Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Volume I Episode V























Hello everyone from your guest blogger, Meredith.


My missions with this guest blog are threefold:


1. demonstrate that formatting can be fun, so that the witty but long-winded regular author of the words you see here, may be persuaded to throw the rest of us a paragraph break every now and then


2. try to keep up with the Jones´, or Jerems` in this case, as I understand that his guest appearance among Blake`s missives home from Spain was a major hit


AND


3. add my humble impressions of San Miguel and the nascent restaurant venture.


So, I´m off.


See, indenting feels good :)


My own arrival to San Miguel was stymied a bit by weather. I arrived in Houston, but ended up with a canceled flight to Leon (apparently the state of Guanajuato has a curfew, no planes landing past midnight- or else they are grounded?). So I spent a night in the Hampton Inn in Humble, Texas. It was humble, but I enjoyed all 4 hrs of sleep Igot. Arrived safely in Mexico the next day, but naturally, without my checked bag. (Bag arrived the following day, another Mexican adventure not worth wasting my precious blog space).


BUT, Blake WAS there at the airport, and we had a very happy reunion.We drove the 1.5 hrs back to San Miguel de Allende (SMA) in his boss´car, and then spent the afternoon hiking around the hills of SMA, enjoying the views and the crazy shaped cactus collection of the botanical garden. The following day was my first venture to the hot springs, I think Blake has talked about these already. They were more swimming pool-esque than I expected, but fed by all natural hot springs, and very relaxing. Blake orchestrated home cooked deliciousness for lunch and dinner that day. Oh, I miss home-cooked deliciousness.


AND THEN, the following night, I got to be one of the first people served in the new restaurant (called The Restaurant, in case you weren´t clear). Five courses served expertly to myself and the owner of the property the restaurant is on, and some of her friends and co-workers. Ceviche & dayboat scallops, portabello ravioli in a slow cooked onion broth, salmon on a bed of lentils, beef filet and mac & cheese (Ma Belle, it tastes even better in mexico!), and then a panna cotta with fresh berries and edible pansies (Reba, wish you were therefor the p.c.). Are y'all jealous? As far as I'm concerned, this is taking the cuisine in this town to a whole new level. You may not think I can be an expert on SMA cuisine, having been here less than aweek, but you´d be wrong. The Restaurant is still in its very early stages, doing private parties only, but hoping to ramp up to full (or full-er menu) soon. Stay tuned...


In my non-restaurant hours, I have kept myself busy wandering around on the cobbled streets, poking around in tons of chachki stores, attending a pilates class, visiting open air markets, and getting a fabulous massage, of course. I've been enjoying meeting the cast of characters in Blake's life these days -- as you all know, he has a wonderful knack for befriending the good ones. I leave tomorrow, but I'm looking forward to coming back soon.


Thanks for reading. Send a few comments my way, kay?


Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Volume 1 Episode IV






Friday, February 15, 2008, 1:51:33


First I'd like to send an RIP out to Moochie, the Boston Terrier, who was the victim of an unprovoked mauling this week. This dog-on-dog violence has got to stop.

Ok, there’s been a lot of uproar about the lack of formatting in this blog. So, I’m going to do my best to be a little more clear with my dates and paragraphs and captions.

I left off last time after a Saturday afternoon recording session with the Alligator. Saturday night we went to a gallery opening/anniversary party at the Aurora, which is an old cotton mill in San Miguel that has become home to a lot of upscale art and a couple of attempts at fine dining (not too successful as far as I can tell). Anyway, these gallery openings are always a little depressing to me as I watch all of the artists have to suck up to, and sell out to, the art patron community which tend to be of a completely different sort than the artists themselves. I guess we all gotta do what we gotta do. Especially when that which you are selling does not have much tangible, objective, or intrinsic value (food, of course, is somewhat, although not completely, included in the list of subjectively valuable).

Anyway, there was some cool art but the feeling of being trapped in a Disneyland for 60 year old Texans was a little overwhelming. We went to dinner at Tacos Don Felix, a local landmark, at least as far as side-of-the-road, white tent, taco stands go. More gringos…. wearing deer skin Daniel Boone jackets, hollering at each other across the tent. I mean really, can’t a man eat his 7 assorted tacos in peace?

Sunday we spent a full day out at Fernando’s little house and bakery in the campo (country) outside of San Miguel. He has a brick wood-fired oven as well as a 2 deck bread oven that he uses to produce organic breads that he then sells to stores and restaurants throughout San Miguel. On Sunday we went out to “play” with the wood-fired oven, making a leg of pork wrapped in bacon (I believe that’s not kosher), pingas - which I think means penis in Spanish-(large, mature cactus leaves) stuffed with nopales (young cactus leaves), chorizo, tomato, poblano peppers, garlic and onion, and then sewn shut and roasted in the wood ashes (only the stuffing is eaten, the outside leaves turn black and sooty and are inedible) and a whole slew of pizzas including shrimp and fresh oregano, tomatoes and local manchego and jamon, peppers and caramelized onions. A good group of people trickled through, including a sculptor from Queretaro who made some of the best stuff on display the night before at the Aurora, an architect who spent half the party reading a book on escaleras (stairways) , a local kindergarten teacher, and Fernando’s mom and aunt who got fairly plastered and sat outside on chairs ragging on everything and everyone like a couple of Saturday Night Live characters. Always nice when a party is half gringos and half Mexicans, at least for me, because I can practice my Spanish with plenty of back-up in case I can’t find a word or understand a sentence.

Things have really slowed down to a crawl at the Restaurant. Really hard to get much done when every contractor only finishes half their job leaving leaky sinks, dangling wires, unlevel surfaces and non-functional internet (I am currently typing this as a word document since for the second or third day this week the internet is not happening. Can you imagine trying to start a business in San Francisco with internet access that functions half the time?) It’s also a little challenging when purveyors come without any sort of price or product lists, and the lists that they do have, often include mostly items that they need to truck in from Mexico City so they need 4 days of advanced warning (not usually how life works in a restaurant).

I'm beginning to feel like the optimal solution would be to figure out what products are the freshest and most consistently available, and base our menu completely around that list, instead of the other way around. Its kind of hard, because of course, every other restaurant in town does the same thing without even thinking about it….There is beef, tomatoes, onions, cilantro, corn and chiles around….what are we going to make? Tacos!!! I guess it just adds to the challenge as far as having to create new dishes, rather than working off of already developed recipes. Of course, many restaurants call themselves local and seasonal, which would imply that they are buying exactly what's freshest and most available at any given moment, but at least in the Bay Area, they have access to anything else that they might want or need to finish a dish with less than 12 hours notice. Not to mention an incredible group of farmers always trying to expand the quality and variety of products available at any given time. A crutch we don’t seem to have (farmers - yes, expansion - not so much).

Tuesday night we had a feast celebrating the almost completion of our kitchen. We at least have 2 working stove tops and ovens as well as some running water (not hot) and a working household refrigerator. Anyway, we roasted the lechon pig (about 10lbs) that Donnie had bought last week at the Italian farmhouse. Marinated overnight in soy, tangerine, ginger, garlic, and rice wine, we cooked the pig on a bed of red cabbage and onions until the meat was falling from the bone and the skin began to crack. On the side we made some vegetable fried rice with little duck egg omelet slivers (from Donnie’s ducks that live behind his house), egg rolls stuffed with carrots, zucchini, mushrooms and crab (from a can, but a good can, of pasteurized lump crab meat) and green beans a la plancha (the plancha seemed to get hotter than our wok) with ginger, garlic and scallions.

We also tried out a dish that we’re thinking of putting on the menu ….Marinated sea scallops with manzano peppers (a local pepper that looks like an over-size habanero – orange and kind of diamond shaped- and is sometimes hot, but usually not), mandarin oranges and cilantro. Unfortunately, we have yet to find a local purveyor for fresh scallops, and the frozen ones we tried were slightly rubbery in texture and much less sweet than we had hoped.

We ate dinner up on the roof, candlelit because there isn’t any lighting up there yet, with Donnie, Cynthia, their kids, the three of us from 20 de Enero (Alejandra, Andrew and I), Fernando and 3 of the workers from the store who have been painting our dining room. It’s definitely a family affair around here.

Of course, the next night I made a hogs' head soup with the leftovers from our pig roast, some vegetables, rice and seasoning. For some reason, it reminded me of Louis (my uncle, from Louisiana, who was an amazing cook and introduced me to the glories of hogs head anything).

Meredith is coming in tonight. Hopefully she will write the next posting. If and when we have internet, that is.


Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Volume I Episode III









Photos soon to follow. My camera is kind of out of batteries and I forgot my charger, but Ill post some as soon as I scrounge them up.

Wednesday, Feb 6th, 7:54:32pm

One of the cool things about this part of Mexico is that apparently there are a lot of underground hot springs. Within 20 miles of San Miguel there are at least 4 or 5 public venues for kicking it in some naturally hot water. Some are dug out into huge Olympic size swimming pools. Some are converted into water parks for kids (or adults) with water slides and shallow areas and whatever else a water park makes. Apparently, one of the hot springs is available for rent for the night and you can throw a big rave style party there with djs and candles and cocktails. Don't even think thats not happening some time in the next 2 months. The one we went to on Sunday morning, known as Escondido, is inside a series of brick domes with an outdoor pool on one end. IT kind of looks like that house on 280 near the Junnipero Serra statue for all of you old-school Bay Area vets Anyway, its kind of sauna like inside with a huge pipe gushing a heavy flow of 100 degree water. You can stand under the waterfall and let it massage your back, neck, chest or shoulders, as one massage hog lady did, or you can just hang out in the hot water and let it sooth and relax you and try not to think about how greedy and selfish some people are..
After a long nap (the hot springs really takes it out of you), I went to a bar to watch the Super Bowl. The gringo bar was all full up, so we watched at one of the other bars where it was being shown in Spanish to an all Mexican audience. Its kind of strange to watch the SuperBowl with commercials for local insurance offices and the announcer telling you that Los Gigantes tienen un gran defensa, which apparently they do. Is it just me or was I saying all year that Eli Manning is not that bad of a quarterback and if his receivers stopped dropping so damn many passes (see Drew Brees) he actually might not suck (I'm not implying that Drew Brees sucks, just that he would be even better if his receivers could hold onto anything)?.
This week has involved a lot of data entry by day, and a lot of crazy equipment arrival and organization and counting and moving by night. Seems kind of backwards to me, but as previously explained, with the tiny streets and the large trucks, its easier to unload at night. Easier for them that is. Monday, was the arrival of the bar. Super cool to have your bar custom made, to fit inside the patio of your funky 300 year old house/restaurant. The only problem is that absolutely nothing is flat, least of all the cobblestone patio. So, even though the measurements were fairly precise, the bar still needs some shims and some lifts and some filing to get it remotely flat and square to the wall. And of course, you want it to look good, being that its custom made and brand new and all. So, by the time that is all worked out, its fairly late, but we still decide to go to the Candelaria, the open air plant market in one of the neighborhood parks, which happens 2 weeks a year. People drive in from all over the state of Guanajuato to sell their plants (rumor has it that they are force bloomed), and since there are too many plants to store, and they might lose money on the whole project if they rented a room or a house here in San Miguel, they just sleep for 2 weeks in the park with their plants. So, basically, its always open. We stocked up on herbs for our herb garden which we planted the next day in a sweet little built-in planter along the side of our back stairs (Mat P, Jan Swan and Kimmy would all be proud of my care and techniques)....Basil ( a funky local basil thats not quite as sweet or anisey as the sweet Italian stuff), Oregano, Marjoram, Thyme, Rosemary, Mint, Epazote (a perfumey local herb with purple leaves dating back to the Aztecs ), Dill, some sort of Lemon Geranium thing and a bunch of edible Pansies.
Tuesday night was a glorious doubleheader of refrigeration installation and the arrival of china, glass and silver. Most everything here is cheaper to have custom built then buying new, and that goes double for walk-ins. The problem is that once you have the four walls, floor and ceiling built, you need some pretty heavy insulation. Well, the polyurethane guy, comes from Mexico City in his big truck that stores this nasty toxic chemical that he then pumps through the longest scummiest, most duct taped pipe you have ever seen. The best part is, the guy who is holding the end of the pipe, which is basically spraying a fine mist of agent orange, is protecting himself with a sweatshirt tied around his face and a baseball cap. My eyes were burning and my head was spinning standing 20 feet outside the building while this guy is in a 6 ft by 12 ft room spraying this stuff for an hour protected like hes trying to avoid a sun tan. What makes the whole situation even more surreal is that meanwhile this elegant well-dressed girl (some sort of refrigeration middle-woman) is standing around with a clipboard and a calculator arguing with the big fat truck driver over who has to pay off the cops because they didnt get the proper permit to block the street off for an hour (maybe because they arrived like 3 days and 4 hours late?). Neither of them seemed too concerned about the dude burning off more brain cells than a 16 year old hippy in a nitrous factory. When he finished, our walk-in looked like a yellow cave with funky foam oozing out the totally crooked door. Now the only decision is whether we go with ancient hieroglyphics and stick figures on the walls or just straight graffiti.
Finally at almost midnight, after we had celebrated the glory of refrigeration with a Mardi Gras cocktail at Harrys, San Miguel's finest and only New Orleans themed bar and restaurant (the pain of the menu is too hard for me to describe in words), came the other truck from Mexico City
with all of our china, glass and silverware. Sounds like no big deal, right. Thats where you are wrong. A mountain does not even describe. Imagine all of the plates you own, than multiply by 100, then stack them in boxes and them ship them here from Korea and Indonesia. Do the same with your glasses and silverware. Then add cognac snifters, dip bowls and butter knives. Then carry them from point a to b. Then to c. Then count them, all. Then up some stairs to d. Then restack them. Fun!
Another trip to Queretaro was now in order to pick up our slicer and grinder (you would think these restaurant equipment dealers would deliver given the size and price of their inventory, but no, not even close. Not only would they not deliver, they only will sell you items straight off the showroom floor, and they accept nothing but cold hard green cash. Our bill for the four items we bought was over 20,000 pesos, all of which had to be paid the old fashion way. Hello tax evasion!).
As I said before, Queretaro is not too glorious a place, mostly a big industrial city with lots of American international stores (Walmart, CostCo, Sam's, Home Depot etc), but it does have one thing going for it....Some badass Gorditas. I guess gorditas are one of the regional specialties of this part of Mexico and Guero and Lupita's Gorditas in the artisan market of Queretaro are the best Ive had by far. They are a little like a cross between a pita and a tortilla with a much more integral flour used for the dough. Another words, you take the corn that is used for tortillas (which has been treated with some sort of lye in order to dry it out completely and make it grindable - same stuff as they use to make tortillas) and only partially smash it rather than grinding fine. You then mix it with just enough water to bind and fry it(probably with a little lard) on a hot comal (essentially a large flat cast iron pan that kind of looks like an upside down tractor hub cap). It is then opened up like a pita and stuffed with whole pinto beans, meat (in this case, and the most traditional, is called migajas which means crumbs and is essentially the meat that is left over from cooking chicharonnes which are fried pig skins) and if you like cheese (queso ranchero) and/or lettuce. The point being that there are only a few ingredients, so they all have to be perfect. And that is how Guero and Lupita do it. The dough is crispy, like a good pizza crust, full of texture and corn chunks, not soggy with oil or heavy with too much water like most places. The migajas are not too greasy, which is an impressive feat given where they come from. The salsa, which they grind in a mocajete (lava rock mortar and pestle) is still slightly chunky, and balanced with not too much acid nor sugar.
Our next adventure was a trip to San Miguel mushrooms also known as Monterey Mushrooms....One would think that going to a local farm, even if it looks more like a factory than a farm, with four or five airplane hanger size greenhouses and mountains of hay on all sides, would offer one the opportunity to serve a locally made product. I guess, my first hint should have been when we needed an appointment with the head of sales, in order to take a look at the facility and hopefully taste some of their products. Anyway, once we arrive, and were given our official Visitor badges, also known as lammies (laminates), we headed to the main office to meet Anna, our emissary. She ushers us into a large conference room and proceeds to question us about why we have come, how many mushrooms we are looking to buy,and why cant we buy our mushrooms at the supermarket like anyone else. It feels more like a corporate meeting than a visit with Farmer john. The trip turns out to be a monumental failure, although maybe one with a lesson. No, we can not buy mushrooms direct from the factory. They have a 100 Kilo a week minimum (at least 10 times what we are looking to buy). They supply mushrooms to the likes of CostCo, Sam's Club and the gigantic Mexican supermarket chain Mega. No, we can not tour the factory. I couldn't totally grasp the reason, but it sounded like people were busy and why would we want to take a tour anyway. The place was almost as secretive, elusive and well guarded, as Dick Cheney's office. And no, we couldn't even buy some mushroom compost, the residual from the mushroom growing and harvesting process.
So, on our way back to town, forlorn and empty handed, we decided to make a little pit stop at the huge piles of brown dirt along the side of the road that just happened to smell like a well made duxelle (a fine chop of sauteed mushrooms that the Frenchies have a fancy name for). Crafty as we are, we not only procured a sack of sweet sweet mushroom compost for the low price of 25 pesos, we also made a deal with one of the compost ladies (hard to describe exactly what her job was), to come once a week and buy 10 kilos of mushrooms from the 100s of kilos she and her team pulled out of the dirt. Seems like somebody would have caught on to this before us, but she seemed completely baffled by the fact that we would approached her to buy what she normally would just lug back to the factory and return.
We proceeded in our quest for local purveyors, visiting the ranch of Hectore, the Italian, as they call him around here. We wound our way up a long bumpy dirt road, amidst the cactuses, mesquite trees and scrub brush that dominates the landscape of these parts (although I have learned subsequently, that this part of Mexico was all forest less than a hundred years ago. In 30 years loggers cleared the entire region leaving nothing but arid desert) until we came upon a huge brick farmhouse. In the front yard were lamb and cows, with pigs along the side and dormant wine grape vines as far as the eye could see. it would remind me of Tuscany or Umbria, if I had ever been there. Anyway, at his farm, once again in the dream fulfilling tradition of San Miguel, Hectore makes proscuittos, salamis, cotechinos (a gigantic Italian sausage), several types of fresh and aged cheeses, red and white wines, grappa and occasionally has a few baby (lechon) pigs for sale. Everything is processed by hand in the most old school traditional way possible. The milk he uses from his herd of about 20 Jersey milking cows is unpasteurized, although they do use a centrifuge type machine (the one and only machine they use for cheesemaking) to help rid it of harmful bacteria. The milk curd is hung in cheesecloth with a little rennet and then molded in straw baskets for as little as five days (for the fresh cheeses which taste incredibly of hay and alfalfa which are the composition of their cows' diet). The aged cheeses are left to dry in a cellar and age naturally over the course of 1 to 18 months depending on their types. Grapes are crushed by hand (using a giant rolling pin type thing) in another large custom made cellar with a drain in the floor that leads directly to the huge wooden fermentation barrel. He makes mostly Cabernet Sauvignon, although it seems to have almost no tanin to it and he claims to use no sulfites, which he sells really young as a table wine, , as well as some super fuity Fruili white wine. Unfortunately, Hectore, himself, has been sick for a while, and so production is currently way down. His wife, Estelle, is doing an admirable job of filling in, but it is not her passion like it is his. She also told us that their daughter, when she went off to school, accidentally erased all of the recipes on their hard drive, so Hectore has had to go back to the scraps of paper handed down through his family for generations.
Saturday morning I took the Dude for a long walk around the outskirts off San Miguel. Lots of cool houses up in the hills as well as some still, as of yet, undisturbed lands where hundreds of birds were nesting until Dude came around. We didnt make it into the botanical gardens (no dogs allowed) but we did manage to circumnavigate the top half of the city and make it back home without getting incredibly lost or back tracking.
In the afternoon we headed again out to the rural suburbs where Alligator Dave was going to make a demo of his 15 newest tracks to send off to LA where he is hoping to have a reality series made about his life on the road. a guy named Paul Voudouris has a studio called Hit records that he runs out of the bottom floor of his home. Paul, apparently by all the pictures of him in t-shirts with the neck and sleeves cut out and/or an open leather vest with no shirt underneath, was a platinum selling jazz/new age/pop singer and keyboardist somewhere in the late seventies early eighties. He moved out to San Miguel several years ago and built this studio along with a beautiful house, and apparently at one point a side of the road hamburger stand, which didn't quite succeed. Anyway, he has a few burros, chickens, sheep and dogs running around mostly for the entertainment and amusement of his young daughter (better than Nintendo if you ask me). Dave busted out 15 hilarious tracks in under 2 hours moving from one to the next like a true pro.It is hard for me to describe the "awesomeness" as Dave likes to say other than it ranged from Irish drinking jigs, to an ode to Burt Reynolds in his Smokey and the Bandit days, to a version of supercalifradgilisticexpalidocious where he replaces the key word with humboldtcountykindbudsmokesmelikesomedoja or something like that. He also sang a couple of Mexican style party songs along with Joe, the German tri-lingual rapper. Cool stuff. meanwhile, I sat around and drank Rum and Cokes and enjoyed the view of the desert.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Volume I Episode II











Saturday Feb. 2, 2008 10:28:11pm (Mer's birthday!)

A lot of the process of opening a restaurant is pretty mundane stuff that doesnt really change much whether you go through it in the US or Mexico. This Thursday we went up to Queretaro the mid-size industrial city just north of San Miguel. This is the home of the big local produce market and many restaurant supply and equipment stores. We started with the wholesale produce market where we hoped to meet a few potential distributors of the sorts of generic produce that was not seasonal or locally grown and thus we could not buy directly from our farmer connections. Things like onions, carrots, celery, tomatoes (when they aren't in season), particular fruits that we might want for a dessert or whatever. The place is huge. Like airplane hanger after airplane hanger. One guy who just sells avocadoes, one for potatoes, one for oranges etc. Big old trucks full of nothing but pineapples. The quality is not particularly impressive, nor is the hygiene, but the quantity is pretty kicking. Our success rate was pretty low. Nobody wants to deliver and order under one ton, and nobody really carried enough variety for us to make any special arrangements. Anyway, I guess thats why there are produce companies who deliver small amounts of produce to restaurants at exorbitant prices with mediocre quality and poor service.
Next we stopped at a few different restaurant equipment places. Again these people are like used car salesman. So sly and slimy and untrustworthy. They play dumb. They play smart. At first they ignored us, probably because we are a group of gringos that don't look too serious. Then when they see you are serious they start jacking around with you. Pretending they don't know the price of anything in their store even though there couldn't be more than 20 items. Then acting like they are the experts on commercial blenders and want to show you how well this or that blender can puree water. then when it comes to paying there is always some damn problem. This isnt in stock. No, we don't have the sausage tube you want or need. maybe you should try this one that is only 500 pesos more. It looks much better in the internet demo. My favorite line was when the salesman asked us why we needed a certain size grinder die. As if this 18 year old punk had any clue what we were doing. we need it to grind up our victims into meatballs i told him.
After a failed attempt to find guero and lupitas gordita shop in another crazy farmers market, a couple of bad cheap pastry supply stores, and a whole bunch of u-turns, we finally thank god, made it to costco. The incredible gifts america has bestowed upon the world just never end. The place is packed at like 8:30 at night on a Tuesday. Same shit as Costco in kenner or palo alto or probably beijing. The only difference i could detect was that they served frozen albondigas with salsa roja or empanaditas de chicharon in the aisles. otherwise, exact same crap. We bought a lot of it, of course, and i spent the entire ride back to San Miguel in the back of Donnie's car wedged between a standing mixer, some rubber floor mats, a slab of frozen tuna and 2 gallons of olive oil.
Another classic activity of the pre-opening experience is taking recipes from a variety of sources and putting them on the computer for some sort of recipe book. Some guys are real ambitious about this. They want precise yields and/or food costs. Some are real anal. Everything in grams. Translate all measurements to weights so we can be more precise etc. Some chefs try to pretend that they write all of their own recipes which usually they don't (hope i didn't burst anyone's bubble there). Usually it involves copying something from a paper source, onto a computer where it more likely than not will end up as nothing more than another paper print out to be put in a different book. That's what I did on Friday. All day. With a brief break to get about 60 keys made (there are a lot of doors between the restaurant and the store).
The best part of the day was when the dudes who are installing/building our new walk-in show up at 6pm to install the fan in preparation for the possibility that the polyurethane dude is going to show up that night to insulate the walls. the pu dude drives a huge truck that completely blocks off the entire street and somehow powers his polyurethane spray paint gun or whatever it is (San Miguel's streets are not only cobbled and hilly, but also narrower than nicole richey). Anyway, point being that he has to come in the middle of the night when there isn't too much traffic. But, of course, when the workmen leave at 9pm they still don't know if their compadre is planning to show up that night. And, in typical Mexican fashion, they don't seem real worried about it, nor do they think i should be. they are like... we'll call Donnie, eventually, when we know. Ummm, we are talking about someone (me) having to come to work in the middle of the night and hang out with the polyurethane dude, and you guys aren't ready to tell me at 9pm whether or not thats going to happen. Maybe, just maybe, i have some other things i might want to do between now and 5am. He didn't come that night and its totally unclear as to when he is planning on showing up (monday is a holiday called constitution day. not to be confused with independence day or cinco de mayo or any other holiday celebrating liberty and freedom and getting the man off your back)
Luckily, though, for every couple of days where Mexico seems too similar to the US, we get one where its totally kick butt not. That was today. We, meaning alll of the Restaurant´s employees, Fernando - the baker, Alejandra - the office manager, Andrew - the other sous chef and myself went out with Donnie, Cynthia, Gracie and Sophie (their daughters) to a man named Ricardo´s farm. Ricardo is raising lamb, a type of australian lobster that looks a hell of a lot like a fresh water crawfish, wine grapes and brocolli at his farm south of San Miguel near Dolores Hidalgo (another small city in the state of Guanajuato). PRetty sweet place, especially, if your name is Blake and you happen to love lamb and crawfish. We got to his house and immediately busted into full catering action. I, of course, got the glorious assignment of breaking down the whole lamb. And I mean whole. Head, tongue, eyes, liver, heart, lungs, kidney etc. Fresh doesnt even describe. Warm is a better word for what we are dealing with. As in only a few hours from life. It was interesting though because in my fairly limited experience with the whole lambs, they have all been from one farm and thus all of one variety. This was a Mexican variety that is a little more tropical (no wool), very prolific (each female averages 3 2-3 kid litters in her first 2 years) and dines on a diet of exclusively broccoli. Needless to say, not real fatty. Actually, extremely lean with quite thick membranes between muscle groups. Breaking a lamb usually involves either a very heavy cleaver or as we used at Laiola a hacksaw. Mexicans seem to be big fans of power tools, so we used a sawsall. Makes a pretty scary scene to a small Mexican child to see three gringos in the kitchen breaking a 40lb head-on lamb with a sawsall. Anyway, we got it done. Here´s the menu we broke out:

1st course: Grilled Rack of Lamb and Australian Lobster Salad with Balsamic Vinaigrette and Roasted Garlic Herb Butter
2nd course: Lamb Loin, Heart, Liver and Kidney Crostinis(on Fernando´s Ciabatta and Focaccia) with Garlic and Rosemary or Tapenade
3rd course: Leg of Lamb two ways - Grilled Hind Leg Wrapped in Hoja Santa Leaves and Fore Legs Roasted with Orange, Ginger Vinaigrette
4th course: Lamb Neck, Chickpea and Tomato Tagine with Vegetable Couscous
5th course: Fig, Balsamic, Caramelized Onion and Thyme Tart: Plum, Ginger and Vanilla Tart: and Local Goat Camembert

AT the break between the 2nd and 3rd courses we went out on 4-runners and mules-the ATV, not the animal- to check out the farm in all its glory. First of all you gotta like any place where 8 year old boys and girls can ride 4-runners completely unsupervised and wild style. Mexico, seems to me, like a real sweet, literally and figuratively, place to be a kid. At least, the Mexico I have been seeing. These kids have more freedom, more adventures and more fun than anyone since huck finn. Not to mention eating a pretty crazy diet ranging from lucky charms to lamb liver in the course of one day. Anyway, this guys land is dope. He is in the middle of natural hot springs territory so he has a swimming pool in his front yard that is filled by a hot spring 450 ft underground. Once the water cools down from its starting temperature of 90 degrees, he pumps it out to his crawfish ponds. After, the crawfish do there thing, he pumps it out as irrigation for his plants and water for his lamb. Not bad as far as reusage of water goes. Unfortunately, the wine grapes nor broccoli were currently flourishing, so we hung out with the lamb for a while and watched the dogs chase crawfish (dude, our little street pup, did dive straight into the filthy crawfish muck reminding me of a certain diego bonk squirrel kutner and his affinity for filth - and live crawfish). Anyway, we had a great day out on the ranch. Hopefully we´ll get back there once his newer and better wines are ready.

Friday, February 1, 2008

Volume I Episode I











Monday January 28th, 2008

Arrival and First Day of Work

So, this is my first attempt at keeping a blog so bear with me. I guess Im making it a little hard on myself as Im trying to do too many things at the same time. Trying to keep in touch with my friends and family. Trying to keep a journal of a trip to a part of Mexico where Ive never been and thus have a lot to learn culturally, geographically, historically etc. and finally trying to document the opening of a new restaurant which although Ive experienced several times before Ive never been so audacious or maybe so foolish as to try to document. While, Im in the caveat making section, I have to say that given all of those lofty goals, I cant be held responsible if anyone gets bored or offended or skipped or ragged on.

So we are gunna start back from the getgo. SFO to Houston raining cats and dogs. The plane arrives in Houston about half hour late leaving me about 25 minutes to cross one of the world's great airports George HW Bush International. So, in my best OJ impression I scurry over hill and dale to get over to my flight to Leon/Guanajuato just in the nick of time. Low and behold, no gate agent, no announcements, very few people, and the neon sign still flashing 2233 to Leon leaving on time at 5:50. See, if youve already been in Mexico for a couple of months you might realize, oh yeah, of course, its just late. They dont need to bother telling us such an obvious thing, the plane leaves when its good and ready, just like anything else. I, of course, ask the closest possible station agent (is that the right word?) and her answer is "stand near the door. That way you'll be ready". Thanks. Breathe deeply, rellllaaaaaaxo.

Anyway, while awaiting our flight I meet Andrew, my housemate, co-sous chef and Real World buddy. The only other dude waiting for the flight who looks like he might be anything like a cook. You know...tattoos, dickies work pants, black slip-on vans, scruff. To make a long story short we arrive in Leon a couple of hours later. He gets stopped by the totally random red light/green light security monitor and has to empty this huge box of cooking utensils, linen napkins, cuisinart etc that the chef has sent him down with and then pay some funky import tax(I guess Mexico has a limit on the number of napkins one is allowed to bring into the country). Neither of us get the F3 visa that we had been praying for (thats a business visa which Donnie, the chef and his 'lawyer" had been trying to hook us up with), but the oddsmakers had us as pretty deep longshots so we aren't too surprised. Somehow, unlike America, the Mexican immigration authorities don't seem to accept a letter printed at home with a scanned signature that says hi, I own a restaurant and these people are my new employees. Please give them proper working papers.

So, we get in the car to roll back to San Miguel. Its about an hour and a half from the airport. The most interesting part of the ride is that as we drive along this little two lane highway thats pitch black with an average land speed of about 95 mph there are many many people walking along the side of the road. Not too common of a sight in the good old US of A. Turns out that there is some sort of pilgrimage going on and people are walking for a week to get from wherever they started to some Sacred Saint of something or others special holy place (I dont have the internet hooked up yet, so I cant bust out the research to jar the memory). Anyway, just walking along the side of the road in pitch blackness....fun! And it turns out our driver is also a matador.

So, we meet up with Donnie, at the house, which by the way is super sweet. He and his wife built this house to sell and she is an interior designer and so the place is beautiful and charming and stylish with crazy brick archways, 3 fireplaces (including one on the roof deck), lots of custom stone, wood, tile and metal work etc. Im a little freaked out as the only decoration in my room is a flashing neon Virgin of Guadalupe. We grab some tacos (a very common theme of our tripas you will soon realize) and head downtown to see the restaurant and go out for drinks.

The restaurant is in a building within one block of the main church and garden square right in the heart of San Miguel. It is the interior courtyard of a large u shaped building with the kitchen and bar area behind the main u and the offices, walk-in, dry storage and prep area in a seperate building. There is all kinds of San Miguel history that explains why the restaurant is in a historic building with a large outer wall protecting it from the street. I guess the key elements are that the city was at one point under Spanish occupation, and the Spanish aristorcrats liked to build large walls to keep the rifraff from checking out their sweet pads (kind of like the French quarter in New Orleans) and that the whole centre of the city is now a UNESCO heritage site so nobody can really change building structure. Anyway, the point being that Donnie and Cynthia have had to build this restaurant within the confines of a previously existing building whose wings are a high end furniture and home decor store. But, given said limitations, the place is incredible. Cynthia has designed everything from the chandeliers to the tiles surrounding our kitchen and hood to the tables and chairs including back lit recessed wine cabinets in the dining room, crazy paisley cow hide banquette upholstery (cooler than it sounds) and a huge wooden bar complete with built in cash register and waiter station.

The night out is fun mostly because Donnie is a superstar. Every bar we enter is like cruising Long Beach with Snoop Dogg . Hugs, pounds, free drinks, lots and lots of cheek kisses, DJ high fives. We somehow manage to hit all five of the critical San Miguel bars before heading to bed.

Saturday starts with a trip out to the ranch where our bar is being custom built and some of our organic vegetables will eventually be grown (long story, but the seeds haven't quite arrived yet). I guess San Miguel is a place where people can and do make their dreams come true. The ranch owner is an American man who was an interior designer back in Santa Fe. He came down here and now not only does he get to design the interior of various dream houses, but he has his own upholstery factory, woodworking shop and metal studio on his compound where he makes all of the furniture he uses in said homes. And when he gets bored of that he can go out to his organic garden where he has rows and rows of beets, leeks, swiss chard, lettuces, etc. None of which he seems to have to actually touch himself. Next we eat some more tacos (fish this time) before picking up various sundries including a safe, metro shelving and a huge custom chandelier that looks a little like an upside down wedding cake but covered in mirrors and cool metalwork and without all of the disgusting buttercream frosting.

Saturday evening is full of green chile enchiladas (mine stuffed with huitlacoche a savory black corn fungus pretty common in Mexico), art openings (that seems to be the thing to do in San Miguel) and house parties. I guess San Miguel has a reputation as both an art colony and a psuedo art colony where lots of rich older Americans go to buy art and act snobby. The truth, as far as I can tell after 3 days here, is that its both. I have already met tons of artists, visual, musical, actors, dancers etc. Young hip bohemians and working artists. Probably a more concentrated and active and creative and frolicking art community than Ive ever experienced including SF, New Orleans and Barcelona. And yes, there are definitely some retired folks here taking art tours and art or Spanish classes and buying stuff. They seem to be both constantly at odds with each other and completely interdependent. Kinda funky. But, mostly, I have to say that although Ive met a lot of the dreaded ex-pats, young and old, people here are really really cool. people who have left the US or other countries to live a simpler life or to raise their kids in a better community or to get away from something or to make art or for the perfect weather or a million other perfectly legitimate reasons.

that seems to be all I have in me tonight. i guess I wont get on to day one of work til tomorrow.

Tuesday January 29th, 8:10:56pm (I just got the fresh Casio digital calculator watch with 30 phone number memory)

Sunday, was an official day off the restaurant (not like we have been working that hard yet). Anyway, Andrew and I took a few random walk abouts trying to get a feel for the layout and life of San Miguel. Stopped on our block for some barbacoa and menudo. Barbacoa is goat leg steamed in these big ass leaves and then served as tacos with some of the broth from steaming. They also had some tacos using the goat organ meat minus the tripe (intestines) which goes into the Menudo. Nice full product usage right here on the block. Donnie was DJing in the afternoon for a 12 year old girl's birthday party at a club that usually opens at 1am and is called Diablito (little devil). Anyway, what a sweet party. Free drinks (everyone there seemed to like a drink called a paloma- tequila and Fresca with lime check it out) , free tacos cooked fresh on the parilla out on the porch, fresh hip-hop DJ rolling from 2pm to 8pm at least. Met a bunch more cool San Miguelians (if thats what they're called). A couple from New Zealand who have 2 kids and are volunteering for a local group building houses for the local poor. They just brought a few students in from RISD who are teaching them and the recipients of the homes how to build using a homemade adobe brick and an arch support so that the homes are well insulated, sturdy and quite cheap. Cool. In he same conversation I also learned that Mexico has more millionaire citizens than any other country (is that true?) including many around San Miguel. People told stories of houses with pools in the guest house and waterfalls in the living room. The night ended at another couple's house who are a painter and an actor with some badass guitar playing and beautiful singing (neither of which emminated from me).

The final note on Sunday is that on our way out of Diablito, Andrew bends over to pet one of the stray street dogs. He's a little German Shepard looking mutt, but only about 20lbs and real cute and playful. Anyway, one pet seems to be all that this little homey needs to be hooked. The rest of the night he follows us around and waits, somewhere between patiently and impatiently for us to finish up at whatever bar or house we happen to be hanging in. When he finally tails us home, he refuses to come in the house. But, low and behold, the next morning he is still lying on the front porch awaiting his new master. Needless to say little homey, now called Dude as chosen by donnie's 2 daughters, is becoming a part of the family.

Monday, we began into the real project of building the restaurant. I think one of the trickiest parts to starting a new restaurant is manipulating the chessboard of jobs so that right ones get finished in the right order. The complexity of this is multiplied when you are building from scratch. So Monday we cleaned (swept,mopped, washed windows) the office, so we could build the metro shelving and put in the desks. This allowed us to put up the computer system which in turn prepared for the guy to come and set-up our internet and network. This allowed for another guy to come set-up our fax and vonage phone lines (international phone line which somehow runs through the internet) which then allows for the guy to come in and set-up the POS (point of sale system). Not sure why these are all guys, they just seem to be.. And dont even think any of these guys show up anywhere near on time. There is definitely some reality to the expression Mexican time. Anyway,cleaning the office then allows us to bring in all of the chefs cookbooks from his house along with all of the small wares which he has been using at home but which are now going to become restaurant gear. I think this often happens with chef types. You think you can save some money and maybe some hassle by bringing in gear from your house.. Usually it ends up breaking quickly through either mishandling or over-handling and then you don't have a functional cuisinart at home or work. I guess many chefs stop cooking at home altogether though once their restaurant opens. Not I says the naive son.

Wed, January 30th

Tuesday we began with a trip to the tinges (that is a made-up spelling based on what i hear the pronunciation as). Anyway, its the big old farmers market which also is a flea market of sorts. Tons of produce stands, carnitas, fresh liquados (juices), cheap clothes, watches (thats where I got my dope casio), random wires, ultra cheap pirated cds and dvds. Same thing like they have in almost every cool non-American western European country on earth. We stock up on some sweet extra grande shopping bags, Meyer lemons, hoja santa (big old leaves used to wrap and steam fish which impart a kind of minty-oregano like flavor), and random sundries for the barbecue that we are going to co-host that evening out in the campo (the country) with one of our new bartending amigos. It's kind of tricky here in Mexico, because a lot of the places stock the exact same 20 items of produce which happens to make one think of cooking Mexican food.. Luckily, Southern soul food is relatively similar to Mexican in the simplicity of its ingredients and the available meats and vegetables.

Next we stop by the badass dude who Ive decided to call super guapo who is custom making all of our tables and chairs out of iron. First of all he is all tough guy, mustache, jean jacket, huge silver belt buckle of what looks like an iguana and some type of reptile boots. Second of all he raises roosters for fighting. Third of all he talks just like Cheech except he is actually speaking Spanish. Pretty sweet "factory" he runs as well....4 or 5 dudes standing in a big carport welding without masks or goggles or any sort of protection what so ever. Occasionally you will see one put his hand over his face to keep the sparks out of his eyes. Anyway, Cynthia designed all of the furniture on her autocad which I'm sure super guapo has never heard of.

So, we get out of work a little early to head out to the country for a barbecue. It's about 10 or 12 of us in this cool Gaudiesque house with funky rounded roof, composttng toilets, cool cactus garden and a crazy badass tango collection on vinyl. It turns out one of the folks we are hanging out with is house sitting for a local ceramics artist and tango teacher. The crew includes Alligator Dave, a south Texan who plays bluegrass guitar and raps real dirty. He also happens to be from a family that is best friends with the Phillips family originally of Houston but now of Dallas Texas (for those of you not named Slaver, said family includes gentlemen by the name of Wade and Bum who have both coached the Saints). Like any good Southern man he does like to tell a lot of stories over and over again. But, there is really no limit to the number of times I can hear about holding Jerry Jones' ring covered hands while kneeling and reciting the lord's prayer. A Mexican skater/rapper who seems to know all the inside outs of the area and was born in a bathtub less than a half mile from the house we are in. A German kid whose parents own a bar and who also happens to be an aspiring young rapper. A Senegalese drummer and dancer. A plant biologist from Sonoma with a huge mastiff-rotweiler named diggity (As in the Blackstreet song). A few bartenders, a few cooks and a few dreads (and at least a couple who are both). You can imagine the shenanigans that ensue. Dirty rapping in three languages with some flamenco/bluegrass guitar and tango dancing in the background.

The night ends on an unfortunate note as Andrew and I while walking home get accosted by some of San Miguel's finest. Three cops pull us over for walking while white. Hands against the wall. Frisked from sock to dread cap. Everything out of the pockets. Every single shred of paper and lint (which I tend to carry a lot of) checked to see if it held any sign of drugs or other contraband. Serious shakedown street. Not really a great feeling to know that if anything is found or "discovered" you could be pretty much going to jail or emptying your bank account or both. Luckily, there was nothing to find.

Wednesday, we take a ride out to our baker Fernando's house and bakery. Also in the country outside of San Miguel, he has built a really cool little bakery with his mom and aunt. Brick wood burning oven which he designed himself (from a plan he bought from a famous Australian wood oven builder), extra large super industrial mixer and bread slicer, a few proofing racks and shaping tables, fridge to house his starters most of which are made from local ambient yeasts he collected off grapes grown by his neighbors. All solar powered. All out in the middle of a huge tract of dessert like land with dusty soil, cactus and scrub brush. On our way back to the restaurant we stopped at another organic farm. So, different from the farms at home. First of all, these farmers are literally growing more produce than they can harvest or sell. i guess people here haven't really accepted that organic vegetables justify their price. As we walked through the fields, most everything had way out grown its peak. Giant purple turnips. Chard and kale with leaves over a foot long. Radishes the size of baseballs. PArsley and cilantro that looked like bushes. Lettuce heads that could feed a family of four for a week. Anyway, its kind of sad in that it goes to waste, but its also kind of cool to see how great the growing conditions are and how much potential there is for the future. Anyway, this farm is hopefully going to take our seeds and help raise them up to the seedling stage. Unfortunately, they didnt seem equipped to necessarily handle the raising and harvesting and delivery of the final product. We will have to transfer and replant them elsewhere for that.

Much of our kitchen equipment was finally installed on Wednesday afternoon. Again it is a juggling act to get the kitchen prepared, walls tiled, hood built including the tiling outside and the duct and filters inside, along with the proper electricity and plumbing pre-installed, and the fire safety system at least minimally prepared, so that when your kitchen equipment arrives it can be easily installed without delays. Similarly when the guys arrive with your custom built steel tables and shelves, all of the equipment needs to be placed and wired and plumbed and gassed and fire protected so that the stainless can be more or less permanently affixed. I'm sure in the glorious world of project management there are some sweet flow charts and graphs that might help with all of this. But in the world of chef owned restaurants, especially in Mexico, it definitely takes some luck as well as some planning, patience, skill, foresight and lots of money.

Wednesday night i finally cooked at home for the first time since arriving. New red potatoes with Brussell sprouts, mushrooms, peppers and onions with over easy farm eggs and a green salad with gigantic purple turnip (which by the way is excellent raw. sweet and spicy). Met my other housemate, Alejandra from Mexico city, and made some hibiscus, chamomile, lemongrass and mesquite honey sun tea (bisquit eat your heart out).