The non-greasy papas needed a little salt, but they, too, were classic of type. ![]() As a chile junkie I might have tolerated more kick, but the scrambled eggs weren't dry, the refrieds had good, lardy flavor, and the corn tortillas, substituted for the normal flour variety, were tender and fragrant. The servers are genuinely attentive, the chatter of contented patrons is equally welcoming, and the food is worthy of emulation, no matter how confusing or misleading its pedigree might be.įrom the served-all- día Tradicional Breakfast menu, I picked a habitual favorite: huevos a la Mexicana. But what would be harder to emulate abroad is the infectiously warm feel of the place, mural and menu included. Then there's the menu: an almost comically classic example of un-ironic Spanglish with lines such as "served all día", " especiales of the casa", and "American comida" - again, perfect for export. The mural in the main dining room avoids the images of the sombrero-wearing Mexicans that, due to "cultural insensitivity," were sanitized out of the restored Mission Drive-In marquee across Roosevelt, but it is otherwise the very essence of romanticized New Spain set against a backdrop of missions and River Walk scenes, complete with troubadours and palomas in flight. Accordingly, I have a suggestion for the perfect mother of all global Mexican restaurants: Nicha's Comida Mexicana right here in San Antonio. Pilcher has eaten in many of these Faux-Mex restaurants, and his arguments are convincing. We might stage a mano a mano between the two tacoistas in the future, but today let's explore Pilcher's assertion that the "Mexican" food that has spread around the world - indeed, as far as Stockholm, Sweden, and Tashkent, Uzbekistan - is not really Mexican at all (what that is remains a separate question) but rather a sketchy version of Tex-Mex - OK, with a little Cal-Mex thrown in. ![]() ![]() The last few months have seen the appearance of Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America by Gustavo Arellano of "Ask a Mexican" fame (in equal measure, appealingly impassioned and annoyingly Cal-centric) and Midwestern professor Jeffrey Pilcher's Planet Taco: A Global History of Mexican Food (what it might lack in passion, it more than makes up for in scholarship). Is two of anything enough to signal a trend? If so, then the taco is ready for a run - at least in the book world. Tortilla soup combo from Nicha's Comida Mexicana.
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