Preformed Taco Shells? Wha...?
Most of us grew up with tacos that came in hard, preformed shells. These products of Mexican food manufacturers, like El Paso, and Mexican food retailers, like Taco Bell, were (and are) fried and shaped tortillas that break apart when eating.
My question: does the hard, preformed tortilla shell exist in native Mexico, or was this engineering disaster the product of manufacturers, who wanted to pack a lot of shelf-stable product into a box, and retailers, who found it easier to inventory this product and a more certain method of portion control and sandwich preparation (it's easier to smash a measured quantity of meat into a preformed fold than it is to lay meat into a soft tortilla, fold it, etc.)?
Although the tostada is a traditional Mexican food platform, I have never seen the El Paso/Taco Bell type formed of preformed tacos shells any where in Mexico nor in "authentic" Mexican restaurants (i.e., places other than Taco Bell, etc.). My suspicion, of course, is that this hard, preformed, shelf-stable taco shell does not actually exist in traditional Mexican cuisine.
Hammond
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins