A guide to Mexico City’s best markets
The 400 or so public markets in Mexico City are where the city’s fabled food culture comes to life, where culinary traditions get disseminated and find new expression.
Indeed, these crucial social and economic spaces are where millions of people eat, work, shop and network daily – in a manner that has remained relatively unchanged over the city’s 700-year history, as it evolved from Mexica-ruled Tenochtitlan to Spanish colonial capital to modern metropolis of more than 22 million people.
Complementing its public markets are CDMX’ countless tianguis, temporary markets at which vendors take over designated streets on a specific day of the week to sell produce, prepared food, housewares and various other goods. (The term comes from the Nahuatl word tiankistli, meaning “market.”) Almost every neighborhood in Mexico City has a tianguis day, which provides locals with quality ingredients and affordable food options alongside the permanent public markets.
There might be no better way to plunge into the culture and local life in North America’s largest city than by taking in its varied and vibrant, raucous and essential markets. Here’s how.
19 Insanely Cool Things To Do In Memphis with Kids
Memphis is a city with a rich musical history and a culture unlike anywhere else in the Un…