Food of Texas. Caroline Stuart

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Food of Texas - Caroline Stuart Food Of The World Cookbooks

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a chile-eating contest. Attendees might tell you that, short of a blowtorch, there's nothing too hot for a bold Texan to put in his mouth, and here the chile reigns supreme. But the celebrations don't end there. Barbecue festivals turn up all over, and everyone awaits the results of the granddaddy of chili cook-offs in Terlingua.

      But this famous down-home character is counterbalanced by the state's equally famous opulent glamour and conspicuous consumption. For every pair of broken-in cowboy boots dancing the two-step and making tracks to local barbecues and cafes, a stylish couple dressed in glitter and gold savors haute cuisine in Houston, Austin, or Dallas. Whether in a low-down honky-tonk down the road from the farm or at a refined upscale establishment in a big city, it's impossible to miss the genuine hospitality, warm southern drawl, and easy comfortable attitude that emanates.

      In light of this fabulous diversity of cuisine and culture, one fact remains: the Texas soil, forever yielding and forever stretching to where it meets the sky, provides.

      At La Fogata Restaurant in San Antonio, owner Johnny Cavillo helps his friend Maria eat queso flameado, prepared with Mexican sausage, cheese from Oaxaca, and corn or flour tortillas.

      So if Texans speak of their fair state in bold superlatives, perhaps the bragging rights are justified, even if exaggeration does creep in from time to time. Who can blame Texans for taking pride in what is truly one of the most colorful of the United States, for celebrating their shindigs and state fairs, shining cities and sprawling plains, the best beef and barbecue in the world, and on and on. The state is surely blessed with bounty.

      Mama Ninfa Law renzo herself serves up some of the best Tex-Mex the state has to offer at her self-titled establishment, Ninfa's, located in Houston.

      The Mexican Connection

      The exciting fusion of Tex-Mex takes Texas by storm

       by Dotty Griffith

      Although Texas freed itself from Mexico in 1836, Texans were never so foolish as to seek culinary independence. On the contrary, they've embraced the spicy flavors, colorful ingredients, and traditional techniques from south of the border and made them their own.

      Tex-Mex cuisine grew out of the combined cultures of Texas and Mexico. Most of the dishes are simple fare, usually combining beans, corn, and a bit of meat. Tex-Mex icons include tacos, tamales, burritos, fajitas, enchiladas, retried beans, nachos, and Mexican or "red" rice, so-called because it is cooked with tomatoes. Variations on these dishes have spread all over the United States—arguably the world—in the form of fast food, although what is served in New York or Seattle seldom bears resemblance to the real thing.

      Mexican cuisine (also known as "Mex-Mex") is dynamic enough by itself. Its source is in simple, no-frills food from a vast number of climates (deserts, mountains, rainforests, and temperate coastlines, for example), and it honors the traditions of Native Americans and Europeans, primarily Spanish. But it ranks as one of the world's most complex and varied cuisines, especially if one bases such assessments on the variety and refinement of sauces. With hundreds of salsas and moles, Mexican cuisine can strike as many chords as French or Chinese. Just imagine what it can accomplish when it's teamed up with Texan cuisine.

      You'll find the strongest Mexican connection among Texas residents in San Antonio, where holidays such as Cinco de Mayo arid Diecises de Septiembre are celebrated much as they would be in Mexico. Here, young folk dancers participate in the revelry at the Mission San Josey San Miguel de Aguaya in San Antonio during a Mariachi Mass.

      Tex-Mex flair isn't necessarily the same in all parts of the state. Indeed, aficionados will argue that the cuisine differs distinctly from city to city.

      San Antonio is the most Mexican of all the Texas cities, and the food reflects that. This is where chili con carne (a bowl of red) was first sold from street carts by women known as chili queens. The carts were an antecedent to the chili parlors that were once as common in some Texas towns as Dairy Queens are today. San Antonio boasts restaurants like La Fogata—"The Torch"—where legendary New York Times writer Craig Claiborne "discovered" queso flameado (flaming cheese), an appetizer of melted white Mexican cheese flamed with brandy. Locals swear by El Mirador, with its distinctive fruit tacos and grilled goat. And no matter where you go in San Antonio, a party isn't a party without antic-uchos (grilled marinated beef or chicken chunks on a skewer).

      Tex-Mex in Dallas was originally pretty simple: enchiladas or tamales with what Texans call chile gravy, rice, beans, and, almost exclusively, corn tortillas, plus a praline for dessert. This uncomplicated tradition spawned the two restaurant chains that for decades defined Tex-Mex cuisine: El Fenix and El Chico. Among small local operations, Martin's Cocina and Rafa's stand out, as does Mia's for fajitas. Gloria's offers an enchanting combination of Savadoran and Mexican cuisines.

      Joe T. Garcia's in Fort Worth, perhaps the best known Mexican restaurant in Texas, also remains true to its simple roots. Family owned, this rambling restaurant has lots of outdoor seating and covers almost a whole city block.

      Over in Austin, a bold restaurateur has dared to innovate. Matt Martinez' El Rancho Martinez has fed generations of University of Texas students cheaply but well. Now with three additional Dallas restaurants under his belt, Matt takes some of his tried-and-true fare and dares to improve it. One great example: the recombinant Bob Armstrong dip—a layered appetizer of guacamole, refried beans, and chile con queso (melted cheese dip)—which is named after the former Texas land commissioner for whom it was created. Also in Austin, consider Guero's, Las Manitas, and Angie's. The latter offers freshly made corn tortillas that you'll never forget. And for a fully authentic experience, Fonda San Miguel is a tribute to true Mexican cuisine.

      The Las Manitas ("Little Hands") Avenue Cafe in Austin is an authentic Mexican eatery owned by the Perez sisters: Cynthia (middle) and Lidia (right). On the left is Elsa Lemus, one of the cooks at Las Manitas'.

      Ninfa Laurenzo of Houston built a restaurant dynasty on the addictive properties of her warm guacamole salsa. Ninfa's remains one of the city's—and state's—best, retaining the integrity and flavor that made Mama Ninfa famous. Also in Houtson, Blue Agave serves a good up-scale Southwestern meal.

      El Paso in the far western part of the state offers Mexican food like nowhere else, although it seems more akin to that of neighboring New Mexico than the rest of Texas, but without the blue corn. Roasted green chiles are the backbone of its daring cuisine, providing the distinguishing characteristic of its uniquely delicious Mexican food. The well-known La Hacienda is now even more remarkable for its setting than for its food, set on four acres and adorned with artwork and historical monuments. And the oddly named, but much loved, H and H Car Wash and Coffee Shop is an El Paso institution where everyone loves to "eat Mexican" in the small dive next to the car wash.

      No discussion of the influence of Mexican culture and cuisine in Texas is worth having without paying tribute to some individual Tex-Mex specialties. The Mexican breakfast menudo, a tripe stew, is purported to cure even the worst hangover. While not for culinary cowards, other traditional dishes like migas (eggs scrambled with onions, peppers, tomatoes, and strips of day-old corn tortillas), or huevos rancheros (fried eggs on a corn tortilla smothered in salsa roja) are some of the easiest dishes of the Tex-Mex breakfast repertoire to embrace, especially when served with a side of silken retried beans, made smooth, glossy and incomparable with lard.

      Fajitas

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