Most often used in Mexican cooking, chayote is a pear-shaped fruit with a slightly spiny skin that tastes like cucumber. It’s typically roasted or grilled, and often served as a salad or side with other vegetables.
Chayote is in the Inception stage. It’s considered a premium ingredient that can be found on mostly fine-dining menus.
RockSugar Southeast Asian Kitchen in Los Angeles serves Crispy Vegetable Spring Rolls filled with chayote, shiitake mushrooms, tofu and glass noodles, with sweet-hot chili sauce.
Xoco in Chicago serves Carnitas Caldo, slow-cooked gunthorp pork carnitas, potato-masa dumplings, chayote, roasted serrano chile, greens, arugula and avocado.

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Those of us at Restaurant Hospitality regularly see what independent operators are dishing out, but some menu items make us stop and stare — whether they involve an out-of-the-box way of using an ingredient, the appearance of a burgeoning trend or simply stunning presentations. We bring to you NOM: our New on the Menu weekly roundup.