Saturday, February 25, 2012

The Taco Lady

"Señoras y señores, estamos comenzando nuestro descenso final en la Ciudad de México. El capitán y la tripulación le gustaría darle las gracias por volar con nosotros esta noche, y bienvenidos a México! "

 “Ladies and gentlemen, we are starting our final descent into Mexico City. The Captain and crew would like to thank you for flying with us this evening, and welcome to Mexico!”

For weeks I have dreamed of these words, knowing that within the hour of landing, my lust for REAL tacos would finally be satiated. For the uninitiated, Mexican street tacos bear almost no resemblance to the tacos found in the U.S., although in certain neighborhoods of the state’s capitol where we live a resurgence towards the traditional style is gamely feeding the migrant population, and turning gringo hearts like mine away from deep-fried crunchy shells and “smeat” found in drive-thus and chain restaurants to the marinated and seasoned meats chopped fine and served in small corn tortillas topped with salsa, cilantro, onions, and a squeeze of lime.

Upon arrival to Mexico, after passing immigration, jostling around the baggage carousel, and clearing customs, after being welcomed by family where everyone, male and female alike, hug and kiss with every hello and goodbye, after threading and bumping our way through Distrito Federal to the suburb of Tlalnepantla, I make my long-awaited request: bypass the house and take me straight to the Taco Lady.




On the corner of Calle Colima off the highway to Queretaro, under a tarp serviced by two propane tanks and electricity borrowed from one of her family member’s small tienda, the Taco Lady to me, also called Doña Guille by the family, serves up some of the best street tacos in all of Mexico. For the last 40 years my husband’s family has made Doña Guille’s tacos the stop for the common late-night snack or 4th meal. The original owner of the store’s wife is Guillermina, and as a child, my husband’s cousin (primo Juan) simply latched on to the only other adult name he knew outside of the family: Guillermina, and so the Taco Lady became “Doña Guille”, although that is not her real name. To this day, no one in the family has ever called her anything else.



Doña Guille’s specialty is suadero, beef cut from the breast or brisket, chosen specifically for its tender, less muscle-grained texture, marinated and cooked in hot oil and then chopped fine, served in warm corn tortillas topped with onions, cilantro, and spicy salsa verde. Much to the chagrin of my hubby’s tender taste buds, Doña Guille always tops my tacos with extra salsa.




What makes tacos de Doña Guille so good is not just the suadero, which is the most delicious I have ever had, but the experience itself; the camaraderie of standing on the street corner in the glow and glare of sulfer streetlamps and clamped floodlights, the chatter and laughter of friends and family, and the knowledge that tomorrow, without fail, the Taco Lady will be back, slinging tacos 
and pombasos from when the sun goes down until the early morning hours, feeding neighbors and weary travelers alike.



Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Mmmm, Bacon (almost)!

I have been in a deeply committed love affair with pork products most of my life. I know, I know; we all love bacon, the golden child of pork, but I love the lesser heralded cuts, too. Some are pretty obvious: ribs, ham, and more bacon. But what about sausages and pancetta and even the maligned and lowly pork chop?

Now, I know none of this is good for me. I know I should limit not just my pork intake, but try and make more of my meals vegetarian in general. Oh, but I do so love the puerco!

This morning I had a hankering for one of my favorite sandwiches, a FEBLT: Fried Egg, Bacon, Lettuce, & Tomato. It indeed makes me "feebled" (get it?) in the knees just thinking about it. I prefer topping the over-easy eggs and oven-baked bacon with micro greens or a so-called spring mix, and summer-ripe heirloom tomatoes, lightly dressed with a just a teensy bit of EVOO and fresh cracked sea salt and pepper, all on toasted sourdough or a ciabatta roll.

So, I dug into the depths of the freezer and found a package of Morningstar faux bacon, normally reserved for when we have veg-head guests or our annual Lenten "no-meat" sacrifice. Baked in the oven at 400 degrees, I now have a tidy stash of perfectly crisp almost-bacon to use over the next couple of weeks AND I satisfied my hankering for a FEBLT.

Happy tummy, happy body. Talk about a win-win.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Scales of Injustice

If you have been following my C25k progress, or if you saw my Facebook post early last week, you probably saw that I thought I had lost 16.8 pounds since starting the running program.   THOUGHT.


Unfortunately, when I went to weigh myself this morning, I discovered a major malfunction with our scale.  It said I weighed 287 pounds.  I stepped off, and stepped back on. 68 pounds.  What the heck?


So I swapped out the batteries, grabbed an unopened sack of rice flour and tried again. 5.2 pounds. Now we're getting somewhere.


Except that when I stepped up, I hadn't lost nearly as much as I thought, only about 10.7 pounds. Instead of  feeling let down, I reminded myself that 10.7 pounds is nothing to shake a stick at, a point driven home much faster as I hefted the 5 pound sack of flour back into the cupboard. Wow, two sacks of flour lighter than when I started.


I am proud of that small accomplishment, and remain motivated.  Maybe even more so now.


I guess that is what I get for being prideful.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Thomi's Cafe

Breakfast always tastes better when you don't have to cook it.  Well, almost always.


On a mission to eat out and try one of the local restaurants at least once a week, this Sunday we really wanted breakfast.  Breakfast out is usually predictable and easy on the pocketbook, so I figured it would also be an easy entry into the local reviews as well.


Up at 4:45 this morning, by 7:30, I was starving and ready for brekkies. I trolled the internet for breakfast places, and other than the standard chains, Denny's and Perko's, the two stand-outs appeared to be Mel & Faye's Diner and Thomi's Cafe. Can you believe that Mel & Faye's doesn't list their hours on their website (or at least somewhere I could find it)?  So, by default, we chose to try Thomi's.


Photo courtesy of Thomi's website.


The building has a charming exterior on the corner of a little strip mall on highway 49. We arrived about 8:10, the first and only customers of the day.  The reception was cordial, but hardly warm and friendly.  Maybe because it was early on a Sunday and the young girl really didn't want to be there.  Really, I can't say I blame her all that much...




The interior is cute, almost cozy.  I really liked the bar/hostess station with the brick-red wall.  The wooden chairs were a nice touch compared to the faux-wood ugly tables, but they were FILTHY.  I mean, really gross.  Every chair-back in the restaurant was covered in a film of sticky fingerprints and spilled food, made glaringly obvious by the high-gloss finish of the chairs. It skeeved me out quite a bit. 


We started with coffee as we perused the breakfast menu.  Sadly, it is an over-sized laminated menu, the exact same as on the website.  For such a cute little place, you would think that the menu would be something just slightly more...classy. The hubby and I usually pick standard fair for our first visit to any restaurant, eggs being a pretty good litmus for the rest of the food; if you can cook a good egg, chances are the rest will follow suit.


We loved the large, friendly cobalt-blue mugs.



Rick ordered the Pancake Griddle Combo: two pancakes, two eggs, and four strips of bacon or sausage, $5.99. I ordered the Eggs Benedict, served with hashbrowns; I added avocado, which brought the total to $9.88. Sadly, as yummy as these pictures may look, I found breakfast to be more than a little lacking.




My breakfast arrived cold, not warm; stone-cold and starting to congeal.  As the first, and still only, customers, I could not understand how my whole plate could be so cold.  


Did they make my breakfast, put it in the window, and THEN start Rick's? Although my eggs were almost perfectly poached, they forgot the avocado (which was later brought to the table as a side), the ham was not the thick slice of grilled ham as pictured on the menu, but shaved, overly-salty lunch meat, and the hollandaise sauce was the completely bland packet variety. Had it been hot, it would have tasted a whole lot better. As it was, I ate because I was super-hungry, not necessarily because it was good.


Side of avocado, browner than in the photo.
Rick's meal was huge and fairly average; scrambled eggs were too dry, but pretty fluffy, bacon salty, but a little flaccid, pancakes okay, but fork-tough (needed a knife to cut).

My side of avocado, when it arrived, was pretty brown and looked old. (The picture looks better than it did in person) It would have been fine if it was covered by the hollandaise, or in a burger or omelette, but not very pretty served as is.  I would have re-thought bringing it to the table.


Our total, without tip ended up at $20.87. The waitress was much friendlier by the time we left (maybe she just need some coffee, too), but I don't think it was enough to make the experience worthwhile for a second visit.


Perhaps we should have trusted our instincts and stopped at Mel & Faye's; at 8 am their parking lot was full.


Rating (1-10):
Ambience: 7
Service: 6
Food: 4
Value: 7
Overall: 6


The Particulars:
Thomi's Cafe
627 S. Highway 49,
Jackson, CA 95642
(209) 257-0800
Open 7 days, 8 am - 9 pm (8 pm Sundays)













Wednesday, January 25, 2012

A Roya-l Lunch

I am always hunting for new ideas to jazz up the lunch hour standards: a tuna sandwich, a garden salad, leftovers... Blah, blah, blah.


And then I saw this post from a friend and fellow blogger Roya (Dirt Don't Hurt) and have been dying to try it: Curried Chicken Salad.  Why haven't I thought of this before?!


Roya's Pic. YUM!
Here is her recipe as she posted a week or so ago:


"This recipe can be eaten right away, but it is better if it's refrigerated for a few hours.
This can be doubled, tripled, quadrupled!
I used leftovers from a roasted chicken, and wish I had made more.


1 cup chicken, chopped up small
1/2 apple, chopped finely
¼ bulb fennel, finely chopped (or 1 stalk celery, but the fennel makes this amazing)
1 handful of dried cranberries 
Handful of chopped nuts (totally optional)


1 T mayo
Splash of apple cider vinegar (to taste)
Salt and pepper
Dash of celery salt
Curry powder (optional)


Mix all together, then add the curry powder to make it as yellow as you like it.


I start with just a dab of mayo (I don’t like it to be too “wet”, just a little coating, and add more as needed. I’ve made it with greek yogurt, and it’s just not the same. You could probably go 50/50 yogurt/mayo though. It’s really not that much mayonnaise ;)
I added about ¼ cup of leftover faro which added some good chewiness to it, but that is totally not necessary. I can see quinoa or brown rice being good too.


Served in lettuce wraps, or over a TON of cabbage, this is the most delicious thing ever. Eaten by the spoonful out of the Tupperware in your fridge it is also delicious ;) "

How could I NOT want to eat this?!  Having just returned from Poland, I realized this morning that there is almost NOTHING in our fridge that is still edible. And then I found this in the back of the fridge:


And this:



Oh, heck yeah, it is ON!  Although I didn't have the exact ingredients specified by Roya (I would have LOVED fennel in this), I whipped up a close approximation, with a few additions of my own.


Although I normally prefer to use leftover chicken for my chicken salads, in a pinch the Kirkland chicken is pretty yummy.  It's packed in water so no extra fat, calories, or flavor, and has really large chunks of white meat.


Kirkland Chicken
I opted to add a little bit of red onion.  I add onion to almost every recipe, including salads.


Red Onion
I definitely opted to add nuts to my salad.  I love the extra richness and crunch these toasted pecans added to the salad.  If a recipe calls for nuts of any kind, I usually try and buy the biggest bag I can budget for, and keep the remainder for future use, like today!


Toasted Pecans
Even without the dressing and the apples, I was already salivating a little at this point.


Salad pre-dressing (sans apples)
So for the dressing the debate raged: Veganaise or Mayo?


Veganaise: 90 Calories, 9 Grams of Fat

Olive Oil Mayo: 45 Calories, 4 Grams of Fat
Guess who won?  Yep, the mayo.  I always mix my dressings, whether it is for potato salad, cole slaw, or in this case, chicken salad, in a separate bowl.  That way if I screw up the dressing I haven't botched the whole meal.  In my case I added LOTS of curry (very yellow), garlic powder, a squeeze of spicy brown mustard, and a touch of cayenne to my dressing.  I like my curry with some heat!


Curry-Mayo Dressing
Mix it all together, cover and chill.  Waiting was the hardest part.


Chicken salad dressed, with apples
Finally lunch time arrived!  I dressed my greens with the barest kiss of EVOO and some fresh ground salt and pepper, topped with the chicken salad, and took this quick picture before I dove in.


How pretty is that?
And there it is, sitting on my desk as I type this, except that by now, I have an almost empty plate!


LUNCH!
Recipes like these are so quick, easy, and flexible depending on what you have on hand.  In my case, purple instead of green cabbage, celery instead of fennel, green apples instead of red, raisins instead of cranberries.  It was delicious anyways.


Thanks again to Roya for a great idea and a happy lunch.