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Aciento (Pork Rind Paste) Recipe
Aciento (Pork Rind Paste) Recipe-March 2024
Mar 30, 2026 10:53 PM

  Chances are, if you're not Oaxaqueño and grew up in this last generation in Mexico or the United States, you’ve probably been taught to think that pork fat like aciento—Oaxacan-style chicharrón paste—is not good for you, and that you should always cook and eat things made with a plant-based oil instead. It’s normal to think this way. That is, until you go to Oaxaca and see that aciento is a way of life and that a lot of elders live to be more than one hundred years old eating the stuff on a daily basis. You’ll also realize that it is amazingly flavorful and really completes a lot of masa-based Oaxacan dishes such as tlayudas, memelas, empanadas, and chochoyotes. Think of it as a Oaxacan brown butter. If you do it right, it should taste nutty and toasty, not like lard or like fat. I also understand that a lot of people may not have the time to properly render chicharrón into a paste, so this shortcut version using olive oil is much quicker and tastes almost as good. If you can’t find or don’t have access to fresh chicharrón, American-style pork rinds also work well.

  

Ingredients

Makes 3 cups (720 mL)

  13 ounces (375 g) chicharrón

  3⁄4 cup (180 ml) olive oil

  

Step 1

Place the ingredients in a food processor and process until smooth and the chicharrón is broken down to a chunky paste, about 3 minutes.

  

Step 2

This aciento will keep in the refrigerator for a month.

  Reprinted from Oaxaca: Home Cooking from the Heart of Mexico. Copyright © 2019 by Bricia Lopez. Published by Abrams.Buy the full book from Amazon or Bookshop.

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