[¡Ask a Mexican!] Muy Caliente Summer Edition

 

Dear Mexican: I am a Chicano in Connecticut. I moved from Arizona to the East Coast for my dream job, and I have to admit that I’m still homesick. Connecticut is a completely different world. To sum it up in one phrase, vale madre. It took a while for me to find a Mexican restaurant close to me. It’s very comparable to that cardboard-tortilla outlet known as Taco Bell. When I first went there, I was served chips and salsa. Of course, I dove right into the appetizer. The chips were very stale, and the salsa tasted like candy. Sí, como dulce. I asked my mesero if they had a hotter salsa because the salsa was nothing but salsa de tomate with some chunks of cebolla in it. He told me that they have a spicy pico de gallo and he would bring it right out. ¿Sabes que, carnal? What I received was nothing but a bowl of chopped cebolla with some cilantro in it! He proudly displayed a sonrisa and asked if I liked it. I returned his pregunta with another pregunta and asked if this was his hot sauce. His smile quickly faded, and then he said, “Pues tu sabes. Tenemos que servirle esa comida a ellos que no están acostumbrados a nuestra comida.” I responded by telling him that if you’re going to serve Mexican food, serve Mexican food.

I’m tired of Mexican-owned restaurants advertising their comida as auténtica, only to be disappointed by how crappy the food, OUR food, tastes. Why does our gente feel as though we have to water down our great cuisines for the gabachos? Why don’t the dueños of the restaurants show off the beauty of nuestra cultura and forget a candy-flavored salsa in favor of a great-tasting salsa that not only makes our mouths water, but also makes us teary-eyed?

Chicano In the CONN

 

Dear Wab: A tip for the next time you encounter salsa milder than vanilla: Carry your own chiles. The Mexican always travels with a sandwich bag containing his favorite peppers—a couple of long, green serranos for freshness, gnarled chiles de árbol to bless my beans with dry heat, the tiny pequín if I need crunch, and one neon-orange habanero to rub in the eyes of any possible stalkers. Your sad story is one experienced by many Mexicans who travel through the parts of this country wabs have just begun to colonize, but it’s not unique to us: New Yorkers always bemoan the quality of bagels everywhere outside of Brooklyn, and San Franciscans simply won’t eat burritos not folded in the Mission District. I will argue, however, that Mexican cuisine is more whitewashed than others, but I won’t reveal my thesis until next year, when my next book, Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America (And Soon, the World), appears. Stay tuned, and stay enchilado!

What’s up with all the salsa music in Mexican restaurants?

No More Congas!

 

Dear Gabacho: Solamente no es Mexican eateries where you find Caribbean rhythms replacing Mexican regional music. Movies, newscasts or segments about Mexicans, TV shows such as Ugly Betty—really, any media manifestation of Mexicans needing a soundtrack usually eschew banda sinaloense (the brass-band one), conjunto norteño (the accordion one), pasito durangüense (the melodica one) and mariachi (the sombrero one) for salsa or any other type of Latin beats. It’s easy to blame anti-Mexican hatred for such swaps, but the razón is obvious: Gabacho America’s hatred of polkas, waltzes and all the folk music of a previous generation of idiot Catholic immigrants that influenced Mexican regional. Seriously: When was the last time outside Cleveland, Milwaukee, Oktoberfest, The Lawrence Welk Show, an octogenarian dance in heartland America, a Mexican party, or a Weird Al Yankovic concert that you heard such music appreciated without irony? America likes cool, and the polka-loving bola de gente I just mentioned are about as hip as Dubya.

Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net or myspace.com/ocwab. Or write to him at: Gustavo Arellano, P.O. Box 1433, Anaheim, CA 92815-1433. Find him on Facebook and Twitter!

 
  • VM 08/08/2009 1:10:00 AM

    I'm a guero with a tapatio bf who cooks, we have a pretty developed Mex community up here, and I just got back from a month in Oaxaca. Trust me, even some of us white people that have never lived in Mexico "miss" real Mexican food. And good idea. I may start carrying chiles around myself.

  • j gold 06/09/2009 3:57:00 AM

    I've heard that the conductor Zubin Mehta always carries a pillbox of hot chiles around with him, and bravo. On the other hand, George Bush the elder is never without a little bottle of Tabasco on his person.

  • Kat 06/09/2009 1:10:00 AM

    The saddest thing is most of the mexican eateries I've been to use canned beans!....everything tastes like Rosarita. Bleh...

  • FBM 06/06/2009 4:53:00 AM

    Santo Coyote is a nice restaurant in Guadalajara, a guy comes with a portable table with grilled tomatoes, onion, peppers (serrano, habanero) then he blends the salsa to perfection into the molcajete using your pick of chile(s) at your hot/picante level, believe me chicano Conn and all salsa-fans, it can hardly get any better with the crispy salty totopos and a nice cold beer, book your travel now!!

  • Gustavo Arellano 06/06/2009 2:22:00 AM

    Paisa: I've never claimed otherwise! Best moment: when I was at an Italian restaurant before a meeting and pulled out some habanero slivers to spike my lasagna to the gasps of the elderly folks in the audience! Dre: Always wonderful to hear from you!

  • DRE DAWG 06/06/2009 12:13:00 AM

    Your media/movie/tv comments made me think of Jurassic Park and the scene when the guy who used to be on Seinfeld meets with the secret agent to discuss their plan to steal the dino embryos. The caption at the bottom of the screen reads "San Jose, Costa Rica" yet there's mariachi music blaring in the background...and even worse, the city (depicted as a dinky little pueblo, which it so is not) is next to the ocean...San Jose is dead center in the country, no body of water near it at all. So sad that even Spielberg doesn't know basic geography.

  • El Gringo 06/05/2009 10:08:00 PM

    As a retired restaurant writer, it is my rule of thumb to look around in any eatery touting its ethnicity. If it is a Mexican restaurant, are there Mexicans eating there? And while I don't carry a baggie of chilis, I do have a bottle of Tapat�where ever I go...yeah, I know it is made in Vernon, Calif., but it is a lot better than that vinegar stuff from Louisiana. Goes go on cheap pizza too.

  • El Paisa 06/05/2009 10:49:00 AM

    Gustavo, you carry around chiles with you when you're going to a restaurant? That's beyond Paisa. Haha.

 

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