Nachos were actually invented by a guy named Nacho. Happy Nacho Day!
Nachos Were Invented by a Guy Named Nacho. Seriously.
Sometimes the universe just works out perfectly. The beloved snack known as nachos was indeed invented by a man nicknamed Nacho—Ignacio "Nacho" Anaya García, to be exact. In 1943, this Mexican maître d'hôtel at the Victory Club in Piedras Negras created culinary history with nothing but tortillas, cheese, and jalapeños.
The story goes that a group of U.S. military wives from nearby Fort Duncan in Texas crossed the border for some shopping and dining. They arrived at the Victory Club just as the chef had stepped out. Rather than turn them away, Anaya improvised with what he found in the kitchen: he sliced corn tortillas into triangles, topped them with shredded cheese, quickly heated them, and finished the dish with sliced pickled jalapeños.
When the women asked what the dish was called, Anaya reportedly said "Nacho's Especiales"—Nacho's Special. The name stuck, and the rest is delicious history.
From Improvisation to International Icon
What started as a quick fix for hungry customers became a global phenomenon. Anaya's original recipe was documented in the 1954 cookbook St. Anne's Cookbook, cementing its place in culinary history. The dish spread across the border into Texas and eventually throughout the United States and beyond.
Today's nachos have evolved far beyond Anaya's simple creation. You'll find variations loaded with:
- Ground beef, shredded chicken, or carnitas
- Multiple cheese varieties from cheddar to queso blanco
- Sour cream, guacamole, and pico de gallo
- Black beans, refried beans, or chili
- Even dessert versions with cinnamon and chocolate
But the core concept—crispy tortilla chips with melted cheese and jalapeños—remains true to Nacho's original vision.
A Legacy Celebrated
After Ignacio Anaya died in 1975, the city of Piedras Negras honored him with a bronze plaque and declared October 21 the International Day of the Nacho. The city hosts a three-day International Nacho Festival every October, complete with cooking competitions. Anaya's son, Ignacio Anaya Jr., served as a judge at these festivals until his death in 2010.
The nacho's journey from accident to institution showcases how culinary creativity often emerges from necessity. Anaya didn't set out to invent an iconic dish—he was just trying to feed some hungry customers with whatever ingredients were available. That spontaneous decision in a small Mexican border town created a multi-billion dollar industry and gave us one of the world's most popular snacks.
So next time you're munching on nachos at a sports bar, movie theater, or your own kitchen, raise a chip to Ignacio "Nacho" Anaya. His quick thinking and kitchen resourcefulness gave us a dish so perfectly named, it sounds like it was destined to exist.
