Marlboro Country Guacamole
Submitted by jen_jacobi
Marlboro Country guacamole is a stripped-down, cowboy-style take on the classic: mashed avocado, chopped onion, pimentos, and a squeeze of lemon. Five ingredients, ten minutes, Western ranch vibes.
YIELD
1 cupPREP
10 minCOOK
0 minREADY
10 minThis is cowboy guacamole, short on fuss and long on flavour. A single ripe avocado, chopped onion, a spoonful of pimentos for sweetness and colour, lemon juice for brightness, and a pinch of salt. That’s it.
Skipping the usual tomato and cilantro is what makes this version distinct. Without the extra water from tomato, the dip stays thick and clingy, the way ranch-style guacamole used to be served with thick tortilla chips around a campfire.
The secret to any good guac is the avocado itself. It should yield to gentle pressure but not feel mushy. Under-ripe and it’s chalky, over-ripe and you’re dealing with brown strings.
Lemon juice here isn’t just for flavour, the acid slows the enzymatic browning that turns avocado grey within an hour of mashing. Mix it in right after mashing, not at the end.
Kitchen Tips
- Use a fork or potato masher, food processors turn avocado into glue.
- Soak the chopped onion in cold water for five minutes before adding if you want to tame the raw bite.
- Press plastic wrap directly onto the surface to store, air is what turns guacamole brown.
- Make it an hour ahead max, guacamole is a fresh-eating dip, not a prep-ahead one.
Variations
- Swap lemon for lime juice for a more traditional Mexican finish.
- Add a minced jalapeño or a pinch of cayenne if you want heat.
- Fold in a spoonful of sour cream for a creamier, Tex-Mex-style dip.
Ingredients
Directions
Peel, pit and mash avocado; add remaining ingredients and mix thoroughly.
Comments
My friend made this brought it to work and everyone loved it. She had to make it again the following week because we all kept hounding her for more. The only differences were the addition of 2 cloves of minced garlic and chopped fresh coriander.