Mexican Food Miami FL

According to a recent report by Scripps Howard News Service, Mexican food is poised to become America’s favorite ethnic cuisine. Reporter Lance Gay writes that we eat four times more Mexican food than we did 20 years ago, and salsa sales are trouncing ketchup. Tortillas are replacing bread as consumers choose wraps and burritos over sandwiches. Tortilla sales, in fact, are 200% higher than they were a decade ago.

Chili's
(305) 471-8178
8696 N.W. 13Th Terrace
Miami, FL
Moe's Southwest Grill
(786) 336-0138
10660 N.W. 19Th Street
Miami, FL
Chili's
(305) 622-5661
1675 W. 49Th St
Hialeah, FL
Chili's
(305) 821-5699
5705 Nw 173 Dr
Miami Lakes, FL
Chili's
(954) 704-2667
13610 Pines Blvd
Pembroke Pines, FL
Moe's Southwest Grill
(305) 854-4797
229 Sw 8Th St.
Miami, FL
Chili's
(305) 373-0601
401 Biscayne Blvd. 2Nd Fl.
Miami, FL
Chili's
(305) 596-5025
11900 S.W. 88Th Street
Miami, FL
Moe's Southwest Grill
(305) 919-5322
3000 Ne 151 Street Wolf University Center First Floor
Miami, FL
Chili's
(305) 682-9898
19905 Biscayne Blvd
Aventura, FL
Data Provided by:
 
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Mexican Food

According to a recent report by Scripps Howard News Service, Mexican food is poised to become America’s favorite ethnic cuisine. Reporter Lance Gay writes that we eat four times more Mexican food than we did 20 years ago, and salsa sales are trouncing ketchup. Tortillas are replacing bread as consumers choose wraps and burritos over sandwiches. Tortilla sales, in fact, are 200% higher than they were a decade ago.

This is great news for organic food shoppers, who are finding a much wider variety of fresh chili peppers, salsas, guacamoles and tortillas at local organic and natural food stores.

Gay also notes that Mexican food has almost doubled in popularity among Americans who cook regularly (from 44% in 1985 to 86% in 2003—statistics provided by the Institute of Food Technologists). This homemade fare, which features vegetables and other fresh ingredients, is much more healthful than the cuisine enjoyed at many mainstream Mexican restaurants, whose chefs often rely on lard, entrees that overflow with cheese and the allure of huge portions.

Ironically, as more Hispanics become U.S. residents, their eating habits shift dramatically as they embrace the far-from-healthy standard American diet: frozen meals, salty snacks, junk food and other high-fat fare. They are prime candidates to embrace organic living!...

Click here to read the rest of "Viva la Organic Tortilla!"