Endangered barrel cactuses often called biznaga are seen rising contained in the botanical gardens of the Nationwide Autonomous College of Mexico in Mexico Metropolis.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
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Rebecca Blackwell/AP
MEXICO CITY — Despite the fact that it is unlawful, bars of acitrón are stacked in almost each stall on the Merced market in Mexico Metropolis.
They appear like lemon bars. However they’re items of barrel cactus which were chopped up after which seeped in vats of sugar till they’re crystalized.
Edith Hernández Torres, who runs a store right here, wraps hers in cellophane. She says acitrón is particular, that it tastes nothing just like the candied lemon or candy potato or the pineapple she additionally sells.
“It has a chewy texture,” she says, “like something roasted.”
The Mexican authorities started banning the sale of acitrón within the early 2000s. That is after they discovered that the biznaga cactus — a species of barrel cactus — was at risk of extinction because of overexploitation.

Acitrón on sale at a stall in Merced market in Mexico Metropolis.
Eyder Peralta/NPR
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Eyder Peralta/NPR
Hernández is aware of acitrón is against the law, however her prospects demand it. When NPR asks if she would not really feel unhealthy about promoting one thing that is going extinct, she shrugs.
“Our whole planet is going extinct,” she stated.
As she speaks, María Julia Gutiette picks up a bar of acitrón. She does it gently, like she’s selecting up a bar of gold.
Her husband and this nation had been born on the identical day: Sept. 16. So, yearly, Gutiette buys the pears, the peaches, the pink pine nuts and the acitrón to make the make chiles en nogada, a standard dish that’s eaten from August to early October.
“Traditions are the salt and pepper of life,” she stated. “They are that extra something that makes life extraordinary.”
When she says this, her eyes tear up. She by no means had chiles en nogada rising up as a result of the elements had been too costly. However then, she studied, she grew to become a nurse and moved to Mexico Metropolis.
“When you grow up and make your own money, you save for nice things,” she stated. And so for Independence Day, she needs to deal with her household to one thing particular. And the chiles en nogada, she says, should be made with acitrón.
“Cacti don’t grow like grass”
On the Nationwide Autonomous College of Mexico’s botanical backyard, there’s an entire part devoted to barrel cactuses. It is the form of cactus that performed an essential function in Mexico even earlier than the Spanish launched the sugar that made it so candy. The cactus seems within the Aztec codices and the title comes from a Nahuatl phrase meaning a pot lined in spines.
“In Mexico, we have more than 150 species of biznaga,” stated Salvador Arias, a biologist who runs the botanical gardens. Most of them are going extinct within the wild.
He factors towards the golden barrel cactus whose spines make it appear like a rising solar. Mexico constructed a hydroelectric dam, the place these golden barrel cactuses stay and right away their setting was destroyed and this species was nearly worn out.

Barrel cactuses bloom The Huntington gardens in San Marino, Calif.
Residents of the Planet/Common Photos Group by way of Getty Photos
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Residents of the Planet/Common Photos Group by way of Getty Photos
A few of the cacti are 40 years outdated they usually attain to your thigh. Others are 8 years outdated and they’re tiny, simply the scale of your fist.
“These cacti don’t grow like grass, because their metabolism is especially slow,” Arias stated. “It’s so slow they might grow millimeters a year.”
This implies farming the biznaga is neither sensible nor worthwhile, in order that they’re harvested from the wild. That has left dozens of species on the verge of extinction.
“But I’m an optimist,” he stated. “I believe that cacti have evolved in the past to thrive in contrasting environments. I think they can do it again.”
He walks towards his assortment of nopales, the cactus that adorns the Mexican flag, the cactus that’s an on a regular basis staple in Mexican kitchens. However this species is prospering due to an evolutionary adaptation.
“The nopal is modular,” he stated. It grows in a form of chain, so in contrast to the biznaga, people can minimize off and eat the most recent shoots with out killing the entire plant.
“The Soul of Mexico”
The chef of the restaurant Azul doesn’t use acitrón. However his chiles en nogada are legendary.
They’re so essential that after they start serving them in August, the desk cloths go black and the silverware goes gold.
“It’s a yearly ritual,” chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita stated.

Chiles en nogada, a standard dish that’s eaten in Mexico from August to early October. Made out of poblano peppers, full of meat, pears, peaches, pine nuts and generally — however not on this case — acitrón, and bathed in nogada, a walnut cream sauce, and garnished with pomegranate seeds and parsley.
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Eyder Peralta/NPR
First, the waiters convey out a tray of poblano peppers topped with a inexperienced, white and pink bow. And after they place one on the plate, they douse it with a creamy walnut sauce, as silky as melted white chocolate.
“This plate is the soul of Mexico,” stated Muñoz. “It tastes like the motherland, like independence. It tastes like Mexico itself.”
Muñoz makes a recipe from 1821, which is what was served to the independence hero Agustín de Iturbide in Puebla proper after signing a treaty that consummated Mexico’s independence.
However a number of years in the past, the chef stepped away from that recipe and stopped utilizing biznaga. As an alternative, he began utilizing candied chilacayote, which is a sort of squash.
“In truth, it doesn’t affect the final taste,” he stated. Certainly, he carried out blind style checks and nobody may inform the distinction.
“But Mexicans hold tight to traditions,” he stated. “If you learned to make it from your grandma or mom and they used acitrón, I understand why they would want to keep using it.”
However he feels a accountability to not use it, as a result of he needs barrel cactuses to outlive within the wild.
“We humans have the great power of adaptation,” he stated.
To save lots of the barrel cactus, he stated, we might be clever to make use of it.