Tag: Pancho Villa

  • Report from Yucatan

    After a week of bouncing around the Yucatecan countryside, I
    have come back with an increased respect for the Mexican eateries we have right
    here in the Twin Cities. We ate all over the place – from thatched beachfront
    seafood joints in a quiet fishing village and market stalls in a small colonial
    town to the kinds of upscale restaurants where white-jacketed waiters prepare
    guacamole at tableside.

    At the upscale restaurants, service and presentation were certainly more refined than at, for example, Pancho Villa on Eat Street, or El Paraiso at 35th and Nicollet, or at the little food stalls inside the Mercato Central or the Midtown Global Market, but the preparations were often very similar. And the little panaderias (bakeries) we visited in the Yucatan offered a much smaller selection than you can find locally at Panaderia Marissa on Eat Street, or the other Mexican bakeries you can find around the Twin Cities.

    (Our local Chinese restaurants wouldn’t stack up
    nearly as well in a similar comparison with typical Hong Kong eateries, and I
    know the local Thai eateries aren’t in the same league with what Bangkok’s
    dining scene has to offer.)

    It isn’t quite a fair comparison, because the Yucatan has
    its own distinctive regional cuisine, while most of the Twin Cities’ Mexican
    restaurants, like our immigrant population, are rooted in areas closer to the
    US border.

    We headed straight from the Cancun airport – where the
    dining options include Bubba Gump’s, Johnny Rockets, pizza and food-court
    Chinese – to the downtown Cancun bus station, and boarded a first-class ADO bus
    to Merida, the state capital. First class bus travel in Mexico means action
    movies on the tv monitors – we got to see Once Upon A Time in Mexico with
    Antonio Banderas and Selma Hayek twice! –
    and air conditioning, both cranked all the way up. When the locals pay
    extra for a.c., they get their money’s worth – our driver kept the cabin temp
    right around 60 degrees for much of our trip.

    Our first dinner in Mexico was at the Portico del Peregrino, in a stately old colonial building not far
    from Merida’s main square, where I sampled a couple of Yucatecan specialties – a
    lively sopa de lima (lime soup) of shredded chicken, chopped tomatoes and
    tortilla strips in a savory lime-flavored chicken stock; and pollo pibil,
    chicken marinated in sour orange juice and baked in banana leaves. Other
    highlights of our two days in Merida included a lunchtime visit to Los
    Almendros
    , which offers an extensive menu of Yucatecan specialties in elegant
    surroundings. I opted for a combination plate, which let me try four different
    local specialties – cochinita pibil (slow-cooked pork, baked in a banana leaf),
    poc chuc (a grilled pork steak marinated in sour orange juice), turkey en
    escabeche, cooked in a sour and spicy sauce, and longaniza, a dark and spicy
    dry sausage. Unlike most Yucatecan
    restaurants we visited, Los Almendros offers no fish or seafood entrees, so
    Carol opted for the papadzul, corn tortillas stuffed and topped with
    hard-boiled eggs, and bathed in a savory pumpkin seed sauce.

    Two more tips if you ever make it to Merida – a little hotel
    with courtyard and fountain called Luz en Yucatan, run by a very friendly Irish
    expat named Donard, and a breakfast café and bakery called Flor de Santiago,
    that looks like the Mexican version of a 40’s-era diner, frozen in time.

    The fishing village of Celestun is a couple of hours away
    from Merida on a second class bus – no loud movies, no air-conditioning, and
    lots of stops in Mayan towns and villages along the way. It’s a sleepy and
    charming little town that is just starting to welcome an influx of tourists who
    are looking for a sleepy little fishing village that doesn’t get a lot of
    tourists. (More are on the way: at the poolside bar at our hotel, a real estate
    investor from Merida handed me a Cuban Cohiba and boasted of his plans to buy
    up miles of unspoiled beachfront nearby, and carve it up into luxury
    properties.)

    In the morning you can walk along the beach and watch the
    fishing boats come in with their catch, and then in the afternoon you can dine
    on fresh fish – or shrimp, blue crab or octopus –at any of half-a-dozen
    restaurants that line the shore. Our favorite was the Restaurante Chirivico,
    which offered all the usual fish and shrimp dishes, plus a lively seafood
    cocktail, a pounded steak of caracol (conch) prepared like a breaded pork
    tenderloin; and a tender and garlicky octopus al mojo de ajo.

    On the way back, we stopped in the beautiful little town of
    Valladolid, built by the Spanish conquistadors where an older Mayan settlement
    once stood. The finest hotel and restaurant in town are at the Meson del
    Marques,

    right on the main square, with the usual Yucatecan repertoire of pollo pibil,
    cochinita, and pok chuk, plus steaks, pasta and seafood. For the more
    adventuresome, though, the Bazar Municipal next door is a covered marketplace
    with tables and chairs in the middle, and tiny stalls along the side, where
    vendors sell tacos, tortas, pozole soup, and the Yucatecan versions of the
    tostada – the panucho and the salbute, fried tortillas topped with shredded
    chicken and pickled onions.