Where to Start with Pati Jinich
Pati Jinich brings something rare to Mexican cookbook writing: the perspective of someone who grew up in Mexico City, trained as a political scientist, and then pivoted to food as a way of preserving and sharing her country’s culinary heritage. As host of the three-time James Beard Award-winning PBS series Pati’s Mexican Table, she has spent over a decade traveling through Mexico, documenting regional recipes that might otherwise be lost. Her cookbooks combine rigorous recipe testing with personal storytelling, making the food feel both accessible and deeply rooted.
Start here
Treasures of the Mexican Table
Pati Jinich · 400 pages · 2021 · Moderate
Themes: Mexican cuisine, regional specialties, home cooking, traditional recipes, culinary travel
A New York Times bestseller and IACP Award winner that reads like a culinary road trip through Mexico. Pati Jinich spent a decade traveling her home country, collecting recipes that range from iconic national dishes to local secrets unknown outside their region of origin. The result is a book with more than 150 recipes, each paired with the story of where she found it and why it matters.
Why Start Here
If you already have some kitchen confidence and want a Mexican cookbook that goes beyond the basics, this is the one. Jinich writes with the warmth of someone sharing family recipes, but her approach is meticulous. Every recipe was tested in her American kitchen, which means the instructions account for the ingredients and equipment you actually have.
The range is impressive: birria from Jalisco, carne asada from Sonora, salsa macha from Veracruz, cochinita pibil from the Yucatan, and coyotas from the northern desert. Jinich treats Mexico’s cuisine as a collection of distinct regional traditions rather than a single monolithic “Mexican food,” and that perspective makes you a better cook.
What to Expect
A generous book at over 400 pages with beautiful photography throughout. The recipes span the full difficulty range, from quick salsas and snacks to slow weekend projects. Jinich’s headnotes provide useful context about technique and ingredients, and she is honest about which recipes require planning ahead. This is an excellent second cookbook after you have learned the fundamentals from Bayless, or a strong first choice if you prefer to learn by diving into regional dishes.