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Pork on a trompo

Tacos are an intrinsic part of Mexico, but one of its capital city's taco specialties has a Middle Eastern legacy.

The sizzle of meat being cooked on a hot plate is a familiar sound on Mexico City's streets at lunchtime. Workers head to stalls on the side of the road or to taquerias for their fix of tortillas and tacos.

El Huequito is one of Mexico City's most established taquerias. The name means "little hole" in Spanish - an appropriate name for a diminutive hole in the wall in the middle of a row of shops.

According to owner Marco Antonio Buendia Gonzalez, whose parents opened the shop in 1959, the name has a second meaning, referring to the hole in your stomach that a sneaky taco can fill.

There is a huge vertical spit with a massive chunk of meat that is suspended in front of a flame. Another spit sits behind it. Every so often, the chef turns the spits to ensure the meat is evenly cooked.

At first glance, it resembles a Middle Eastern shawarma or a doner kebab. Here in Mexico though, it is known as a trompo, which means spinning top because the shape of the meat is similar - narrow at the bottom and wider at the top.

This is the basis of the taco al pastor - the shepherd's taco, which is one of Mexico City's signature dishes. Its origins though are anything but Mexican.

"It's a story of migration," says Jeffrey Pilcher, author of Planet Taco: A Global History of Mexico Food.

Migrants from the Middle East started to come to Mexico from the end of the 19th Century. They came in much larger numbers in the early 20th Century when the Ottoman Empire was crumbling.

According to Antonio Trabulse Kaim of the Mexican-Lebanese Cultural Institute, there are as many as 800,000 Lebanese people and their descendants now living in Mexico.

making tortillas
Man carves trompo meat
pile high taco

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