepper. If I close my eyes I can put myself right back in that kitchen and hear people laughing outside, feel the sun on my shoulders. That is some serious sense memory sorcery.

And the taste. Stop it. It was like life took a left turn and I saw this whole other vista open up before me. I hadn’t ever had guacamole that tasted of so much. It was tart with lime, it had a bit of bite. It was perfectly seasoned. It hadn’t been blended so you would get chunks of avocado on your chip and he had left the pits in so it didn’t go brown at all. Not that it lasted long.

When I’m having people over this is my go to. It has never failed me once. When you combine it with some easy fajitas or enchiladas it makes a dinner party I guarantee will be memorable for everyone.

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Plate with fresh guacamole with avacado pit and tortilla chips

Ingredients

These are all starting amounts. Adjust to taste:

1 avocado per person
1 clove of garlic per avocado, minced
1/4 red onion per avocado
Big bunch of fresh coriander
1 lime per avocado
Salt and Pepper
OPTIONAL: Fresh jalapeno pepper to taste

Instructions

1
Two principles before we start. 1. Get everything cut up and into the bowl but don’t mix it together until the end because 2. The less you manhandle this, the better it’s going to be. Treat it like pastry dough and don’t touch it too much.
2
You want a bowl big enough for you to cut through some of the avocado. In this case a wide, shallow bowl will work better for you than a deep one. Cut the AVOCADOS in half from top to bottom rather than around the middle of the belly. Take a spoon and carve out large pieces into the bowl.
3
Mince your GARLIC and sprinkle it over the avocado.
4
Slice your RED ONION thinly and add it to the pile in your bowl.
5
Chop your CORIANDER finely, starting from the stalk end and working up to the leaves. Put all of it in the bowl.
6
You can either squeeze your LIME directly over everything or use a juicer if you’re worried about seeds.
7
Add more BLACK PEPPER than SALT but do add both. Start a little light because you haven’t tasted anything and it is important that you taste it with a chip because the seasoning on the chip will make a difference.
8
If you’re into it, chop up your JALAPENO PEPPER very finely and add it in. Also wise to start slowly here because you can always add more later.
9
Now you have a small hill of ingredients in a bowl which need to be incorporated without being destroyed. The technique I use is to take a fork and table knife and pretend like you’re cutting up food on your plate. Your intention is to cut the avocado, not smash it. As you cut it into smaller chunks, the rest of the ingredients will start to mix in naturally.
10
When you’ve got the avocado looking like something you’d like to eat, taste it with a chip to judge the salt level. The two things I’m most likely to adjust at this point are the lime (more) and the salt (more) but I never do either without checking first.
11
Goes without saying but serve with really good tortilla chips. Ideally not Doritos but your party, your rules.
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