LTH Home

To Know Salvadoran Food Is to Love Salvadoran Food

To Know Salvadoran Food Is to Love Salvadoran Food
  • Forum HomePost Reply BackTop
  • To Know Salvadoran Food Is to Love Salvadoran Food

    Post #1 - October 18th, 2004, 8:56 am
    Post #1 - October 18th, 2004, 8:56 am Post #1 - October 18th, 2004, 8:56 am
    I was on a jury most of last week, inhibiting slightly the passing out of vital information, but on the other hand, I got an extra visit to El Guanaco before writing about it. I have become rather smitten of Salvadoran food, at least as served there.

    Until a few weeks ago, my knowledge of Salvadoran food ended about at: pupusas, something I thought of as cole slaw, and fried bananas with sour cream eaten years and years ago in DC. With this Salvadoran place, El Guanaco, opening very close to me, I am starting to learn a bit more about this food. The majority of the items on the comida Salvadorena section of the menu at El Guanaco (the menu also includes comida Mexicana, Pizza--thin, pan and by the slice--and even a section of antojitos Colombianos*) are under $3 and only one item, a combination plate extends to $9.50. What this means, at least to the VI family, is that we order tapas style from El Guanaco, lots of plates of things to try. And thus, we are learning a bit more of Salvadoran food.

    The oddest thing we have learned is that Salvadorans appear to appreciate a jarring array of flavors at the table. Of course there are pupusas, heavier than say a quesadilla, with a hot but not Zim hot red sauce and the vinegary and oregano dominated slaw. But there is also the fried plantain with sour cream, also quite heavy but not spicy at all. Sweet. Yet, not nearly as sweet as the empanada de platano con leche. This should be a dessert, but it is clearly not in the section called postres or desserts. It is like a plantain donut, covered with sugar but stuffed inside with a log of condensed milk. Also, highly sweet and highly unusual was a kind of atole we tried last visit--not on the menu, ask. It is served in two parts. Part one is a bowl of mashed, very, very, very ripe yucca with a few dumplings similar to the above sugared milk log. It is very sweet. Part two is a large wobbly bowl (placed in another bowl for balance) of something yellow, tasting mostly of licorice. One of the chowhounditas compared it to the candied fennel seeds eaten post dinner in Indian restaurants. Like I say, you get a lot of flavors quickly on the table.

    My favorite thing so far on our table at El Guanaco is their home-made sausage, "estilo cojutepeque". It reminded me twice of Thai sausage, both with its loose mixture of pork and its high herbal element. It is served with a medium sized handmade Salvadoran style tortilla, essentially an unstuffed pupusa. Those pupusas, they do not match my all time favorite served at the Hollywood California weekly farmer's market, but pupusas by dint of being made to order are almost all universally at least good. The pupusas at El Guanco come with the usual cheese and beans and chicharron but also unusual (to us) stuffings of lorocco, some type of Salvadoran flower and ayote, a kind of squash. Sliced jalepenos can be added to any pupusa. The only quibble we have had with the pupusas at El Guanaco is that on both visits, the pupusas we got did not match what we ordered. So, for instance, we have had the lorocco twice, but I am not quite sure what it tastes like. We got a chicarron pupusa by mistake the other night. I liked it a lot more than the rest of the family. It is not the really goey chicarron served in Mexican stews, but neither is it bacon crisp like you would get at Colombian resturants, about like a confit or rillete (to continue to be cross-cultural in references).

    Even though dinner might include those sweet things, order dessert. El Guanaco makes a highly delicious homemade cheesecake, a bit in the style of Eli's but with a much better crust. Also, I should add, on the sweetness front, El Guanaco serves a whole range of Salvadoran drinks, pops, agua frescas, atoles, and they are all sweet, very sweet too. The atole, however, does come with a nice chunk of corn on the cob.

    El Guanaco is a very good place to continue to learn about Salvadoran food. The staff, son and daughter of Mom who is in the kitchen, speak excellent English, and they are keen on introducing you to their stuff.

    *Which is also how I learned about the Colombian fare. I noticed the owner's younger kidz eating Colombian empanadas. It gave me my opportunity to ask about the Colombian antojitos section of the menu. It seems that Mom, upon arrival from El Salvador many years earlier, took a job in a Colombian restaurant, eventually managing it. There, she learned how to make killer empandadas, or so her son says. Perhaps I will try, but I am still anxious to become a bit more expert on Salvadoran food.

    El Guanaco
    6345 W. Grand
    Chicago, IL
    773-637-2915
  • Post #2 - October 18th, 2004, 9:34 am
    Post #2 - October 18th, 2004, 9:34 am Post #2 - October 18th, 2004, 9:34 am
    VI,

    Thanks for the descriptive and informative guide to this place, which I was only barely aware existed. Some of the flavors you describe seem very un-typically Latin American to me, which makes this place even more appealing.

    Hammond
  • Post #3 - October 18th, 2004, 9:48 am
    Post #3 - October 18th, 2004, 9:48 am Post #3 - October 18th, 2004, 9:48 am
    There was an El Guanaco, I think, on Belmont or Diversey or Fullerton, 3000Wish, that I remember writing about on another board (I would repost or link but I don't seem to have it in my file of old posts)-- seems like it might have been related given the Colombian empanada tinge (which I remember there) but it was, overall, a definite disappointment, the kind of place where authenticity seems compromised by the stress on pizza slices and a general slackness in the air, everything tasted more like grease than anything else. Anyway, I hope that they weren't related, or else it just sounds like their act is a lot more together than it once was. (I'm pretty sure the one I ate at is closed.)

    P.S. Here it is. Clearly some of this is me just not being terribly knowledgable and a little closed-minded, but it really wasn't very good compared to things I've had since.
    Last edited by Mike G on October 18th, 2004, 10:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
    Watch Sky Full of Bacon, the Chicago food HD podcast!
    New episode: Soil, Corn, Cows and Cheese
    Watch the Reader's James Beard Award-winning Key Ingredient here.
  • Post #4 - October 18th, 2004, 9:53 am
    Post #4 - October 18th, 2004, 9:53 am Post #4 - October 18th, 2004, 9:53 am
    Mike G wrote:There was an El Guanaco, I think, on Belmont or Diversey or Fullerton, 3000Wish, that I remember writing about on another board (I would repost or link but I don't seem to have it in my file of old posts)-- seems like it might have been related given the Colombian empanada tinge (which I remember there) but it was, overall, a definite disappointment, the kind of place where authenticity seems compromised by the stress on pizza slices and a general slackness in the air, everything tasted more like grease than anything else. Anyway, I hope that they weren't related, or else it just sounds like their act is a lot more together than it once was. (I'm pretty sure the one I ate at is closed.)


    I think I tried that place once. The Condiment Queen picked up pupusas to go, and they were indeed terrible. (Which is why I noted above that it is possible to have a bad pupusa.)

    The place on Grand off of Naraghansatt advertises itself as brand new/grand opening. Surely, perhaps, they have that, that let's try hard to impress air to themselves. They aslo have been busy enough for a new place. It seems that there is a high demand for Salvadoran food on the far west side that was not quenched until this place opened.

    Rob
  • Post #5 - November 17th, 2004, 11:15 am
    Post #5 - November 17th, 2004, 11:15 am Post #5 - November 17th, 2004, 11:15 am
    I had a chance to check out the grand ave location of guanaco a little while back and agree that the house made sausage is excellent. however the pupusas felt a little heavy to me, and I actually didn't care much for their curtido. they were out of a lot of the interesting drinks that rob mentioned So i'll have to go back sometime and give those a try.

    I should mention that those little plaintain/crema fritters are a favoriteof mine, though I like those at izalco's a little more. I'd also differ a little on the description of he filling as sweetened condensed milk, it seemed more a custard to me than straight up sweetened condensed milk stickiness (though I love sweetened condensed milk, a favorite qucik dessert is one of to make one of those frozen roti paranthas and top with s.c. milk)

Contact

About

Team

Advertize

Close

Chat

Articles

Guide

Events

more