While at the altar for her wedding to Dr. John Brown (Francisco Angelini), Tita realizes she cannot go through with it, as her feelings for Pedro remain too strong. Angering her sister Rosaura (Ana Valeria Becerril), but to Pedro’s great relief, she runs off, and the wedding is called off.
Though heartbroken, John understands and offers Tita one final gift: a silver matchbox filled with matches. It echoes an earlier conversation about how everyone carries an “inner box of matches,” needing only the right spark to ignite it. But there is also a warning: Only light one match at a time. If too many are lit at once, the resulting flame will burn endlessly, consuming everything, foreshadowing events to come. The two part on bittersweet but loving terms.
Tita and her sister Rosaura then begin a long-standing feud over the future of Rosaura’s baby daughter, Esperanza. Rosaura is determined to continue the family’s oppressive tradition, forcing Esperanza into the same life of servitude their mother imposed on Tita. To protect the girl, Tita strikes a deal: Esperanza will remain in her life and visit each summer, and in return, Tita will remove herself from the ranch and from Pedro’s life.

Courtesy of HBO
The sisters agree, and Tita leaves the ranch, despite her love for Pedro, who is devastated to find her gone. “The tradition will die with me,” she tells him in a letter.
True to the arrangement, Esperanza spends time with Tita, growing up under her guidance and learning her recipes in the kitchen, just as Tita once did.
Sister Gertrudis (Andrea Chaparro) also suffers loss when Juan Alejandrez (Louis David Horné) is killed during a revolutionary skirmish.
Years later, on Esperanza’s wedding day — where she marries John’s son, Alex (Andres Revo) — Tita and Pedro are finally reunited. Rosaura has passed away, and the fractured family comes back together. Tita prepares the wedding feast, imbuing it with such emotion that the guests quite literally feel the power of love through the meal.
In the end, Tita and Pedro return to her humble home, finally free to be together. Surrounded by candles, they share a long-awaited, intimate moment, unaware that one of the candles ignited a nearby curtain. “There was so much love in that union that all the matches that had within lit at the same time.” As the house quietly catches fire, the flames begin to spread around them. Lost in each other, they do not notice until it is too late, and the fire ultimately consumes the house, the bed, and them both.
Only Tita’s cookbook survives.
How is this different from the book or the film?

Related
In both the book and the 1992 film, on their first night together, Tita and Pedro experience a love so intense that Pedro dies from the shock of it. Devestated that she lost her love after all this time, and wanting desperately to be with him, Tita attempts to ignite her inner fire.
In the book, she achieves this by eating the candles that had lit the room, and in the film, she eats matches until her fire is ignited, killing her. As a result, she meets Pedro in the spirit world.
Their final union sets fire to the entire ranch, while in the HBO reboot series, it is only Tita’s small house that is destroyed.
Will there be a Season 3?
No, this is the end of Tita and Pedro’s journey. The series ends as the book ends, with the lovers deceased but together forever in the afterlife.
Like Water for Chocolate, Seasons 1 and 2, Streaming now, HBO Max
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