Guacamole is the recipe that rewards good ingredients more than it does technique. Three ripe avocados, a lime, some onion, a chili, salt — mash it up, taste, and adjust. That's it. Anyone who tries to make guacamole "fancy" with mayo, cream cheese, or a food processor is missing the point. This is the 10-minute dip that anchors every Mexican meal, upgrades every sandwich, and disappears the fastest at every party.
Classic guacamole
Ripe avocados mashed with lime, jalapeño, red onion, cilantro, and salt — the 10-minute Mexican classic that makes every chip, taco, and enchilada better.

- Prep
- 10 min
- Cook
- 1 min
- Total
- 10 min
- Serves
- 6
Classic guacamole
Makes About 2 cups
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (13)
To finish
You'll need
- Large molcajete, mortar and pestle, or medium bowl
- Fork or potato masher
- Sharp knife
- Cutting board
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1/3 cupWhat to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Hass — the classic guacamole avocado; creamy, rich, nutty, widely available
- Fuerte — smooth green skin; milder flavor but still excellent
- Reed — round summer variety; very rich
- Lamb Hass — larger than Hass, similar flavor
- Pinkerton — pear-shaped; creamy with a small pit (high yield)
Ripeness
The most reliable test is gentle palm pressure near the stem end — a ripe avocado yields slightly but isn't squishy. Rock-hard = 2 to 4 more days of ripening. Soft all the way through = past prime, sometimes brown inside. The pop-the-stem trick is unreliable (per Cook's Illustrated and Serious Eats testing).
Imperfections are fine
Surface bruises often don't reach the flesh — check by opening. Small brown spots in the flesh can be cut around. Long stringy brown fibers = overripe or cold-damaged; rare but not a disaster.
Good substitutions
- Edamame guacamole — use 1 1/2 cups blanched shelled edamame for a lower-fat version
- Avocado + Greek yogurt — swap 1 avocado for 1/3 cup Greek yogurt for a lighter, tangier dip
- Pea guacamole — swap 1 avocado for 1/2 cup fresh or frozen peas (polarizing but valid)
- Any ripe avocado variety — Hass is standard but Fuerte, Reed, or Pinkerton all work
In season
California avocados peak February through September. Mexican Hass avocados fill year-round gaps. Quality matters more than season — a properly ripe avocado in any month is what you need.
How much to buy
3 large ripe avocados (about 1 1/2 lb total).
Find your avocado grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season February – September (California); year-round from Mexico
- For this recipe 3 large ripe avocados
- Freshness Picked within this week (once ripe)
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegan · gluten-free · dairy-free
- While you're there Fresh limes · Fresh cilantro · Red onion · Jalapeños or serranos · Roma tomatoes (in season)
At the market
3 large ripe avocados (about 1 1/2 lb total).
Best varieties
- Hass the classic guacamole avocado; creamy, rich, nutty, widely available
- Fuerte smooth green skin; milder flavor but still excellent
- Reed round summer variety; very rich
Good to know
Tips
- Taste and adjust aggressively. This is the #1 difference between good and great guacamole — proper seasoning.
- Soak the red onion in ice water. 5 minutes takes the harsh bite out without dulling the color or flavor.
- Mash with a fork, not a food processor. Texture matters; smooth guac is baby food.
- A molcajete (lava stone mortar) is traditional and adds stone minerality. A bowl and fork work fine at home.
- Serve immediately for best color. If making ahead, press plastic wrap directly on the surface and refrigerate.
- Save the pit — placing it in the bowl does slightly slow browning (via air displacement), but it's not magic.
- For a crowd, double everything. Guacamole disappears fast.
- A pinch of cumin is controversial but excellent — it amplifies the nutty avocado flavor without tasting like "cumin."
Storage
- Refrigerator: 1 day with plastic wrap pressed directly on the surface.
- Freezer: technically 3 months but texture suffers — not recommended unless used for cooking.
- Room temperature: 2 hours (during a party), then refrigerate.
Reheating
- Not applicable — served cold or at room temperature.
Make ahead
- Prep all the aromatics (onion, jalapeño, cilantro, lime) up to 4 hours ahead.
- Mash avocados right before serving — don't do this part ahead.
- If you must make it earlier, up to 2 hours with plastic wrap pressed directly on the surface and refrigerated.
Variations
- Classic taqueria: add 1/2 cup diced Roma tomato; the traditional Mexican-American version.
- Spicy guacamole: add 1 minced serrano (or leave jalapeño seeds in); for more heat, 1/2 habanero.
- Smoky chipotle guac: add 1 tsp chopped chipotle in adobo.
- Pomegranate guacamole: fold in 1/4 cup pomegranate seeds — fall/winter variation.
- Mango guacamole: fold in 1/2 cup diced ripe mango — summer variation.
- Cotija-topped: crumble 1/4 cup cotija or feta over the top.
- Charred corn guac: fold in 1/2 cup grilled corn kernels.
- Bacon guacamole: top with 3 slices of crispy bacon, crumbled.
- Guasacaca (Venezuelan): blend with extra cilantro, parsley, and olive oil until smoother.
Swaps
- No cilantro: use chopped parsley (different flavor but fresh) or a pinch of dried cilantro.
- No jalapeño: use a pinch of cayenne or red pepper flakes for heat, or skip entirely.
- No red onion: substitute with 2 thinly sliced scallions or 1 shallot.
- No lime: lemon juice works; slightly different flavor but acceptable.
- No garlic (not traditional anyway): skip it — classic guac has no garlic.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I pick the perfect avocado?
How do I keep guacamole from turning brown?
Should guacamole be chunky or smooth?
How spicy should it be?
Can I add tomato to guacamole?
How long does guacamole last?
Can I freeze guacamole?
What do I serve with guacamole?
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