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Food for thought: Cooking lengua and learning about its role in Hispanic cuisine

Homemade lengua can be a tasty dish for Hispanic Heritage Month

Besides being an expert in bilingual-bicultural studies, UTSA professor emerita Dr. Ellen Riojas Clark makes a delicious homemade lengua with her own unique twist.

For those who’ve never had beef tongue, Clark said it not only makes for tender barbacoa, it is also enjoyed worldwide.

“It can be high cuisine or it can be cuisine ‘de la casa,’ family eating,” Clark said.

Being it is Hispanic Heritage Month, Clark’s colorful Mexican-style kitchen was the perfect setting to show just how easy it is to make “lengua,” using “hoja santa,” the “sacred leaf” otherwise known as Mexican pepper leaf or rootbeer plant, which has a faint aroma similar to the popular soda.

Clark said “lengua” was long considered “la comida de los pobres,” a food that poor families could afford and who weren’t about to let anything go to waste.

Even so, she said, “They were so creative and innovative.”

Clark’s own recipe involves adding garlic cloves, bay leaves, pepper corn and salt, wrapping it in “oja santa” to impart its own mild flavor, and then aluminum foil, or just foil if “oja santa” isn’t available. Then it’s into the crock pot. Remove the outer skin after it’s cooked.

“Cook it all night, get up in the morning and it’s ready to go,” Clark said. “It’s actually very nutritious and it has a wonderful, smooth, smooth, delicate flavor.”

A recipe for Lengua en Hoja Santa. (KSAT)

She said the result is delicious barbacoa, perfect for breakfast tacos on the weekend, with plenty of pico de gallo, chopped onions and warm tortillas on the side.

Clark said it’s also important to remember, especially during Hispanic Heritage Month, “It reflects our history, how we were brought up and where we were brought up and what we like to eat.”

FULL VIDEO: Watch Clark describe the cooking process for lengua in the video player below

More Hispanic Heritage Month coverage:


About the Authors
Azian Bermea headshot

Azian Bermea is a photojournalist at KSAT.

Priscilla Carraman headshot

Priscilla Carraman is Manager of Content and Coverage at KSAT. She moved into the role after seven years of producing. She was the producer of the "Know My Neighborhood" series — hyperlocal reporting on different neighborhoods in the area. Priscilla started at KSAT as a producer trainee in 2017 after graduating from UTSA.

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