Mole (MOH-lay) is Mexico's most legendary sauce — actually a family of dozens of sauces, each tied to a region, a season, and a recipe handed down through generations. Oaxaca is the spiritual home with seven distinct moles; Puebla claims the most famous one (mole poblano). This 2026 guide breaks down every mole worth chasing and tells you exactly where to eat each.
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Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Plan a food-focused Oaxaca and Puebla trip with the right mole stops.
Calculate now →What Is Mole?
Mole comes from the Nahuatl word "molli," meaning sauce. At its simplest it's a complex chile-based sauce thickened with toasted seeds, nuts, stale bread or tortilla, and ground spices. Traditional preparation takes a full day — chiles are toasted and rehydrated, ingredients are individually fried then ground on a metate, and the sauce simmers for hours.
The 7 Oaxacan Moles
Oaxaca is known as the "land of the seven moles." Each has a different color, different chiles, and a different traditional dish.
| Mole | Color | Key Chiles | Typically Served With |
|---|
| Negro | Deep black-brown | Chilhuacle negro, mulato | Turkey or chicken |
| Rojo | Brick red | Ancho, guajillo | Chicken, pork |
| Amarillo | Golden yellow | Chilcostle, costeño amarillo | Beef, chicken, vegetables |
| Verde | Bright green | Fresh chile + tomatillo | Pork, chicken |
| Coloradito | Reddish brown | Ancho, guajillo + chocolate | Chicken |
| Manchamanteles | Red-orange | Ancho, with pineapple | Pork, chicken |
| Chichilo | Smoky dark brown | Charred chilhuacle | Beef, lamb |
Mole Negro
The king. 30+ ingredients including charred avocado leaves and Oaxacan chocolate. Deep, smoky, faintly sweet, almost endless complexity. The default mole at Oaxacan weddings.
Mole Rojo
Brighter and chile-forward. Less chocolate, more fruit. The everyday mole in much of Oaxaca.
Mole Amarillo
Not really yellow — more burnt-gold. Often served as a brothy stew with vegetables and chicken. The most savory of the seven.
Mole Verde
The freshest. Made with herbs (epazote, hoja santa, cilantro), tomatillos and pumpkin seeds. Bright, herbaceous, slightly hotter.
Coloradito
A red-brown cousin of negro, slightly sweeter. The mole most foreigners actually love most on first taste.
Manchamanteles
"Tablecloth-stainer." Mildly sweet with pineapple and plantain. Festive and unusual.
Chichilo
The rarest. Smoky and deeply roasted, with charred chiles and avocado leaves. Rarely served outside special occasions.
Mole Poblano (Puebla)
The most internationally famous mole. Created by 17th-century nuns at the Convento de Santa Rosa in Puebla (legend says) for an unannounced visit by the archbishop. Rich, dark, with ancho/mulato/pasilla chiles, almonds, peanuts, raisins, sesame, and chocolate. Always paired with turkey at celebrations or chicken on weeknights.
Other Regional Moles
- Mole de Olla: A brothy beef stew from central Mexico, lightly chile-spiced. Not a thick mole.
- Mole Xiqueño (Veracruz): Sweeter, with extra chocolate.
- Mole Negro de Tlaxcala: Less sweet, smokier than Oaxacan negro.
- Mole Almendrado: Almond-heavy, lighter colored.
- Mole de Caderas (Puebla/Oaxaca): A brothy chile soup made with goat hip — autumn-only specialty.
Where to Try Each
- Oaxaca (7-mole flights): Los Pacos, La Olla, Casa Oaxaca, Origen, Levadura de Olla.
- Oaxaca (market style): Mercado 20 de Noviembre — tlayudas and mole stalls.
- Puebla (mole poblano): El Mural de los Poblanos, Casa Reyna, Fonda de Santa Clara.
- Mexico City (refined): Pujol (Enrique Olvera's 1,000+ day mole madre), Nicos, Azul Histórico, Contramar (mole de pescado).
- Tlaxcala: Tirol, Fonda Tía Yola for negro tlaxcalteca.
Mole Tours & Cooking Classes (2026)
- Casa Crespo cooking class (Oaxaca): $95 — market tour + 4-hour class, finish with mole negro.
- La Cocina Oaxaqueña: $110 — 5-hour mole-only class.
- Pujol mole madre tasting (CDMX): ~$160 tasting menu — book 2 months ahead.
- Self-guided mole crawl in Oaxaca: $18–$28 per restaurant for 7-mole flights — book 2–3 lunches across 3 days.
Order the 7-mole flight (degustación) on day one in Oaxaca. You'll know which mole(s) to chase for the rest of the trip.
Mole (MOH-lay) is Mexico's most legendary sauce — actually a family of dozens of sauces, each tied to a region, a season, and a recipe handed down through generations. Oaxaca is the spiritual home with seven distinct moles; Puebla claims the most famous one (mole poblano). This 2026 guide breaks down every mole worth chasing and tells you exactly where to eat each.
🧮
Mexico Trip Cost Calculator
Plan a food-focused Oaxaca and Puebla trip with the right mole stops.
Calculate now →What Is Mole?
Mole comes from the Nahuatl word "molli," meaning sauce. At its simplest it's a complex chile-based sauce thickened with toasted seeds, nuts, stale bread or tortilla, and ground spices. Traditional preparation takes a full day — chiles are toasted and rehydrated, ingredients are individually fried then ground on a metate, and the sauce simmers for hours.
The 7 Oaxacan Moles
Oaxaca is known as the "land of the seven moles." Each has a different color, different chiles, and a different traditional dish.
| Mole | Color | Key Chiles | Typically Served With |
|---|
| Negro | Deep black-brown | Chilhuacle negro, mulato | Turkey or chicken |
| Rojo | Brick red | Ancho, guajillo | Chicken, pork |
| Amarillo | Golden yellow | Chilcostle, costeño amarillo | Beef, chicken, vegetables |
| Verde | Bright green | Fresh chile + tomatillo | Pork, chicken |
| Coloradito | Reddish brown | Ancho, guajillo + chocolate | Chicken |
| Manchamanteles | Red-orange | Ancho, with pineapple | Pork, chicken |
| Chichilo | Smoky dark brown | Charred chilhuacle | Beef, lamb |
Mole Negro
The king. 30+ ingredients including charred avocado leaves and Oaxacan chocolate. Deep, smoky, faintly sweet, almost endless complexity. The default mole at Oaxacan weddings.
Mole Rojo
Brighter and chile-forward. Less chocolate, more fruit. The everyday mole in much of Oaxaca.
Mole Amarillo
Not really yellow — more burnt-gold. Often served as a brothy stew with vegetables and chicken. The most savory of the seven.
Mole Verde
The freshest. Made with herbs (epazote, hoja santa, cilantro), tomatillos and pumpkin seeds. Bright, herbaceous, slightly hotter.
Coloradito
A red-brown cousin of negro, slightly sweeter. The mole most foreigners actually love most on first taste.
Manchamanteles
"Tablecloth-stainer." Mildly sweet with pineapple and plantain. Festive and unusual.
Chichilo
The rarest. Smoky and deeply roasted, with charred chiles and avocado leaves. Rarely served outside special occasions.
Mole Poblano (Puebla)
The most internationally famous mole. Created by 17th-century nuns at the Convento de Santa Rosa in Puebla (legend says) for an unannounced visit by the archbishop. Rich, dark, with ancho/mulato/pasilla chiles, almonds, peanuts, raisins, sesame, and chocolate. Always paired with turkey at celebrations or chicken on weeknights.
Other Regional Moles
- Mole de Olla: A brothy beef stew from central Mexico, lightly chile-spiced. Not a thick mole.
- Mole Xiqueño (Veracruz): Sweeter, with extra chocolate.
- Mole Negro de Tlaxcala: Less sweet, smokier than Oaxacan negro.
- Mole Almendrado: Almond-heavy, lighter colored.
- Mole de Caderas (Puebla/Oaxaca): A brothy chile soup made with goat hip — autumn-only specialty.
Where to Try Each
- Oaxaca (7-mole flights): Los Pacos, La Olla, Casa Oaxaca, Origen, Levadura de Olla.
- Oaxaca (market style): Mercado 20 de Noviembre — tlayudas and mole stalls.
- Puebla (mole poblano): El Mural de los Poblanos, Casa Reyna, Fonda de Santa Clara.
- Mexico City (refined): Pujol (Enrique Olvera's 1,000+ day mole madre), Nicos, Azul Histórico, Contramar (mole de pescado).
- Tlaxcala: Tirol, Fonda Tía Yola for negro tlaxcalteca.
Mole Tours & Cooking Classes (2026)
- Casa Crespo cooking class (Oaxaca): $95 — market tour + 4-hour class, finish with mole negro.
- La Cocina Oaxaqueña: $110 — 5-hour mole-only class.
- Pujol mole madre tasting (CDMX): ~$160 tasting menu — book 2 months ahead.
- Self-guided mole crawl in Oaxaca: $18–$28 per restaurant for 7-mole flights — book 2–3 lunches across 3 days.
Order the 7-mole flight (degustación) on day one in Oaxaca. You'll know which mole(s) to chase for the rest of the trip.