If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I went to Charrovida on Sunday and enjoyed it. It wasn't the nest I've ever had, but solid and enjoyable for a newer restaurant.
- ByJoveByJingle
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Went to Welcome just now and had a No Way Jose Burger. Then cruised over to Roma Imports and also ignored board wisdom and picked up some frozen Thai Curry and Moroccan Beef Tagine. This inability to follow basic instructions should tell you all you need to know about my life. Hopefully these left field choices are tasty, too. Oh, and some mini cannoli. Even I couldn’t screw up that opportunity.Longhorned wrote:Best burger I've had in Tucson is the Welcome Burger at Welcome Diner. It's the closest I've found to a Fatburger.
Had a decent vegetarian burger at Beaut Burger. Not an Impossible Burger, just the old fashioned vegetarian burger but perfected, and with all the trimmings on a great homemade bun. Normally I hate those kinds of patties but this one is good. Still, as with all veggie burgers, it starts to wear on me before the burger is done with.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I’m at Chef Wang right now and it’s one of the great Chinese restaurants of my life and I’m not even kidding.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Is that the new place on Grant?Longhorned wrote:I’m at Chef Wang right now and it’s one of the great Chinese restaurants of my life and I’m not even kidding.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Yeah, it’s serious, too. Northern Chinese. Stuff I’ve never heard of. Beautiful in execution and appearance. So good.ASUHATER! wrote:Is that the new place on Grant?Longhorned wrote:I’m at Chef Wang right now and it’s one of the great Chinese restaurants of my life and I’m not even kidding.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I’ll try the No Way. I was thinking it’s too hot to turn on my oven, so looking forward to Roma in November.ByJoveByJingle wrote:Went to Welcome just now and had a No Way Jose Burger. Then cruised over to Roma Imports and also ignored board wisdom and picked up some frozen Thai Curry and Moroccan Beef Tagine. This inability to follow basic instructions should tell you all you need to know about my life. Hopefully these left field choices are tasty, too. Oh, and some mini cannoli. Even I couldn’t screw up that opportunity.Longhorned wrote:Best burger I've had in Tucson is the Welcome Burger at Welcome Diner. It's the closest I've found to a Fatburger.
Had a decent vegetarian burger at Beaut Burger. Not an Impossible Burger, just the old fashioned vegetarian burger but perfected, and with all the trimmings on a great homemade bun. Normally I hate those kinds of patties but this one is good. Still, as with all veggie burgers, it starts to wear on me before the burger is done with.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Was getting a haircut on 4th Ave and noticed a Tumerico sign at the corner of 4th/4th. Thought they were moving but they're opening a 2nd location 2 miles away from Tucson blvd. Still haven't been
https://tucsonfoodie.com/2019/05/21/tum ... -location/" target="_blank
https://tucsonfoodie.com/2019/05/21/tum ... -location/" target="_blank
- scumdevils86
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
JPS Seafood. Simple, small, everything you want from seafood (Mexican style). If anyone hasn't ventured there yet and you live in Tucson, shame on you (awful that it took me so long).
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Anyone been to 4th Ave Deli?
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
It's owned by a guy I went to high school with. I've always enjoyed the food.scumdevils86 wrote:Anyone been to 4th Ave Deli?
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Good to know. I've been curious.ASUCatFan wrote:It's owned by a guy I went to high school with. I've always enjoyed the food.scumdevils86 wrote:Anyone been to 4th Ave Deli?
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Seis Kitchen on River added 3 hot sauces on tables, 2 of which I really, really liked.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
You're still not experiencing things like them not making the food you ordered, or serving your food inexplicably dissolving in a plate of water?Spaceman Spiff wrote:Seis Kitchen on River added 3 hot sauces on tables, 2 of which I really, really liked.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
No, I've seen you complain about that, but have not experienced that there. Some of the tacos get more watery, especially with added salsa, but that's sort of par for the course with tacos, especially with corn tortillas.Longhorned wrote:You're still not experiencing things like them not making the food you ordered, or serving your food inexplicably dissolving in a plate of water?Spaceman Spiff wrote:Seis Kitchen on River added 3 hot sauces on tables, 2 of which I really, really liked.
One reason I liked the hot sauces is that I used them instead of salsa on my tacos. It had less overflow, although they were pretty jammed with steak and guac.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I know it's heretical, but I prefer flour tortillas. Flour tortillas have so much more structural integrity and the taste difference is negligible.ASUHATER! wrote:Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
- TucsonClip
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
TJ style, two corn tortillas. Only way to eat tacos, IMO. The bigger the taco on corn, the worse it is, so I do agree there.ASUHATER! wrote:Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
"Plus, why would I go to the NBA? Duke players suck in the pros."
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
There's nothing more legit than flour tortillas in Tucson, or anywhere in the Sonoran desert. Or those fluffy flour tortillas in New Mexico.Spaceman Spiff wrote:I know it's heretical, but I prefer flour tortillas. Flour tortillas have so much more structural integrity and the taste difference is negligible.ASUHATER! wrote:Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
The only time flour tortillas are heretical is everywhere else.
But for tacos specifically, they've got to be corn tortillas hot off the griddle from fresh masa.
And as a native Arizonan, I'll add that I love a crisply fried taco, too. Can't take that away from me.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Crispy fried flour tortilla tacos are the only truly real tacos to me.Longhorned wrote:There's nothing more legit than flour tortillas in Tucson, or anywhere in the Sonoran desert. Or those fluffy flour tortillas in New Mexico.Spaceman Spiff wrote:I know it's heretical, but I prefer flour tortillas. Flour tortillas have so much more structural integrity and the taste difference is negligible.ASUHATER! wrote:Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
The only time flour tortillas are heretical is everywhere else.
But for tacos specifically, they've got to be corn tortillas hot off the griddle from fresh masa.
And as a native Arizonan, I'll add that I love a crisply fried taco, too. Can't take that away from me.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Flour tacos are gringo tacos. Praising them as superior is white supremacy....ASUHATER! wrote:Crispy fried flour tortilla tacos are the only truly real tacos to me.Longhorned wrote:There's nothing more legit than flour tortillas in Tucson, or anywhere in the Sonoran desert. Or those fluffy flour tortillas in New Mexico.Spaceman Spiff wrote:I know it's heretical, but I prefer flour tortillas. Flour tortillas have so much more structural integrity and the taste difference is negligible.ASUHATER! wrote:Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
The only time flour tortillas are heretical is everywhere else.
But for tacos specifically, they've got to be corn tortillas hot off the griddle from fresh masa.
And as a native Arizonan, I'll add that I love a crisply fried taco, too. Can't take that away from me.
“If you have the choice between humble and cocky, go with cocky. There's always time to be humble later, once you've been proven horrendously, irrevocably wrong.”
― Kinky Friedman
― Kinky Friedman
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Tell that to all the Mexican people in Tucson and Sonora. Corn tortillas are for tostitos chips and Rubio's fast food tacos. Flour tortillas are the only real ones.pc in NM wrote:Flour tacos are gringo tacos. Praising them as superior is white supremacy....ASUHATER! wrote:Crispy fried flour tortilla tacos are the only truly real tacos to me.Longhorned wrote:There's nothing more legit than flour tortillas in Tucson, or anywhere in the Sonoran desert. Or those fluffy flour tortillas in New Mexico.Spaceman Spiff wrote:I know it's heretical, but I prefer flour tortillas. Flour tortillas have so much more structural integrity and the taste difference is negligible.ASUHATER! wrote:Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
The only time flour tortillas are heretical is everywhere else.
But for tacos specifically, they've got to be corn tortillas hot off the griddle from fresh masa.
And as a native Arizonan, I'll add that I love a crisply fried taco, too. Can't take that away from me.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
And one point of origin was the flour that very non-white, pre-conquest natives of the Sonoran desert ground from mesquite beans.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
^This. And I hear tell of their very low glycemic load. As to today's flour tortilla, beyond their functional superiority I have no use for them.Longhorned wrote:And one point of origin was the flour that very non-white, pre-conquest natives of the Sonoran desert ground from mesquite beans.
“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition …There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”
~ Wilhoit's Law
~ Wilhoit's Law
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
They are functionally and taste wise far superior though...dovecanyoncat wrote:^This. And I hear tell of their very low glycemic load. As to today's flour tortilla, beyond their functional superiority I have no use for them.Longhorned wrote:And one point of origin was the flour that very non-white, pre-conquest natives of the Sonoran desert ground from mesquite beans.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
- ByJoveByJingle
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Fresh hot flour tortillas from Frontier Restaurant in Abq were often the only thing keeping me alive during grad school. And yes, I’m unabashedly gringo.pc in NM wrote:Flour tacos are gringo tacos. Praising them as superior is white supremacy....ASUHATER! wrote:Crispy fried flour tortilla tacos are the only truly real tacos to me.Longhorned wrote:There's nothing more legit than flour tortillas in Tucson, or anywhere in the Sonoran desert. Or those fluffy flour tortillas in New Mexico.Spaceman Spiff wrote:I know it's heretical, but I prefer flour tortillas. Flour tortillas have so much more structural integrity and the taste difference is negligible.ASUHATER! wrote:Speaking of which, the more I've lived and eaten I've decided that corn tortillas are the worst. They're only good for making into tortilla chips. For tacos and burritos they suck.
The only time flour tortillas are heretical is everywhere else.
But for tacos specifically, they've got to be corn tortillas hot off the griddle from fresh masa.
And as a native Arizonan, I'll add that I love a crisply fried taco, too. Can't take that away from me.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
And I am a real suburbanite.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I'm a big fan of flour tortillas (especially those in Tucson, even more than NM-style); and burros, burritos, chimichangas, etc. are regulars on my favorites menu. Also a side of steamed flour tortillas is a true enhancement for sopping up sauces, beans, etc. But, IMNSHO, tacos are meant to be on soft corn tortillas hot off the griddle, and, BTW, not too full of ingredients (another fat gringo debasement)....ByJoveByJingle wrote:Fresh hot flour tortillas from Frontier Restaurant in Abq were often the only thing keeping me alive during grad school. And yes, I’m unabashedly gringo.pc in NM wrote: Flour tacos are gringo tacos. Praising them as superior is white supremacy....
When I lived in Silver City, NM, I learned the term "Gringo Green", which was a derisive putdown for any green chile stew or sauce made with the crap out of a can of cream of mushroom or chicken soup....
“If you have the choice between humble and cocky, go with cocky. There's always time to be humble later, once you've been proven horrendously, irrevocably wrong.”
― Kinky Friedman
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I think we need to end the tortilla debate.
These are the kind of arguments that can tear a community apart.
These are the kind of arguments that can tear a community apart.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
There are good tortillas on both sides.Alieberman wrote:I think we need to end the tortilla debate.
These are the kind of arguments that can tear a community apart.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
If you're going to bring New Mexico into this, which coming from you is a surprise big enough to hurl my body into a dry river, I have something else I need to say:pc in NM wrote:I'm a big fan of flour tortillas (especially those in Tucson, even more than NM-style); and burros, burritos, chimichangas, etc. are regulars on my favorites menu. Also a side of steamed flour tortillas is a true enhancement for sopping up sauces, beans, etc. But, IMNSHO, tacos are meant to be on soft corn tortillas hot off the griddle, and, BTW, not too full of ingredients (another fat gringo debasement)....ByJoveByJingle wrote:Fresh hot flour tortillas from Frontier Restaurant in Abq were often the only thing keeping me alive during grad school. And yes, I’m unabashedly gringo.pc in NM wrote: Flour tacos are gringo tacos. Praising them as superior is white supremacy....
When I lived in Silver City, NM, I learned the term "Gringo Green", which was a derisive putdown for any green chile stew or sauce made with the crap out of a can of cream of mushroom or chicken soup....
New Mexico green chile is delicious, but it's only one kind of delicious green chile among others. There's nothing wrong with a green chile made with tomatillos. It's a brighter and smoother sauce, made by people who actually know what they're doing. They aren't idiots trying to get away with never having been to northern New Mexico, and ruining the lives children of their neighborhoods by doing it differently. Some people prefer a green sauce made in Tucson, or in Mexico City, and it's okay.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Not sure what you're responding to - I never said anything for or against using tomatillos (in fact, I love green chile using tomatillos!!), nor did I compare green chile from NM to anywhere else....Longhorned wrote:If you're going to bring New Mexico into this, which coming from you is a surprise big enough to hurl my body into a dry river, I have something else I need to say:pc in NM wrote:I'm a big fan of flour tortillas (especially those in Tucson, even more than NM-style); and burros, burritos, chimichangas, etc. are regulars on my favorites menu. Also a side of steamed flour tortillas is a true enhancement for sopping up sauces, beans, etc. But, IMNSHO, tacos are meant to be on soft corn tortillas hot off the griddle, and, BTW, not too full of ingredients (another fat gringo debasement)....ByJoveByJingle wrote:Fresh hot flour tortillas from Frontier Restaurant in Abq were often the only thing keeping me alive during grad school. And yes, I’m unabashedly gringo.pc in NM wrote: Flour tacos are gringo tacos. Praising them as superior is white supremacy....
When I lived in Silver City, NM, I learned the term "Gringo Green", which was a derisive putdown for any green chile stew or sauce made with the crap out of a can of cream of mushroom or chicken soup....
New Mexico green chile is delicious, but it's only one kind of delicious green chile among others. There's nothing wrong with a green chile made with tomatillos. It's a brighter and smoother sauce, made by people who actually know what they're doing. They aren't idiots trying to get away with never having been to northern New Mexico, and ruining the lives children of their neighborhoods by doing it differently. Some people prefer a green sauce made in Tucson, or in Mexico City, and it's okay.
I will mention, though, That when I moved to Silver City in 1986, most Mexican restaurants across the state were serving "New Mexican Style" green chile dishes, and few, if any in Tucson even had green chile on the menu. The sole exception were green chile tamales at Christmas-time. Just a fact.
I've always liked the different regional styles of "Mexican Food" (much of it actually Native American in origin), and Tucson's "Sonoron-style" was my favorite before I explored New Mexico after moving here. My first addiction to "Mexican Food" was a Chihuahuan-style made by a local chef in my hometown in Ohio (used a beef-based brown gravy on enchiladas - yummy)!!! I liked Tex-Mex-style, early on, also....
Since then green chiles have become almost synonymous with "Mexican Cuisine", and many, many chefs around the country have used them in novel, exciting and delicious ways....
“If you have the choice between humble and cocky, go with cocky. There's always time to be humble later, once you've been proven horrendously, irrevocably wrong.”
― Kinky Friedman
― Kinky Friedman
- scumdevils86
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
The absence of Mexican food will leave the biggest gaping hole in my heart when I'm in Wisconsin.
So... breaking news. We're staying in Tucson. My love of Sonoran Mexican food is intact. I will eat too much now in celebration.
So... breaking news. We're staying in Tucson. My love of Sonoran Mexican food is intact. I will eat too much now in celebration.
Last edited by scumdevils86 on Thu Nov 14, 2019 10:56 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Good luck asking for hot sauce or salsa when dining out.scumdevils86 wrote:The absence of Mexican food will leave the biggest gaping hole in my heart when I'm in Wisconsin.
Hope you like ketchup and mayo on everything
- scumdevils86
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I'll start carrying it with me and have it shipped from AZ. 100%Alieberman wrote:Good luck asking for hot sauce or salsa when dining out.scumdevils86 wrote:The absence of Mexican food will leave the biggest gaping hole in my heart when I'm in Wisconsin.
Hope you like ketchup and mayo on everything
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I just checked and there are plenty of Taco Be;;s in Wisconsin.scumdevils86 wrote:The absence of Mexican food will leave the biggest gaping hole in my heart when I'm in Wisconsin.
https://locations.tacobell.com/wi.html" target="_blank
You're welcome.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Taco John's is almost more popular.azgreg wrote:I just checked and there are plenty of Taco Be;;s in Wisconsin.scumdevils86 wrote:The absence of Mexican food will leave the biggest gaping hole in my heart when I'm in Wisconsin.
https://locations.tacobell.com/wi.html" target="_blank
You're welcome.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I'm responding to New Mexicans generally, and specifically those in my family. But that's interesting that you haven't run into that New Mexican snobbery about "other people's green chile."pc in NM wrote:Not sure what you're responding to - I never said anything for or against using tomatillos (in fact, I love green chile using tomatillos!!), nor did I compare green chile from NM to anywhere else....Longhorned wrote:If you're going to bring New Mexico into this, which coming from you is a surprise big enough to hurl my body into a dry river, I have something else I need to say:pc in NM wrote:I'm a big fan of flour tortillas (especially those in Tucson, even more than NM-style); and burros, burritos, chimichangas, etc. are regulars on my favorites menu. Also a side of steamed flour tortillas is a true enhancement for sopping up sauces, beans, etc. But, IMNSHO, tacos are meant to be on soft corn tortillas hot off the griddle, and, BTW, not too full of ingredients (another fat gringo debasement)....ByJoveByJingle wrote:Fresh hot flour tortillas from Frontier Restaurant in Abq were often the only thing keeping me alive during grad school. And yes, I’m unabashedly gringo.pc in NM wrote: Flour tacos are gringo tacos. Praising them as superior is white supremacy....
When I lived in Silver City, NM, I learned the term "Gringo Green", which was a derisive putdown for any green chile stew or sauce made with the crap out of a can of cream of mushroom or chicken soup....
New Mexico green chile is delicious, but it's only one kind of delicious green chile among others. There's nothing wrong with a green chile made with tomatillos. It's a brighter and smoother sauce, made by people who actually know what they're doing. They aren't idiots trying to get away with never having been to northern New Mexico, and ruining the lives children of their neighborhoods by doing it differently. Some people prefer a green sauce made in Tucson, or in Mexico City, and it's okay.
I will mention, though, That when I moved to Silver City in 1986, most Mexican restaurants across the state were serving "New Mexican Style" green chile dishes, and few, if any in Tucson even had green chile on the menu. The sole exception were green chile tamales at Christmas-time. Just a fact.
I've always liked the different regional styles of "Mexican Food" (much of it actually Native American in origin), and Tucson's "Sonoron-style" was my favorite before I explored New Mexico after moving here. My first addiction to "Mexican Food" was a Chihuahuan-style made by a local chef in my hometown in Ohio (used a beef-based brown gravy on enchiladas - yummy)!!! I liked Tex-Mex-style, early on, also....
Since then green chiles have become almost synonymous with "Mexican Cuisine", and many, many chefs around the country have used them in novel, exciting and delicious ways....
As you know, green chile in Sonoran food usually refers to a kind of beef pot roast with green chile. Or you find, "enchilada style - green" with the green chile sauce poured over whatever, which is common all over Mexico.
But red chile is the real Sonoran thing, in spite of the introduction of refrigeration that keeps chilies green all year long.
- dovecanyoncat
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Yellow and white lives matter.azgreg wrote:There are good tortillas on both sides.Alieberman wrote:I think we need to end the tortilla debate.
These are the kind of arguments that can tear a community apart.
“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition …There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”
~ Wilhoit's Law
~ Wilhoit's Law
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I have no issues with the use of green chiles in novel recipes - I'm glad to explore, and, when deserved, dish out the compliments.Longhorned wrote:I'm responding to New Mexicans generally, and specifically those in my family. But that's interesting that you haven't run into that New Mexican snobbery about "other people's green chile."pc in NM wrote:Not sure what you're responding to - I never said anything for or against using tomatillos (in fact, I love green chile using tomatillos!!), nor did I compare green chile from NM to anywhere else....Longhorned wrote:If you're going to bring New Mexico into this, which coming from you is a surprise big enough to hurl my body into a dry river, I have something else I need to say:pc in NM wrote: I'm a big fan of flour tortillas (especially those in Tucson, even more than NM-style); and burros, burritos, chimichangas, etc. are regulars on my favorites menu. Also a side of steamed flour tortillas is a true enhancement for sopping up sauces, beans, etc. But, IMNSHO, tacos are meant to be on soft corn tortillas hot off the griddle, and, BTW, not too full of ingredients (another fat gringo debasement)....
When I lived in Silver City, NM, I learned the term "Gringo Green", which was a derisive putdown for any green chile stew or sauce made with the crap out of a can of cream of mushroom or chicken soup....
New Mexico green chile is delicious, but it's only one kind of delicious green chile among others. There's nothing wrong with a green chile made with tomatillos. It's a brighter and smoother sauce, made by people who actually know what they're doing. They aren't idiots trying to get away with never having been to northern New Mexico, and ruining the lives children of their neighborhoods by doing it differently. Some people prefer a green sauce made in Tucson, or in Mexico City, and it's okay.
I will mention, though, That when I moved to Silver City in 1986, most Mexican restaurants across the state were serving "New Mexican Style" green chile dishes, and few, if any in Tucson even had green chile on the menu. The sole exception were green chile tamales at Christmas-time. Just a fact.
I've always liked the different regional styles of "Mexican Food" (much of it actually Native American in origin), and Tucson's "Sonoron-style" was my favorite before I explored New Mexico after moving here. My first addiction to "Mexican Food" was a Chihuahuan-style made by a local chef in my hometown in Ohio (used a beef-based brown gravy on enchiladas - yummy)!!! I liked Tex-Mex-style, early on, also....
Since then green chiles have become almost synonymous with "Mexican Cuisine", and many, many chefs around the country have used them in novel, exciting and delicious ways....
As you know, green chile in Sonoran food usually refers to a kind of beef pot roast with green chile. Or you find, "enchilada style - green" with the green chile sauce poured over whatever, which is common all over Mexico.
But red chile is the real Sonoran thing, in spite of the introduction of refrigeration that keeps chilies green all year long.
Many New Mexicans do have a gripe with Coloradoans who try to claim the be the "green chile capitol", but most of us don't engage much more than to mock them... Anaheim Green Chiles get some support as best quality, but, except for chile rellenos they're not up to the standards of many NM varieties.
Hatch Green Chile has had competition issues, and some of their farmers sold imported Mexican green chiles repackaged in Hatch-labeled burlap when everyone on earth claimed to be selling "Hatch Green Chile" - the givaway was the inconsistency in the heat of those mislabeled chile's. Probably 20x the amount actually grown in the hatch Valley was sold under that name for several years.... A new trademark now protects chiles really grown in Hatch Valley in New Mexico.
For years, Green Chiles ("Big Jim" variety) from the Pecos River valley near Roswell were as consistently good as Hatch's, but drought and changing markets have diverted the largest farmers to other crops. Back in the 80's, most chiles grown in the Pecos River valley were shipped to Louisiana, and constituted a significant proportion of the ingredients in Tobasco Sauce.
For years, until the early 2000's, every August/September I would ship bushels of fresh green chiles to friends around the country, until quality fresh chile (initially sold as "Hatch") became available in their locales....
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Haven't contributed yet to this thread, nor am I making a case for Tucson's best, but whenever I'm in Tucson my two restaurant stops are always Oregano's and Sushi Garden. Usually the Oregano's on Orange Grove and usually the Sushi Garden at Foothills Mall.
And I said, ‘That last thing is what you can't get...Nobody can get to that last thing. We keep on living in hopes of catching it once and for all.’ Jack Kerouac, On The Road
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Went to La Botana at Grant/Craycroft for the first time and was pretty impressed for what I thought would be a glorified La Salsa. 9 meat options and you can order them with corn/flour tortillas, gringas style which is a flour quesadilla with onions/cheese or tostada style with beans, queso and pico. The chicharrones was delicious. Carnitas and barbacoa were alright. Gonna try fish, shrimp and carne next time. Grilled burritos, salads, apps and desserts as well as a full page michelada menu
They have lunch specials, happy hour, brunch and they have 2 for 1 Grande Margaritas all day every day. Looked like a 24oz Marg if not larger.
They have lunch specials, happy hour, brunch and they have 2 for 1 Grande Margaritas all day every day. Looked like a 24oz Marg if not larger.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I went to Caruso’s last night just to laugh at it and relive my college days. I wasn’t prepared for how popular it still is. Waited 45 minutes for a table.
Boy was I wrong about Caruso’s. You could plop it down anywhere in New Jersey and it would absolutely hold its own against any red sauce joint. It was amazing. I had the lasagna, chicken parm, and then spumoni and some of my daughter’s cannoli.
Boy was I wrong about Caruso’s. You could plop it down anywhere in New Jersey and it would absolutely hold its own against any red sauce joint. It was amazing. I had the lasagna, chicken parm, and then spumoni and some of my daughter’s cannoli.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
This is so good to hear. Caruso's was a staple of my childhood.Longhorned wrote:I went to Caruso’s last night just to laugh at it and relive my college days. I wasn’t prepared for how popular it still is. Waited 45 minutes for a table.
Boy was I wrong about Caruso’s. You could plop it down anywhere in New Jersey and it would absolutely hold its own against any red sauce joint. It was amazing. I had the lasagna, chicken parm, and then spumoni and some of my daughter’s cannoli.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Caruso's is not a restaurant. It's a secret satellite branch facility of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. It prints currency six days a week.
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- dovecanyoncat
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
By the way, If Sal Zagona is still alive, he's over 100.
“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition …There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”
~ Wilhoit's Law
~ Wilhoit's Law
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I've always heard the worst things about Caruso's. Like it's the restaurant you bring your out of town grandparents to that are too scared to try actual good food but they want to do something different than Applebee's.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
- dovecanyoncat
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I know what you mean. It was never a favorite place for me to eat. But I adore my Aunt and her 30 some-odd year tenure there. Sal is a dear family friend, an intelligent and ultra-liberal ex UofA professor, who is a great chef outside the restaurant.ASUHATER! wrote:I've always heard the worst things about Caruso's. Like it's the restaurant you bring your out of town grandparents to that are too scared to try actual good food but they want to do something different than Applebee's.
“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition …There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”
~ Wilhoit's Law
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
I thought it wasn't going to be good. My guess is that people look down on a restaurant that serves pre-1980s Italian American food on red-checkered tablecloths.ASUHATER! wrote:I've always heard the worst things about Caruso's. Like it's the restaurant you bring your out of town grandparents to that are too scared to try actual good food but they want to do something different than Applebee's.
But it's really, really good, and the experience is top-notch. It's like time travel to the early 1960s in the best of ways. In the sense that in the 1960s, it would have already been "an old joint." There's a reason why the place is so beloved that you have to wait 45 minutes for a table.
Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
Also, they have the best salad dressing in town. I wouldn't go to Caruso's for authentic Italian food, but it's really good for what it is.
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Re: If you had to pick ONE restaurant in Tucson
It is authentic Italian American food. The people of any region of Italy would wonder about that salad dressing, what's with all the red sauce covering the food, and why the fuck is there garlic on the bread?ASUCatFan wrote:Also, they have the best salad dressing in town. I wouldn't go to Caruso's for authentic Italian food, but it's really good for what it is.