Oaxaca Means Food

This is a food town for sure, with corn, chocolate and mezcal being the cornerstones.  Once again what is compelling about Oaxaca is the way they preserve and celebrate their traditions, but also welcome the modern take on them.  And food is no exception, from the fantastic marketplaces and family restaurants, to today’s chefs putting new twists on locals dishes.

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Comal (griddle) heating nopal (catus)

La Biznaga restaurant

La Biznaga restaurant

Food vendors outside Juarez Market

Food vendors outside Juarez Market

hot cakes

Late night snacks.

Comida

Comida, is the main meal of the day.  It includes  sopa (soup) or ensalada, a main dish and postre (dessert). It is often accompanied by an agua fresca(fruit flavored water). That is the milky looking drink on the table.

One tradition is chapulines, baked and spiced grasshoppers. They sell them by the bagful in the marketplace, but we also saw them on restaurant menus. And yes, we did try them. We just sampled some from a street vendor. Peter’s was spicy and crunchy and mine tasted like a dill pickle and crunchy. Let’s just say we can check that off the list.

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Who knew there were so many grasshopper?

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Cautious, but I did it!

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Unlike Lay’s Potato Chips, you CAN just eat one chapuline.

Chocolate comes in numerous forms from a beautifully crafted hot chocolate to the famous mole poblano.  The complex sauces can be bought throughout the markets and of course ordered in restaurants.  Many debate if there are 6 or 7 official types of moles, so Peter decided not to try just one and ordered a tasting that came with roasted pork in 6 different moles.

6 mole sampler

6 mole sampler

Hot chocolate

Mixing the hot chocolate

Hot and cold chocolate drinks are made with the same intensity as your coffee barista.  They scoop steaming milk into ceramic pitchers and break in chunks of dark chocolate from solid bars and feverishly mix and froth with a traditional wooden dowel called molinillo (moh-lee-NEE-yoh)

One thing Oaxaca is really into is Mezcal – not the rot gut downed by Hollywood banditos, but rather high-end, aged clear Mezcal, sin worm. Mezcal is made from maguey, a type of agave and is meant to be sipped straight. Thanks to a tip from our friend George, we went to a little hole in the wall mezcaleria called In Situ. Its walls were lined with hundreds of bottles of Mezcal, and only Mezcal.

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In Situ mezcaleria

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Owner, Ulisses Torrentera, and friends at the bar

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Bottles of mezcal

IMG_6660 The liqueur is made in dozens of factories around Oaxaca, from Mom and Pop shacks to fancy places with tasting rooms that would not look out-of-place in Napa.  A red-cheeked round little man named Ulisses Torrentera runs In Situ, and he wrote the book on Mezcal (literally – he handed us the book he wrote but alas it was in Spanish).  However, even with his limited English and our nearly non-existent Spanish we learned a great deal from him and tasted several varieties before settling on a bottle with a nice smokey flavor to bring back to the boat.

The bottle we took home.  Traditional mezcal is drunk from these ceramic cups

The bottle we took home.  Traditionally mezcal is drunk from these ceramic cups.

Ulisses tasting a local farmer's mezcal

Ulisses tasting a local farmer’s mezcal

It was fascinating to watch a farmer come into the shop with several large soda bottles filled with his product to sell to Ulisses.  After tasting it, Ulisses let us know under his breath that this particular batch was not very good and he wouldn’t be buying any.  We felt bad for the farmer but that’s business I guess.  Although it isn’t as well know as tequila, mark my words, I predict it will soon be the next drink de jour in the states.

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Mercado entrance

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Camarones (shrimp)

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Sorry Wilbur

The Juárez and 20 de Noviembre mercados are giant labyrinths of food and craft vendors selling everything you can imagine and some things you can’t. On our days, yes we made several trips there, we ate and sampled and bought everything from Oaxaca cheese (like string cheese), chocolate to those damn grasshoppers.

Oaxaca cheese

Oaxaca cheese

DCIM100GOPRO DCIM100GOPRO DCIM100GOPRO IMG_6691Peter was in carnivore’s heaven when we wandered into the smoky carne asada alley.  It’s about 200 feet long and lined with glowing barbecues on each side.  You can barely see your hands in front of you, due the smoke.  He didn’t know what the procedure was, but after a little Spanish and a lot of pantomime, he was handed a plate with raw peppers and scallions and pointed to the row of identical stalls grilling beef and sausage.

DCIM100GOPRO DCIM100GOPRO DCIM100GOPRO He picked one and handed his plate and the vegetables to the grill master and said “mixto”.  What he didn’t know was that the meat was sold by weight and, not specifying an amount, they decided how much he wanted.  We sat and waited and soon a kilo, maybe more, of perfectly grilled meats and the aforementioned scallions and peppers as well as tortillas and salsas were delivered to the table.  It was really a meal for two or three people and all for about $9.  IMG_6683 IMG_6678 I went to another stall in the marketplace for a tlayuda.  This is a pizza-size baked tortilla that is covered with any combination of things, but always based with black bean paste.

Tlayuda stacked up at La Abuelitas

Tlayuda stacked up at La Abuelitas

tlayuda

tlayuda

Again this was enough food to feed the town and was only $5.  I wasn’t successful finishing mine (I shouldn’t have filled up on those grasshoppers 😉

Lucy had room service back at the hotel!

Lucy had room service back at the hotel!

Click here to read other posts on our road trip to Oaxaca or for post on touring the city.

The Road to Oaxaca

Huatulco Beach

Huatulco Beach

We arrived in Hualtuco to find long stretches of  empty beaches, a nice marina, but a sterile town.

This is one of Mexico’s planned tourist areas, trying to make up for the sins of Cancun and Ixtapa by thinking things out before slapping up high rises on every square inch of land.

La Crucecita, Hualtuco

La Crucecita, Hualtuco

They succeeded in avoiding the spring break blight, but forgot about history and culture, resulting in a charmless town with quaint neighborhood names like IMG_0479sector A & sector C and, oh yes, everyone’s favorite sector T.   Most boaters hole up here waiting for a favorable weather window to cross the infamous Gulf of Tehuantepec (Click here for that post).   Amazingly when we arrived there was such a window and several other boats we knew were going.   So what to do: do a quick turnaround and take the opening or stay for an inland adventure?  After our fun stop in Acapulco, we were itching to see more sides of Mexico, not just beach towns, and Oaxaca (wa-ha-ka) was at the top of our list.   Many warned against the long journey and torturous roads, but after researching and hearing that our NY pal George and his wife Laura had just had a fantastic trip there, so we couldn’t resist.  Besides Lucy had already rented a car 😉

Oaxaca please

Oaxaca please

So we drove about 250 miles from Huatulco to Oaxaca.  We will do a longer posts about the trip, but first we had to get there.  Many folks warned us that the drive would be a horrible one on a bad road in very mountainous terrain.  We had a lot of experience driving in mountain switchbacks from our time in Northern California and thought, “how bad could it be?”  Well, the road was VERY windy and long (6.5 hours), but it is pretty well maintained.

Road to Oaxaca

Road to Oaxaca

The countryside is absolutely stunning – very hilly and largely unpopulated, with many agave fields and roadside mezcal factory.

Agave field

Agave field

Roadside Mezcal factory

Roadside Mezcal factory

Whenever you’d approach a small town, sometimes just a couple of buildings clustered near the highway, there would be a speed bump, or several, spanning the highway, called a “tope”.  Now, mind you, this was a highway that several seconds

Catus

Catus

IMG_6955earlier you were traversing at 70 mph.  We only failed to see and slow down for about two of them and those we bounced over Dukes of Hazzard style, thinking we’d have to buy the rental car company a new exhaust system.

But, apart from those instances, the trip was fine.  We arrived in one piece and can report that it’s not the road that makes the trip tough but the crazy drivers down here.  There seemed to be a memorial at ever other turn.

Road side memorial

Road side memorial

This is a truck chassis being dragged 500ft back up this hill from where it went over the edge.  May whomever was in that vehicle rest in peace.

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Oaxaca accident

Oaxaca accident

Click on photos to enlarge or click here for photo gallery