New Mexican meals make much use of corn , Which is served n a variety of ways-baked as tortillas served fresh as corn on the cob, blended into soups and sauces, and mixed into salads or with other vegetable, especially red and green peppers. Native blue corn is quite surprising when it is served as blue corn bread, chips, or tortillas. In the markets of New Mexico , you can still find Chico's, or sun-dried grains of roasted sweet corn. Chico's last a longtime, but when soaked and boiled , they taste almost like fresh corn. Many recipes also contain pinion, or pine nuts, the small sweet seeds of the southwestern pine tree, once a staple food in the Pueblo diet.