Marquee wrote:Robb Walsh is one of my favorite food writers. Houston is lucky to have him, although most dont even know who he is. The article specifically mentions Hacienda Tecalitlan. I have never been and my search of this site didnt come up with anything. Any experiences?
Marquee:
Amata and I ate there some years back and the impression we had was that it was good but very much at a level comparable to Nuevo Leon in Pilsen, but then much more expensive than the Pilsen institution. Consequently, we've never felt moved to go back. The space is impressive and nice, in a strange way, and the food was fine, but it just didn't strike us then as anything sufficiently out of the ordinary to justify the higher prices. That was some years back, though, and perhaps things have changed. On the other hand, perhaps Walsh's experience was a little out of the ordinary, since the owner seems to have been paying some attention to his visit. Either way, it seems it might well be time to give HT another visit.
I found the article's take on the Mexican presence in Chicago partly off the mark. True, that presence in Chicago has grown considerably in the last decade but the Mexican community here has been large and variegate for a very long time. One gets the impression that the author thinks the Mexican scene here is new and needs that as a way to mitigate the (from the author's standpoint) puzzling quality and vitality of Chicago's Mexican culinary offerings. Of course, I wouldn't for a moment dispute the idea that much of the dynamism is due to the input of recent immigrants from Mexico, but Chicago's Mexican-American community, which started to take shape already in the 1920's, clearly plays a rôle as well.
Antonius
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.