
Recado Rojo (Achiote Paste)
Achiote and Yucatecan spice paste, the base for cochinita pibil and regional dishes.
About this recipe
Recado rojo is the fundamental spice paste of Yucatecan cuisine: ground achiote with charred garlic, allspice, cumin, Yucatecan oregano, cloves and bitter orange, forming an intense red paste that is the irreplaceable base for cochinita pibil, pollo pibil, panuchos and dozens more Yucatecan dishes.
History & Origin
Recado rojo - also called achiote paste or simply recado - is the soul of Yucatecan cuisine, the preparation that most distinguishes it from all other regional cuisines in Mexico. Without recado rojo there is no cochinita pibil, no pollo en relleno negro, no panuchos, no tikinxic, nor dozens of dishes that define the peninsular gastronomy. Achiote (Bixa orellana) is a plant native to tropical America that the Maya used before the arrival of the Spanish both as a food seasoning and for dyeing textiles and as a body pigment in rituals. The intense red color of achiote - produced by the carotenoids bixin and norbixin - not only colors food: it imparts a mild, slightly earthy flavor with nutty notes that is unmistakeable in Yucatecan cuisine. The recado paste as we know it today is the product of the culinary mixing of the colonial period: the Maya contributed achiote, dried chile and stone-grinding techniques; the Spanish contributed Old World spices - cumin, cloves, black pepper, Mediterranean oregano - and citrus marinating techniques. Bitter orange (Citrus aurantium), introduced by Franciscan missionaries in the 16th century, became the preferred acid for dissolving the recado and marinating meats, replacing the green tomato juice that the pre-Hispanic Maya may have used. In Mérida's markets, recado is still sold as a solid paste compressed into blocks or cylinders, made artisanally in stone mills. Commercial brands such as La Extra and La Anita have industrialised its production, but traditional Yucatecan cooks insist on grinding their own at home, arguing that freshly toasted spices ground on stone produce an incomparably superior flavor.
Estimated cost
$9.13
Total cost
$1.14
Per serving
* Approximate prices based on US supermarkets
Nutritional information per serving
45
Calories
1g
Protein
6g
Carbohydrates
2g
Fat
1g
Fiber
280mg
Sodium
* Approximate values. May vary depending on ingredients used.
Method
- 1
Dry-toast on a comal over medium heat: cumin, allspice, cloves, black pepper and oregano for 1–2 minutes, stirring constantly, until fragrant. Do not let them burn.

💡 Toasted spices develop more complex and deeper aromas.
- 2
Char a whole head of garlic (unpeeled) and a halved onion on a comal or directly over a flame until blackened in spots (5–7 minutes per side). Peel the garlic.

- 3
In a blender, place the achiote (seeds or paste), toasted spices, charred garlic, onion, oregano and bitter orange juice. Blend until a very fine, smooth paste forms.

💡 If using achiote seeds instead of paste, soak them in hot water for 15 minutes before blending.
- 4
Pass the paste through a fine sieve to remove skins and fibres. It should be a silky red paste. If too thick, add a little more bitter orange juice.

- 5
Season with salt. The recado is ready to use. To store, form into a compact block, wrap in cling film and refrigerate for up to 3 weeks, or freeze for up to 3 months.

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Founder, Recetas Mexas
Mexican from Puebla, IT professional and foodie. Author of 1000+ authentic Mexican recipes adapted for home kitchens worldwide. Based in Madrid since 2018.
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