15 Feb 2025 01:00:00 GMT?.css-1txiau5-AnswerContainer{color:var(--GlobalColorScheme-Text-secondaryText2);}Tepatitlan FC won 1–0 over Tapatio on Sat This is 6 of the Liga de Expansion MX Clausura Predicted lineups are available for the match a few days in advance while the actual lineup will be available about an hour ahead of the match The current head to head record for the teams are Tepatitlan FC 4 win(s) Haven't kept a clean sheet in 8 matches Have scored 7 goals in their last 5 matches Tapatio haven't lost to Tepatitlan FC in their last 5 meetings (2W Who won between Tepatitlan FC and Tapatio on Sat 15 Feb 2025 01:00:00 GMT?Tepatitlan FC won 1–0 over Tapatio on Sat 15 Feb 2025 01:00:00 GMT.InsightsHave scored 8 goals in their last 5 matches Tepatitlan FC is playing home against Tapatio on Sat the general mood of the holiday this year is bittersweet especially the part when we sit around the table for hours trading stories and jokes As a kid I was riveted by my mom’s stories Many involve small-town characters with oddball nicknames and indeterminate fates: The shy shop girl known as La Purina (nicknamed after the feed store where she worked); the hard-working brothers known as Los Triperos (because they grilled and sold tripas near the main town square); and the local teacher who punished unruly students by making them keep their arms raised until their limbs went numb but back then it was a much smaller town and life was slow There was a lot of emphasis on “el qué dirán” (“What will people say?”) My dad made roof tiles and mosaic flooring for a living My mom was an incredibly hard-working homemaker and sold cross-stitching on the side We didn’t have running water so she spent a lot of time going to the arroyo to wash our clothes I was the second eldest of 12 children and there was always a baby in the house I had to help my mom with everything: wash the clothes I was already in charge of tending to much of the household Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. 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What are some typical things you ate growing up it seemed like everybody in town ate the same thing: caldo de res (beef and vegetable stew) There were stalls in the market selling bundles of cabbage Another common dish was mole de espinazo (pork spine mole) It was typical to buy one or two kilos of the pork spine at the butcher shop It was great with nopales and verdolagas (purslane) A large part of our days were spent taking the nixtamal (nixtamalized maize kernels) to the molino (stone mill) to have it ground into masa Most women would get up sometime between 4 a.m to drop off their bucket of nixtamal and then go to the nearby market to buy meat and vegetables while they waited for the masa It was customary to only eat fresh tortillas The first time I tasted prepackaged tortillas was when I came to the U.S Some days you got to the molino and somebody would tell you: “Se quebro la piedra” (“the stone broke”) That meant you had to wait for somebody to tear down the mill and replace the volcanic stone used to grind the masa There were three molinos in town back then the mills were disappearing and they were being replaced by tortillerias so a lot would depend on whether we could find kindling My mom would send us out to gather twigs and bark but we had to be careful because scorpions liked to nest in the tree bark Everything got easier when my mom saved up money for a kerosene stove There were lots of days we went many hours without eating My dad had a funny habit he picked up from his own father He would come into our room very early when we were still sleeping and left a fresh piece of pan on our pillow I can’t explain how much joy it brought us to wake up to a fresh piece of bread My dad was a bracero (one of the millions of Mexican guest workers in the U.S He was an agricultural worker and traveled back and forth between the two countries for many years He already had a visa and he wanted us to get our papers so we could also earn a living in the U.S He came down with a painful ulcer and he thought he was going to die He told us: “There is no way for women to make a living in Tepa I want you all to get your papers in order in case I’m not around soon.” My brothers got their papers processed first It took about four years to finally reunite all the family in California Bags of oranges outside California Citrus State Historic Park in Riverside The author’s mother worked in the groves that the park now protects (Patricia Escárcega / Los Angeles Times) What was it like to move to a new country I walked my little sisters to school and we were regularly harassed by a group of neighborhood cholos who called us things like “dirty paisas” (“Paisa,” short for “paisano” or “paisana,” is slang for someone who is from your home country) Tell us about what you did when you arrived in Southern California in the late ‘60s I was in my early 20s and there was a lot of tumult oranges and grapefruit in the groves around Riverside Hemet and San Jacinto with my dad and brothers After that I picked chile peppers and onions in Temecula I picked grapes in Pomona and strawberries in Anaheim Back then that part of Anaheim was full of fields I also worked as a sorter at a citrus packing house in Arlington Heights in Riverside and worked for a time packing carrots near Perris My least favorite job was picking lemons because at the end of the day your face and arms would be completely scratched up by the thorny branches You have to wear thick leather sleeves and gloves to do that job I was asthmatic and terrified of falling off those tall ladders We got paid 30 cents a box for the oranges and a few cents more for lemons What do you wish people knew about picking vegetables and fruit I want people to know that you should really appreciate and respect people who harvest food for a living It’s incredibly hard work with miserly pay You can’t imagine until you do it yourself It’s easy now to see the faces you love across many miles It’s easier than ever to tell someone you love them Do you think most restaurants will be able to rebound once they reopen Email us. — Just because restaurants are closed, it doesn’t mean you can’t treat mom to a special meal. Jenn Harris has a terrific guide to Mother’s Day takeout in L.A — Genevieve Ko shares the best chocolate chip banana bread you’ve ever tasted — and it’s vegan — Exciting news: Genevieve Ko and Ben Mims have a new cooking newsletter. Sign up here for fresh cooking inspiration — Rotting food and hungry masses: Kevin Rector reports on how the food industry has been flipped on its head by the COVID-19 pandemic — Amy Scattergood tells us what’s available from L.A.-area farmers right now and where to get it, and what to do with all that extra sourdough starter you’ve been feeding during quarantine Amy Scattergood has some tips for what to do with the extra sourdough starter in your kitchen. (Lisa Kogawa / For The Times ) Food Patricia Escárcega Follow Us Patricia Escárcega was a restaurant critic at the Los Angeles Times from December 2018 to April 2021. A Southern California native, Escárcega was born in Riverside to a family of naranjeros (citrus pickers). Food World & Nation Subscribe for unlimited accessSite Map a bilingual resource specialist at Madison East High School is leaving on Saturday on a cross-cultural Sister City service trip to work on a mosaic mural project in central Mexico at an elementary school in Tepatitlán and she is looking for a little community support to help set up a program to bring her East High students there Gómez de Soriano is a Xicana mentor for students at East and a co-founder of the Xicano Institute for Education and Self Determination a program that helps students learn about their self-identity and cultural roots She tells Madison365 that many of the students she works with on a daily basis who have lived their whole life in Madison have never had the opportunity to visit Mexico and she wants to “initiate a student exchange program that will benefit many young people from Madison and Tepatitlan for many years to come.” we’re going to be talking to the superintendent and the principal of the high school about a cultural exchange program with high school students at East and those at Tepatitlán,” says Gómez de Soriano who is also a member of the Sister Cities of Madison/Tepa committee “I want to give students this incredible experience who would otherwise never have the experience to visit Mexico.” her students hosted students from Tepatitlán Regional High School in celebration of the 10th Anniversary of the Madison/Tepatitlan Sister Cities The 10 Mexican students spent time at East High visited the University of Wisconsin-Madison and attended the Madison/Tepatitlan Sister Cities anniversary dinner on Sept “They experienced life in Wisconsin in Madison and what our hope is that we do the same for students to go over to Mexico to kind of experience that life in Mexico,” Gómez de Soriano says “It would be a great opportunity for somebody who has never been there to have that educational and cultural experience there.” Shadayra “Shady” Kilfoy-Flores also a member of the Sister Cities of Madison/Tepa committee will be accompanying Gómez de Soriano on the upcoming Tepatitlán trip which will take place from March 11-29 “It’s tough if the student’s parents don’t have proper documentation for their parents to facilitate a trip to Mexico so this would be a way for students who may not have that opportunity to travel with their parents for them to still be able to experience going to Mexico,” she tells Madison365 Kilfoy-Flores and Gómez de Soriano will be working on a mosaic mural project at an elementary school in Tepatitlán Gómez de Soriano will be facilitating Tepatitlán high school students to help the elementary students with the mosaic project while making new meaningful connections Tepatitlán de Morelos lies nestled deep in the highlands of the Mexican state of Jalisco this midsize city is a significant producer of agricultural commodities for domestic consumption and global export and milk in Mexico and produces world-class tequila has previously spent time in Tepatitlan in 2014 painting a mural with students at the same elementary school in a sister-city artist exchange and she also set up the current mosaic project “This will be an extension of that original project,” Kilfoy-Flores says but it will be with the same [elementary school] principal that she worked with before and we’ll be working with the principal from the high school Kilfoy says she expects there to be between 100-200 children working on the mosaic from the grade school with 15-30 students coming from the high school to help out “Every student in the grade school will be able to participate at some level on the mosaic,” Kilfoy tells Madison365 “The young kids will do the simpler drawings and the fourth and fifth-grade kids will help do a lot of details There’s a high school that we’ve been involved with so we will have high school students helping out with the mosaic “Silvia and Shady will be overseeing all of that The goal is to create a beautiful work of art but also to engage kids that maybe have not done mosaic work before or don’t consider themselves to have a lot of artistic talent,” Kifloy adds “We think it’s important for them to be able to know that they’re capable of creating art and that they can certainly do something that’s going to be really Kilfoy adds that she’s looking forward to seeing the joint project that will see Tepatitlán high school students helping the elementary students “The high school is a college prep school with students who are fairly well off and the grade school is in a much much poor neighborhood,” Kilfoy says “So it’s getting some of those high school kids who were recently here visiting Madison from Tepa involved with a low-income school doing community service right there in their own community.” During the upcoming three weeks in Mexico, Gómez de Soriano will also be looking to initiate a student exchange program that will benefit numerous young people from Madison and Tepatitlan for many years to come. She recently started a GoFundMe to help cover expenses as Gómez de Soriano makes it clear that this is not something that MMSD is paying her to do “I will not be paid by MMSD during the 3 weeks while in Tepatitlan and MMSD does not pay me any vacation time,” she says in the GoFundMe “She’s not getting leave of absence or any of the such and so really the GoFundMe is to supplement her loss of income that she won’t be making but particularly to help Sylvia make those cross-cultural connections and for her to be able to set up these programs,” Kilfoy-Flores says “We set the goal of $3,000 for the GoFundMe because we feel like we wanted to be realistic about Silvia’s needs and we wanted her to be able to come home without being super far in debt.” Gómez de Soriano says that she is very excited about the trip and plans on giving plenty of updates Her plan is to make as many connections as she can and to meet with the school superintendent and school leaders to organize a safe “My goal for this program is to teach East High School Raza students about their culture and heritage,” Gomez de Soriano says “And I want them to come back with more knowledge and a stronger sense of cultural pride.” 10 Wins / 12 Draws / 10 Losses in the Last 32 fixtures *Tepatitlán de Morelos's stats from Ascenso MX 2024/25 Prediction Risk - UNLOCK This season in Ascenso MX, Tepatitlán de Morelos's form is Poor overall with 10 wins, 12 draws, and 10 losses. This performance currently places Tepatitlán de Morelos at 0 out of 15 teams in the Ascenso MX Table Tepatitlán de Morelos's home form is poor with the following results : 0 wins Tepatitlán de Morelos has scored a total of 49 goals this season in Ascenso MX More Over / Under / BTTS / Goals data are under the Goals tab More Tepatitlán de Morelos corner stats are available under the Corners tab Leones Negros de la Universidad de Guadalajara * Average Goals Scored Per Match for Tepatitlán de Morelos in Ascenso MX 2024/25 • Tepatitlán de Morelos scores a goal every 0 minutes in Ascenso MX • Tepatitlán de Morelos scores an average of 0 goals every game * Average Goals Conceded Per Match for Tepatitlán de Morelos in Ascenso MX 2024/25 • Tepatitlán de Morelos has conceded a total of 38 goals this season in Ascenso MX • Tepatitlán de Morelos concedes a goal every 0 min • Tepatitlán de Morelos concedes an average of 0 goals every game Tepatitlán de Morelos's Over 2.5 percentage is 47 Over / Under Goals are calculated from total match goals for fixtures that Tepatitlán de Morelos has participated in Under 2.5 percentage is 53 for Tepatitlán de Morelos This is based on an average goal count of 2.72 from both teams This means that 17 of the 32 matches Tepatitlán de Morelos has played has had less than 2.5 goals in total Over / Under 1H/2H Goals are calculated from both team's goals in that half UNLOCKCorners / Match * Average Corner Kicks per match between Tepatitlán de Morelos and their opponents in a single match Match corners is the total corners between Tepatitlán de Morelos and their opponent in the match Corners Earned = Tepatitlán de Morelos's corner kicks UNLOCKCards / Match * Average Total Match Cards per match between Tepatitlán de Morelos and their opponents in a single match Match cards is the total cards between Tepatitlán de Morelos and their opponent in the match Cards For is Tepatitlán de Morelos's bookings * Not all matches have goal timings recorded for Tepatitlán de Morelos Cards and Corners in these tables are total between both teams * Not all matches have goal/corner/card timings recorded for Tepatitlán de Morelos * Average Shots Per Match for Tepatitlán de Morelos in Ascenso MX 2024/25 Tepatitlán de Morelos's 2024/2025 season is seeing them taking an average of 8.37 shots per match with 3.93 shots being on target and the rest being off target xG For - Tepatitlán de Morelos takes an average of 8.37 shots per match This resulted in 1.53 goals scored per match xG Against - Tepatitlán de Morelos concedes an average of 1.28 xGA every match • Tepatitlán de Morelos is given 2 free kicks per match • Tepatitlán de Morelos performs 4 goal kicks per match • Tepatitlán de Morelos does 27 throw-ins per match Most frequent scorelines for Tepatitlán de Morelos Most frequent total goals for Tepatitlán de Morelos Adolfo Enrique Hernández Sotelo Luis Guadalupe Loroña Aguilar Alfonso Arístides Tamay Sánchez Daniel Álvarez López Juan José Machado Siqueiros Miguel Ángel Vallejo Navarro Josué Gómez Del Rosal Martín David Barra Nava Gerson Vázquez Zahid Yibram Muñoz Lopez Mauricio Hernández Rizo Alan Fabrizio Ruiz Preza Johan Rodríguez Antonio Soto Tomás Antonio Montano Zambra Mario Armando Aguilar Mares Ulises Israel Cardona Carrillo Jesús Alejandro Venegas Vergara Amaury Gabriel Escoto Ruiz Luis Ángel González Calderon Juan Fernando Cruz Jorge José de Jesús Saavedra Ruíz Diego Antonio Hernández Aguayo Sergio Eduardo Vázquez García Said Ezequiel Castañeda León Jesús Eduardo González Mendivil Eduardo Pastrana Reyes Edder Ricardo Martínez Bahena Ricardo Díaz Quirarte Williams Bravo Escalera *Tepatitlán de Morelos Roster and stats are retrieved from 2024/25 Season Tepatitlán de Morelos's top assists list is comprised of Ricardo Díaz Quirarte with 0 assists, José de Jesús Saavedra Ruíz with 0 assists, and Said Ezequiel Castañeda León with 0 assist The player with the most assists per 90 minutes is #player_fullname_p_assist90_p1 with #assist_per_90_p1 per 90 minutes Tamay Sánchez leads Tepatitlán de Morelos's appearance list with 31 appearances this season in the Ascenso MX. Tamay Sánchez is followed by Loroña Aguilar (31 apps) and Díaz Quirarte (30 apps) Tepatitlán de Morelos's most frequently booked player is Eduardo Pastrana Reyes (8 cards), followed by José de Jesús Saavedra Ruíz (7 cards), and Mario Armando Aguilar Mares (7 card) Average AttendanceNot recorded yet or may be affected by COVID-19 FacebookTepatitlán de Morelos Facebook Follow FootyStats on the following channels to make sure you never miss a stat * Please be aware that unauthorized individuals may be falsely claiming affiliation with FootyStats on Social Media These individuals are not associated with our company in any capacity Please verify official representatives through our website or official communication channels is not responsible for any interactions or transactions with unauthorized persons misrepresenting our organization © FootyStats - Built with Love for The Beautiful Game This website is using a security service to protect itself from online attacks The action you just performed triggered the security solution There are several actions that could trigger this block including submitting a certain word or phrase You can email the site owner to let them know you were blocked Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page “For me, personally, Día de los Muertos is a day of remembrance of my past loved ones. I have many, many loved ones that I remember fondly and this is the day that we get to feel their presence come to visit,” Silvia Gomez, a Spanish bi-cultural bilingual resource specialist at East High School and an advisor for Raza United, tells Madison365. just a day of remembrance of our past loved ones,” she adds “and how we never must forget them.” Día de los Muertos — also known as Day of the Dead — will return to Madison East High School It is a traditional Mexican holiday where families welcome back the souls of their deceased relatives for a brief reunion that includes food Families create ofrendas (offerings) to honor their departed family members who have passed Altars are decorated with bright yellow marigold flowers and the favorite foods and drinks of those being honored East High School’s Raza United and Ballet Folklorico de Maria Diaz will once again be the hosts for Saturday’s event Gomez has been helping to organize the annual Día de los Muertos since it first started in 2015 along with María Díaz founder of the Madison-based Ballet Folklorico de Maria Diaz The event returned to Madison East High last year after a three-year hiatus because of the pandemic Maria [Diaz] always works on choreographies for new dances and they are wonderful We will have food sales and face painting,” Gomez says “This year we’re gonna have a Lotteria fundraiser where people can pay $5 to get a lottery card and then we play lottery – which is like a Mexican version of bingo – and whoever wins gets a prize,” Gomez says “So we have prizes donated by the mothers of the Ballet Folklorico … various baskets.” Through the collaboration with Madison/Tepatitlán Sister Cities the students of Madison East’s Raza United recently had an amazing opportunity to experience Día de los Muertos in México and learn firsthand the educational and cultural traditions of México while visiting Tepatitlán de Morelos “The kids have been doing so many things in Mexico this past week and a half It has really been quite the experience,” Gomez says “They gave us space to do an altar here … and it’s just beautiful Our students have been able to witness and participate in Dia de los Muertos firsthand,” Gomez continues “A lot of our students have never been part of something like this you really don’t experience Dia de los Muertos like it is here in Mexico and we are just having an amazing and inspiring experience I’m going to bring some of these ideas back home.” At Saturday’s 7th annual Día de los Muertos celebration at Madison East, Gomez and Raza United students are excited to carry on the many traditions they learned in Mexico here in Wisconsin. Half of the proceeds from the event will go to Raza United and half will go to Ballet Folklorico de Maria Diaz. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for kids. Buy tickets here. “People can donate even if they can’t make the event,” Gomez says East High School’s Raza United and Ballet Folklorico de Maria Diaz will present the 7th annual Dia de los Muertos celebration on Saturday, Nov. 11, at East High School, 2222 E. Washington Ave. For more information, e-mail Silvia Gomez at [email protected] Responding to an emergency call, local authorities attended the scene just after 11am on Saturday. The four-storey building engulfed the four-storey building in the Mexican town of Tepatitlán de Morelos, Jalisc At least a dozen people are thought to have been injured, with local media reporting two deaths, including a quadriplegic person who was inside the building at the time. The injured have been transferred to a nearby hospital and the Red Cross are currently on scene attending to the incident. Enrique Alfaro, the governor of the state of Jalisco, tweeted:"A few minutes ago a gas pipe exploded in the center of Tepatitlán. The Ministry of Security of Jalisco protects the place, the injured are being treated. Police have reported that the fire is now under control and Government personnel are currently on site monitoring the scene. According to local authorities, the building housed a food preparation business in the center of the city.