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In Mexico, bread is the heart of daily life
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A selection of breads at Panaderia Rosetta in Mexico City, Mexico, in March. Across the country, fresh bread is the standard, part of a centuries-old baking culture.
PHOTO: MARIAN CARRASQUERO/NYTIMES
MAZATLAN, Mexico – As the morning light stretches across the sultry, tropical sky over Mazatlan, Mexico, a small crowd gathers inside Panaderia “Don Ramon”.
Racks loaded with steaming hot bolillos (crusty rolls), teleras (soft rolls) and conchas (enriched rolls with a sugary crust) are wheeled out. Lines form. The aroma of fresh-baked bread wafts through the streets.
“My sisters and I could tell the time of day by smell, by what was coming out of the ovens at the panaderia two blocks from our house,” said pastry chef Fany Gerson and the author of My Sweet Mexico.
Every morning, afternoon and evening, a similar scene plays out across Mexico’s 60,000 registered panaderias, one bread bakery for every 2,100 people. Think of their prevalence as equivalent to convenience stores in the United States.
In Mexico, fresh bread is not an indulgence, but the standard. A staple at the heart of daily life and major holidays alike, it forms a centuries-old culture.
Conchas (enriched rolls with a sugary crust) served at Panaderia Rosetta in Mexico City.
PHOTO: MARIAN CARRASQUERO/NYTIMES
In the 1520s, the Spanish introduced wheat to Mexico. Because scarce or overpriced bread could be politically dangerous, the Spanish government began regulating the prices and ordered that panaderias sell it in the public plazas for the masses.
These regulations benefited Spanish settlers who relied on bread as a staple. Corn, central to indigenous diets, remained outside those policies.
As the years passed, Mexicans cultivated the wheat, grew it, milled it, baked it and, more importantly, adapted it into the forms people see today.
Chef-owner Rafa Rivera of Forte in Mexico City deems bolillos as having importance on an economic, social and cultural level.
PHOTO: MARIAN CARRASQUERO/NYTIMES
“Even though it doesn’t have the same cultural weight as corn or tortillas”, bread, said chef-owner Rafa Rivera of Forte in Mexico City, “has importance on an economic, social and cultural level”.
The most widely produced and consumed is bolillo – what chef Elena Reygadas of Panaderia Rosetta in Mexico City, described as “the most democratic” of Mexican breads.
Bolillos (soft split-top rolls). In Mexico, the bolillo is the daily bread you pick up on the way home, still warm from the panaderia.
PHOTO: JOSEPH DE LEO/NYTIMES
Oval rolls with a crisp golden crust and a soft interior, bolillos are used in tortas (sandwiches), molletes (open-faced sandwiches) and, in many homes, for scooping up food off the plate and soaking up sauces, soups and stews.
“It is deeply cultural,” chef Reygadas said, “because it is on everyone’s table.”
Variations across the country
The bolillo’s creation is often linked to the 1860s era of Emperor Maximilian I, when French bakers were believed to have taken their techniques to Mexico and when French-style recipes were adapted to local wheat, clay ovens, climate and altitude.
Typically made with flour, water, salt, yeast and without fat, bolillos staled quickly, prompting panaderias to make multiple batches a day – a ritual that continues today.
This openness to adaptation remains, with many breads reflecting the regions they are from.
Chef Rivera shapes bolillos by rolling the dough to taper its ends.
PHOTO: MARIAN CARRASQUERO/NYTIMES
In Guadalajara, where the altitude contributes to an expedited rise and moisture loss in bread, birote develops a crust and structure that is sturdy enough to withstand the salsa-soaked tortas ahogadas it is made for.
In the western state of Michoacan, the aguacata, a piloncillo-sweetened treat with a faint smokiness from clay ovens, takes its name from the region’s primary crop, avocados.
In Tlaxcala, a noted producer of pulque – an alcohol made from fermented agave sap – panaderos use it to leaven pan de pulque.
So, too, does another of Mexico’s most popular breads – pan de muerto, eaten for Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) season in October and November – change from place to place, reflecting the tastes of its home region.
In Oaxaca, a version called pan de yema (an egg-enriched roll) is often topped with a small face made from alfenique (moulded sugar paste).
In Puebla, bright pink sugar tops crisp, ring-shaped golletes, and in Guerrero, bakers shape pan de muneco into human figures to represent the deceased.
But the most well-known version, sold nationally each October, is a round, lightly sweetened roll topped with crossed strips of dough meant to resemble bones and scented with orange blossom water.
Another noted holiday-focused bread, rosca de reyes, eaten on Jan 6 for the Epiphany, maintains its oval wreath shape across the country. An enriched dough decorated with candied fruit and baked with a hidden figurine inside, it varies chiefly in flavour, filling and topping, reflecting the choices of its bakers.
People queuing to buy pastries at Panaderia Rosetta in Mexico City.
PHOTO: MARIAN CARRASQUERO/NYTIMES
Sales of pan de muerto and rosca de reyes make up a major portion of a panaderia’s yearly sales. In 2025, Mexicans spent about US$230 million (S$293 million) nationwide on the two breads.
But, after the rush of October and January and the heaviest baking seasons, Panaderia “Don Ramon” returns to its predictably brisk but rhythmic pace.
At 8pm, it closes its doors, with a soft and affectionate “nos vemos manana” (“we will see you tomorrow”).
The last customers walk out, carrying bags of conchas, cuernitos and bolillos. Racks empty, the night shift arrives and begins anew – making the bread for the next day’s morning rush. NYTIMES


