At one time, LTH and proto-LTH boards had a meteoric fascination with Mexican seafood restaurants, beginning with the Las Islas Marias mini-empire, with a resurgence around Mariscos el Veneno and some noteworthy plates at erstwhile board-favorite and early GNR Taqueria La Oaxaquena.
Momentum behind the quirky but easily recognizable Mexican seafood place - with its butter, saltines, Asian tints, mayo, Maggi, and incongruously pricey items amid the thrifty (like Chinese spots with their big-money lobster, abalone, and shark fin plates) seems to have waned around here. But the Mexican seafood scene has maintained, unabated. This is not based on the "foodie" press, so much as the Mexican sea-side palapa's popularity among shellfish-loving cheapskates of all ethnicities and Mexican men following the traditional alimentary path toward virility through dishes translated as "bed wrecker" and "lady killer."
Oddly enough (to me), these places tend to have strong connections to the old country, whether Nayarit or the Yucatan, and often represent one of 2 or 3 US outposts of a Mexican original. Invariably, the other US branch is somewhere around Atlanta. I have not perceived much of this trend in LA for whatever reason (Norteno immigration, as opposed to more Central Mexican? Though LA has plenty of Oaxacans and other Central Mexicans.) Maybe I missed it in the strip malls of the Valley; probably have.
El Veneno remains a great place, and its friendly rival across Ashland, El Barco, while a step behind in the kitchen is about as fun a spot to waste some time drinking as you might find on that industrial strip between hipsterdom and Wrigleyville.
I was reminded what swell eating these can be by two recent meals at places new to me. Both spots stood out for having pristinely fresh, not overcooked seafood (a common enough problem, including on home turf in Mexico). And both had knockout handmade tortillas - an increasingly common attribute of the Mexican seafood spot.
La Palapa in McKinley Park is an over-the-top architectural parody of the Mexican beachfront shack, complete with a massive plastic Great White, a rare (for Chicago) outdoor-indoor thatch-roofed shanty sitting in a dusty lot by a railroad trestle. I believe this was previously the original Islas Marias, and it keeps to the vaguely Pacific theme (alas, without fish Sarandeado). PIGMON and I had a terrific mid-afternoon snack here, highlighted by an off-the-menu special of shrimp quesadillas on superb hand-patted tortillas with the house "Palapa sauce," which I reckon involves a lot of butter, Maggi, and Huichol and will be familiar to anyone who's dined at Veneno. PIGMON has a photo that I invite him to share. In this application, shellfish and cheese work. Like the Ashland places noted above, La Palapa also features some of the friendliest staff in town.
Riviera Maya is less flamboyant but no less delicious. Plus it delivers to my house. The scene at this small storefront next to El Llano on Elston at Irving is more Atlantic, with one of the better ceviches for the money in Chicago - tiritas a la Maya, marlin strips with lime and thinly sliced jalapeno. I had a couple of basic seafood cocktails, which were great, but the standout was a huge shrimp taco in a handmade tortilla that popped because of the more rustic, coarse yellow masa they use. A steak taco made with the same tortilla would give any of our Mexican steak specialists a run for their money. Good stuff from the kitchen all around, and even the garnishes (limes, lemons, salsas) were supremely fresh and well-handled. These guys know what they are doing and deserve some love in the shadow of the much busier El Llano. At this point, Riviera Maya hardly exists on the Internets with 2 random Yelp mentions.
Both places are BYOB. Live it up.
La Palapa
2000 W 34th St
Chicago IL 60608 (At S Damen Ave)
(773) 376-9620
http://www.lapalapamariscos.com/main/Riviera Maya
4009 N Elston Ave, Chicago IL60618
(At W Irving Park Rd)
(773) 463-7641
http://rivieramayachicago.com/
Last edited by
JeffB on May 6th, 2013, 3:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.