I live in a place where it is hard to find decent corn meal or Mexican hominy flour, masa horina. The nachos I've had here taste sweet. I think it is because they probably only grow sweet corn here. I spoke with a corn farmer who said he grew sweet corn, and based on what he said, corn here is sweet corn. So they probably use that instead of field corn for nachos.I've fried up nachos from corn tortillas from the store in the US, and if I cooked them just right for long enough, they came out yellow and nice looking.I got some masa horina and brought it over here. It has been sitting in a bag doing nothing. So last night, while my wife was out grocery shopping, I asked my kids if they wanted to help make some nachos. Two of my daughters were interested. So we made some play-dough out of masa and water, squeezed them on the wooden press I bought in the US, and I cooked them on the skillet. They tasted like regular tortillas. Some were a bit thick, but pretty authentic as I recall. I didn't have any of the fixings, and I was going more for nachos. I fried them up. They either turned out too dark or too white. They were okay, but not as good and not the same color as a bag you might pick up from a grocery store in California. Are nachos usually made from the masa horina the Mexicans use to make tortillas?Here is another big question. I found some okra in the store, and the plan was for my wife to try to make the southern style okra. Has anyone tried masa horina instead of cornmeal for this sort of thing? We moved and were busy, so my wife ended up putting the okra in bolognese sauce, which actually went well, except whoever picked the okra let it get tough and chewy instead of picking it young. I used the sauce on the nachos I did not fry. I saw some overpriced corn flour here in a store. It was kind of a fine flour, and I wouldn't be surprised if it were sweet, too