Category: New Mexico

New Mexico Trip #1: Setting the Scene

Fun New Mexico fact: It snows here!

Many people mistakenly think New Mexico is warm like, say, Arizona or Texas. This leads to many panicked purchases of coats and boots upon arrival in Albuquerque. The sun does shine nearly every day, but hell yeah, man–it snows here!

Which was precisely my fear when I first arrived. Snow can fall in huge blizzards anytime up until May, and that can put a serious cramp in my carefully timed research trips. Four years ago around this time, I got caught in a tremendously awful blizzard that shut down all the interstates, and I caught a tremendously awful cold while waiting out the storm at a friend’s house.

So for this trip, I concentrated on southern New Mexico. The Chihuahuan desert spreads over a lot of the southern part of the state, and there are fewer mountains–which still means it can snow, but the risk is a lot less.

For most of the trip, I toodled around the desert lands and the open plains of “west west Texas” (as eastern NM is sometimes known). I also headed west, and popped into Silver City, tucked up in the mountains, just after the snow had melted from the worst storm they’d gotten in like 80 years.

Normally, I think of the flatter parts of southern New Mexico as a little bleak and short on scenery. But in the middle of winter, the relative warmth is welcome, and the scenery was beautiful this time of year. Tiny spots of green were just showing up, and the winter had been so wet that the earth was darker, giving a sharper contrast to all the gold-blond scrubby plains that look so monotonous in summer.

I spent one long day driving from Silver City to Roswell (304 miles, when you take the direct route–which I did not). It was like watching an eight-hour film, with the clouds scudding overhead and the vistas opening up at each mountain pass. Near the end of the day, there was a stubby rainbow, and then the clouds turned bright pink and loomed up on the horizon like the biggest cake in the world. After the sun set, lightning crackled all along the horizon.

I’m running a contest all this week, for free copies of a Santa Fe guidebook–enter here.

New Mexico: A Guide for the Eyes

nmeyesI mentioned Elisa Parhad’s genius new guidebook idea a little while back, but now the book — New Mexico: A Guide for the Eyes — is finally out and for full-on sale.

It’s as savvy and beautiful as I’d expected. Love the turquoise-blue endpapers!

The premise: You’re driving around New Mexico and you notice there are an awful lot of drainage ditches. What’s up with that? Flip through and see the picture of an acequia–and you get all the background on Spanish-Arab irrigation techniques. The zia sun symbol, koshare, and chile ristras all get their due, along with other iconic things like enchiladas, smudge sticks, cowboy hats and biscochitos.

This guide is a total delight to read–and, just as important, it really helps you understand the essential cultural details about New Mexico.

I have just finished yet another guidebook where, in the name of meeting my word-count limits, I had to cut out 95 percent of the random interesting details I’d noticed about southern Spain to make room for opening hours and phone numbers.

I know this data is essential for a standard guidebook — but the kind of info you get from a guide like Elisa Parhad’s is just as key for really getting to know a place.

So…just buy two guidebooks. It’s worth it.

This is more a book for reading ahead of time, or looking up details after you get back home. It’s all glossy color photos, and hardbound in a nice little square trim size. For what it’s worth, there’s a one-page list of really good restaurants, attractions and museums in the back of the book–you’re smart enough to look these places up on your own.

Then, when you’re on the road and need quick reference to phone numbers, maps and opening times, take a black-and-white paperback like mine.

I’m looking forward to seeing the next guides in the series!

Genius New Guidebook

nmeyesI mentioned New Mexico: A Guide for the Eyes a little while back, but I just got my advance copy (connections, baby!), and it’s available for preorder now. Release date is August 1.

If you’re planning a trip to New Mexico, or you just came back from there, or you just like the place, I heartily recommend this book. The concept — a guide to all the visual icons, from architecture to food to landscape — is so brilliant that it could change guidebook-land forever.

Every destination needs one — just think of all the times you’ve been traveling and wondered what a recurring symbol/dish/car was all about. The guide to New Mexico has entries for bolo ties, pawnshops, mesas, hogans and even lowriders. Perfect reading for pre-trip education, or while sitting on the patio back at your hotel at night.

Obamanos!

I did a super-quickie trip to ABQ this weekend, which happened to coincide with an Obama rally. Crowd estimates were about 45,000, and I think I walked past every one of those people just trying to find the end of the line to stand in. After about 10 minutes at the end of the 1.2-mile-long line (not kidding! See Google map), we decided to hoof it back up to the field, and try to listen from across the street. At a certain point, everyone there on the outskirts just politely rushed the field.

Read more

NM Wrap-Up

As it happens, ABQ wasn’t so big-city after all. I was strolling around downtown (aka The District, according to the slick magazine/brochure the city puts out to promote its new urbanist efforts), and happened to spy an ancient-looking shoe store: a faded sign jutted out from the shopfront: “HALE” vertically, block letters, “shoes” horizontally in script. (Or that’s the way I remember it–the place is already shifting into long-lost legend in my head.)

Let me just explain here: Yes, I was doing book research. But yes, I was also shopping. I never, ever shop in NYC because it’s a pain in the ass–crowds, surly clerks, screaming babies. When I’m traveling, I buy everything from postage stamps to deodorant to jeans–the amount I throw down on the road can look shocking to my traveling companions, but trust me, I’m not spending like that at home, because it would make me way too crabby. And compared with buying a bike the day before, pausing at a shoe shop–something a tourist in ABQ might even conceivably do–seemed pretty on track, work-wise.

When I stepped into the shadowy area by the inset display windows, I saw total time-warp inventory: all those puffy-all-over old-lady shoes with sensible heels, Hush Puppies from before they got a brand makeover, dowdy cold-weather boots. Nothing I could rock even with a huge dose of retro irony. But way over in the corner, I saw a pair of these German sandals that just last month I’d run across online–Worishofers. They looked comfy, not too frumpy and, best of all, sensibly designed to stay on your feet in even the slip-on variety.

I pushed open the door, and could barely see a thing. The tiny shop was very dim, and stacked floor to ceiling with shoe boxes. By the time I’d located my shoes–amid more puffy vinyl numbers with brand names like “Auditions!”–the owner had emerged from some darkened back room. I innocently asked, “Can I try these in a 38?”

He looked at me a little critically. He made no move to get me the shoes. He gestured toward the chairs in the center of the store and said, “Well, first, let’s measure your feet.”

I was riding the Way-Back Express! I haven’t had my feet measured since I was eight years old, maybe! I got the whole treatment: putting each foot up on the little slanty padded chrome-and-burgundy-vinyl stool, while the guy appraised my polka-dot socks and noted the small disparity between my right and my left. Then he got up and rooted through the various boxes to get me the shoes.

Again with the slanty stool: He held the shoes there to let me slide my feet in, all the while describing the merits of these particular Worishofers–lightweight cork that could be resoled, nifty padding right at the metatarsal (I have a metatarsal?!), breathable foot bed…

Ooh, they were dreamy! And cheap! World’s fastest sale. But of course I couldn’t move too fast–there seemed to be all these little layers of shoe-shop protocol that I’d forgotten since I was eight. Filling out the invoice, learning my name, adding some tips on shoe care. Before I left, he said, “By the way, those are the 39–don’t tell the neighbors!” Yes, I had just been schooled on my own shoe size.

And just as I was checking out, another woman had come into the shop–a much older woman, her hair in a tidy white bob. “I’ve come in for just exactly the same shoes!” she said–totally undermining my conviction that I’d somehow managed to pick the one pair of non-old-lady shoes in the place.

But who freakin’ cares! They’re the best shoes ever! And when the guy mentioned that he’d be retiring in a couple of months and the shop would be closing, my heart nearly broke.

The very next day, I came back with my mom, and bought two more pairs for me, plus a pair with straps for her. The guy measured my feet again–“in case they grew overnight,” he joked. I instantly wondered if he had some kind of foot fetish. But again, I thought: who freakin’ cares! I guess if you work in a shoe shop for 44 years, you either have a fetish to start with, or you develop one. So feel free to fondle my feet a little while telling me random snippets of poetry you’ve read on bathroom walls and stories of old-time Albuquerque (did you know the CBS radio station had its offices in the KiMo Theater, and hosted a monthly live show called “The Neighbor Lady” where women brought in their recipes? I did not–and I want to revive that!).

And I didn’t feel so bad about being a sentimental sap over the store closing–the store I’d known of for less than 24 hours–when the owner told me that the woman with the white bob from the day before had actually started crying when she heard the news.

If you’re the type who tears up over this kind of thing, you can read more here, in the Albuquerque Alibi.

If you’re not, sorry to take up your time. Progress! Future! Change! I’ll be marching forward in my hot, hot old-lady shoes, thank you very much.

Small-town NM

So that night I was writing the last post, and it got really late…I very nearly screwed myself. I went out to the restaurant that’s in my guidebook that’s known for staying open late. But they were just closing. They sent me to a newer bar on the south side of town. I raced down there, and as I was walking in, I passed a couple of people leaving. “Wow–we just closed Taos down,” one said to the other.

At the bar, there were two stragglers and some guy who was maybe in charge. No. No food, he said. When I asked where I might eat something this time of night, he laughed and said, “Wennn-deee’s!”

I didn’t want to resort to fast food yet. I consulted my own guidebook once again, and called the Alley Cantina, which recommend for a burger during the day. Lo! They were still serving food after 10pm!

Let me just say, every time I type in a phone number for a Moon guide, I grumble. “Rough Guides doesn’t require the phone number for every damn bar!” I think. But then I consider, well, suppose someone left their credit card behind or something…I suppose it would be handy to have the number to call.

And now it turns out it’s very handy for saving the actual author’s starving ass on a too-late Tuesday night. I raced over to the Alley Cantina (back on the other side of town), and entered with trepidation. This is the place that is traditionally the last stop on the Taos bar crawl, with the chaos you’d expect. Fortunately on a Tuesday, there wasn’t much crawling, though there was some very effed-up French hippie dude with a bad goatee who seemed to have to become that night’s mascot. Phillippe/Felipe was weaving around doing things like sticking a paper napkin to the guitar player’s forehead while he continued to strum and sing his country covers.

I sat alone at a table and ate my green-chile cheeseburger (first on the trip!) and drank a microbrew. Can I just give a shoutout to the waitress who, when I asked whether I should get the burger or the meatball sandwich, said, “Hamburger, definitely. The meatball sandwich doesn’t sell much, so it’s not fresh.” Now that wasn’t so hard! Why do namby-pamby waitstaff say, “Ohh, they’re both just delicious! I don’t know which to call my favorite!” I tipped the ass off that girl.

Near the end of my meal, some guy came up to my table and said, “Can I just ask you–were you at Joseph’s Table last night?” Turns out he’s the bartender there. In that way that only fellow restaurant people do, he asked me what I’d eaten. Like my waiter, he was delighted over the liver choice. Then he asked what I was doing eating at the Alley Cantina, of all places, and I explained how I’d fucked up–and that I’d even been thinking of going back to Joseph’s Table again, just for the trout.

“Oh, the trout! That’s an amazing dish!” he said. Shit! What I wanted to hear, in that case, was “Meh–trout’s fine, but whatever…” Suddenly my green-chile cheeseburger wasn’t so satisfying.

So next day, I left Taos, having eaten nearly everywhere I wanted to, and when I got close to Santa Fe, I was really surprised at the size of the place. I’d been in Taos only three nights, but had already gotten into the holed-up-in-the-mountains vibe. Mike, the Joseph’s Table bartender, had scoffed when I mentioned I had to go back to Albuquerque–what could I possibly want from that urban hellhole?

Then I was in the midst of cramped, bustling, so-craaazy-huge Santa Fe, waiting at a light in all that traffic, and who should I see walking down the sidewalk but a woman I’d seen at the Japanese bathhouse the week before. Hilarious. I wanted to shout, “I’ve seen you naked!” out the car window, but then the light changed. Santa Fe seemed pretty cozy and intimate–too intimate–right then.

Now I am in that giant metropolis they call Burque. I spent the morning out in Los Ranchos and Corrales, though–that’s “the ranches” and “corrals” in English, and it’s just as rural as it sounds. Horses, sheep, goats. Irrigation ditches running from the Rio Grande. I toured a beautiful farm/historic inn and soaked up new urbanism and architecture talk. Then I had a kick-ass plate of enchiladas, and I bought a bike.

Yes! Not on the research schedule at all, but Stevie’s Happy Bikes (4583 Corrales Rd.–tell ’em I sent you!) was right there across from Perea’s Tijuana Bar where I ate lunch, and I wandered over to ask if he rented bikes. While there, I couldn’t help notice a Raleigh mixte–I didn’t even know Raleigh made such a thing, and it’s the first time I’ve seen a mixte that wasn’t French, complete with annoying French threading, etc., which Peter refuses to work on. So my chic rust Raleigh “Rapide” is getting popped in a box and shipped to NYC. My invoice from the store is stamped with a goofy bike-riding cartoon–a happy biker indeed.

And very happy to be in the big city!

Meanwhile, Back on the Road…

Since yesterday, I have been embroiled in and fascinated with Kohnstamm Kontroversy… Fortunately it landed on a couple of days when my research schedule has been relatively light. My main challenge in Taos has been catching up on all the new restaurants (ha–I typed ‘restrooms’ first by mistake…perhaps also true). I carefully charted out which ones were open for brek, which for lunch, which dinner–and on what days. Seeing how Sunday and Monday are major closing days, it wound up being a little like an LSAT puzzle to hit them all. I mostly had it worked out, but then I was so busy blogging this morning that I missed breakfast, and now everything’s messed up again.

But last night I ate dinner at an old standby: Joseph’s Table. Joseph Wrede made a huge splash here when he opened his restaurant. He was one of the first chefs in the state to really push for local, organic ingredients; he was a Food & Wine hot new chef in 2000, all that jazz. Midway through dinner last night, I remembered that years ago, during a period in which I was looking for A Big Change, I had actually briefly fantasized about chucking my NYC life and moving back here to work at his restaurant.

I went last night not because of this ages-old restaurant crush (like I said, I’d forgotten I’d even had it) but because I’d heard lots of mutterings that the place had gone downhill. Wrede is notoriously flaky–or something, I don’t know, but a lot of deals just don’t work out for him…he was supposed to run the restaurant at El Monte Sagrado, he opened a bakery cafe a couple of years ago, and now I find it’s already shut. So I could believe he’s not really steering the ship away from the rocks at Joseph’s Table.

But, dude, I am here to say: the place is just fine! Oh man. And it was especially heartwarming after my Coyote Cafe experience.

True to form, I drank a couple of glasses of Lillet (first thing on the wine list–how can I not love the place?) and wrote a lot of shit in my notebook while I ate.

It all boils down to: When I eat at a restaurant, I want to be nourished, not dazzled (or, more likely, dulled, as that’s what happens when dazzlement goes awry with too much butter/foie gras/melted cheese/squiggly sauces).

It’s the same standard I set for eating at home, or for cooking for other people in my home.

So why do I go to restaurants at all, then, if I’m so not impressed by your culinary ass-slapping? Well, I go to learn about new flavors. I go to sit in a beautiful room (can the person who painted Joseph’s Table please come do the same gorgeous flowers all over my dining room? And while they’re at it, dust the pussy-willow chandeliers that I want to install, but know are impractical?). I go to enjoy composing a dinner–which appetizer goes best with which main and which dessert? Menu planning is often just as satisfying as the cooking–without actually having to follow through and cook it.

And I go to eavesdrop on other people. Last night was Dining with the Almost-Stars. I did a double-take when I saw Fabio at the next table. Then I saw he had bangs, and I just knew the real Fabio would never compromise his locks in such a way. At the table on the other side, a couple of Afflecks from Massachusetts were complaining to their companions about how people so often misspell their name Asslick–once for a funeral, no less! I have a little more sympathy for Ben now, knowing what he must’ve gone through in school.

I perused the menu. And I did something so genius I can’t imagine why I’ve never thought of it before: I asked for the dessert menu right up front! There’s nothing I hate more than being presented with a half-assed, uninspired dessert menu and realizing I could’ve eaten more savory dishes. Or–let’s be honest here, as it’s more often this way–getting a drop-dead gorgeous list of sweets and realizing I never should’ve ordered an app and a giant main.

So I sat there with my various pieces of paper. It was pretty easy to pull together. Desserts looked good, so I just went for two apps: warm kale sauteed with shallots and a tomato dressing, and a plate of pork liver (from a local farm) in a lemon-caper sauce.

I got the kale because it’s still damn cold here, but I need vegetables. I got the liver because Peter hates it so I never cook it at home. When I ordered it, the waiter practically did a little dance. The best way to endear yourself to the restaurant staff is to order the weird thing on the menu. You can bet they don’t give a shit when you get the roasted token, I mean chicken. And slabs of meat–you already know what a steak tastes like, and there’s nothing a chef can do to make a good steak taste better than just grilling it mid-rare and sprinkling some salt on top. I can do that at home. But something like liver (or the sweetbreads I ordered the other night, at a steak, seafood or steak-and-seafood kind of place), you know the chef has put a lot of thought into how to make that tasty.

And I ordered a glass of Lillet. Drinking my Lillet with my plate of lovely crispy, curly kale, with my wedge of sourdough Frenchy bread and butter on the side, I felt like I could be at home. After a week on the road, that in itself was a treat.

Then my liver came. “If you’re a liver lover, you’re just going to adore this!” said my waiter, with a flourish. I told him I hadn’t eaten liver in a long time, actually, so it was a really special treat.

When I said that, I wasn’t even thinking of the last exact time I’d had liver. But as soon as I had a bite, I remembered. Actually, no–it was the second bite, which I combined with a little spinach leaf from my mixed-green garnish.

The last time I ate liver was in those weeks right after my heart surgery, when Karine and Tamara came to California and dedicated themselves to raising my red-blood-cell count through home cooking. I’m practically crying just thinking about it now. Fucking fantastic friends. They made me chicken-liver-and-spinach salads up the ying-yang. Lillet would’ve gone great with that too, but I couldn’t drink with all my pain meds. Within a week of applying the special leafy-greens-and-liver diet, my blood was back to normal, and I was sleeping a few hours less out of the day. I went outside and walked around the block. The sun glimmered down and the birds sang in the trees.

I am a liver lover because I was raised on it. It was one of those genius fancy-on-food-stamps meals my dad would cook, in the same vein as on-sale steak with homemade french fries and nothing else. “Never let it get overdone!” he’d always proclaim as he seared the liver quickly in the skillet. (And he’d go–and still goes–“Aaaaaagh!” in his signature way when he encountered it overdone in restaurants–or even recalled such an undignified encounter.) A little salt, and that was it. No onions, or I don’t remember any. It was rich, and cheap.

My pork liver would’ve made him proud. I think it must’ve been chilled right up till it hit the super-hot pan, because the outside, the thin edges, were wonderfully chewy, but the inside was almost jelly-like it was so rare. Offal-eating can be such a quien-es-mas-macho sort of thing, but I’m not trying to pull that here, I swear. It was just delicious.

Also, it was doused in a lemon-caper sauce. Now why have I never thought of that? This is what I mean when I talk about learning something new by eating at a restaurant. The lemon brightened it up in the most lovely way, and the capers must’ve been the nice wee salt-cured ones because they looked like they’d exploded when they hit the hot fat in the pan. After I cleaned my plate, I actually ate one of the stragglers right off the tablecloth, where it had landed during my initial omigod-this-is-so-amazing eating frenzy.

I cleaned my plate, and I felt great. I felt nourished–not just from the iron coursing through my bloodstream, but from the fact that someone had concocted this lovely dish for my express delight. For me, the liver lover. I could feel the spirit of home cooking in every bite.

In a swoon, I looked at the dessert menu again. But I’d already decided–the Guinness ginger cake. And another glass of Lillet. It arrived looking like a cupcake, topped with fluffy whipped cream. It was delicious. I ate every bit, and actually did not feel painfully stuffed.

I even felt a twinge of regret at not ordering more. I reconsidered my restaurant schedule for the next day–it would only be a small loss to the greater research plan if I came back the next night to try the risotto cake and the trout with trout roe, and that bay-leaf creme brulee… (Note that I was not thinking thoughts remotely like this at the Coyote Cafe. I was thinking, “Haul this tired, butter-coated ass to bed.”)

On my walk home, I mean to my hotel, I realized my dessert choice hadn’t been random either. During the Great Red Blood Cell Boost of 2006, I finished all my meals with a big slab of gingerbread made with iron-rich blackstrap molasses.

Amazing, in retrospect, that I didn’t get sick of any of these things–greens, liver, gingerbread–or associate them with trauma and never eat them again. Now that’s the power of food cooked with love.

—-
PS: I completely forgot to mention: this all came in at LESS THAN HALF THE PRICE of my Coyote Cafe dinner. I put that in caps not because I’m a bargain-hound, but because usually I don’t even notice what things cost–and this really struck me. (This probably makes me a bad restaurant critic, but I think of my occasional restaurant outings as an extension of the genius Grocery Store Diet & Budget articulated by some lovely houseguests last year: scrimp on everything else, but let yourself get whatever you want at the grocery store, and you’ll be just fine. Plus, it’s all in the name of research, and making me less cranky about my job at the end of the day.)

PPS: I’ve spent so long typing this post that I’ve now missed dinner hours at the place I’d meant to go tonight. Hm. Joseph’s Table is still open. Tempting. But I don’t want to go and have an only semi-wonderful meal this time, and leave on a lower note, know what I mean?

Drunk Dinner Notes

Because I’m dealing with my incoherent notes from my notebook two nights ago, this post borders on telling you about a weird dream I had. In the same way, it may be just as boring.

My notebook says:

“Here I am at the Coyote Cafe, ground zero of SF trendiness. I am optimistic.”

(The back story: Eric DiStefano, adored/reviled restaurateur of Santa Fe, has bought the place from 1980s celeb Mark Miller, the guy who did haute Southwest way before Bobby Flay. There are no more deconstructed pumpkin empanadas, but the place is hot again.)

On the next page of the notebook, all I see is the word “nosedives.”

What’s odd is that I actually remember that meal fondly–I mean, the taste of it was fine, and there was a general glow to the evening: some amiable chatting with strangers, some occasional expressions of “Mm!” But deep at the core I had some terrible misgivings.

I sat at the “chef’s bar” or whatever they called the counter in front of the open kitchen. A brilliant invention for people eating alone, and also for people who are used to watching TV while they eat, and need some distraction. Another solo woman was sitting next to me. I was planning to chat with her after I’d finished perusing the menu, but then I noticed that she got her short ribs, ate two bites, and then put down her silverware and gestured for the waitress to take it away. She turned to me and swooned about how delicious the food was. I couldn’t think of anything to say to her except, “Then why didn’t you eat it?” Which I didn’t actually say, so I just went back to inspecting the menu until she paid up and left.

After I ate my dinner, though, I was a little more sympathetic to her plight. I saw the gargantuanity of the portions (quadruple-thick porkchops slapped on the grill, three handfuls of gnocchi lobbed in the skillet, etc) and stuck to appetizers. But even so, I could barely finish. The constant smell of fat wafting off the skillets on the saute line in front of me deadened my palate.

The real deterrent to enjoying my foie gras with smoked duck, and my butter-lettuce salad with warm fig dressing was that the grim reality of restaurant line cooking was right there in front of me. So much parcooked risotto, squeeze bottles of sauce, little prepped cups of salmon steak marched before my eyes. So many portions of wasabi mashed potatoes (Whose horrible idea?! Will a food historian please track down the inventor and strangle him with his chili-pepper pants?), green-chile mac-and-cheese and agave-sweetened yams dispensed in massive bowls with an ice-cream scoop. Nothing pleases like soft, butter-laden pap, and seeing it all lined up like that sent me into a spiral of existential despair.

Restaurants have this fiction of “cooked to order.” But what’s really happening is that a number of different pre-cooked or prepped components are quickly combined in a skillet, blasted with heat, arranged on an oversize plate (usually stacked, these days) and topped with minced chives. Voila. Some restaurants do more of this, and some do less, but they all have to do it for simple logistical reasons–or else be like Spicy Mina, where you just know you have to wait an hour while everything’s done from scratch.

And while it may taste pretty good, it just doesn’t seem real–especially when I’m forced to look behind the curtain, from my little perch at the chef’s counter. It’s too obvious this food is not cooked with love–it’s assembled in haste. I’m fine with my meat coming from a living animal–but please do not destroy the illusion that someone has carefully crafted my meal just for me.

This is why open kitchens are a horrible idea. They make people like me kind of queasy. And they make people who don’t know how to cook think that’s the way cooking works. It never occurs to them that someone (someone not cool enough, fast enough or English-speaking enough to work in the open kitchen) spent all afternoon making the gnocchi.

After that, my wine and the high altitude must’ve gone straight to my head, because my notebook moves on from concrete things (the “audible squelch” of the too-gelatin-y panna cotta) to the more abstract.

Here’s where it gets like me telling you about my crazy dream: I devise a grand theory of authenticity, using parallels with current politics! The only thing I can decipher, however, is that The Queen’s Hideaway is the culinary keepin’-it-real equivalent of Dennis Kucinich…except so not vegan, obviously. And Prune is Obama (somehow, it hinges on Goya canned chickpeas, and whether you admit to using them). And my meal at Coyote Cafe was Hillary–nothing really to object to, but trying too hard.

If you’re confused, so am I. Having eaten restaurant meals three times daily since Monday, I am feeling overfed, bloated, greasy, cranky and totally un-smart. Last night I was talking with a painter friend who’s worried that maybe he has effectively spent the last fifteen years huffing solvents, and secretly likes it even as it makes him increasingly stupid. I wonder if I have the same relationship with butter.

In New Mexico in Mud Season

Ah, spring in New Mexico. It has snowed off and on for the last few days. Smells great. Everyone goes around saying, “We need the moisture.” But damn it’s muddy. I nearly got stuck in the Arroyo Seco cemetery today, after I drove in to take photos, and then saw the sign saying “Don’t take photos–violators will be prosecuted.” Lots of slipping and sliding, and furtive looks back over my shoulder as I tried to make a graceful retreat.

So I’m here in Taos (just as, I think, one of my favorite bloggers is here for her wedding…or just was). I hope it didn’t snow on her! It was beautiful in the days before Thursday, though.

To otherwise bring you up to speed:

On my first day on the road, some mountain men of the kind that I think exist only in NM–it’s the ponytails that do it–showed me a weird, dead critter. It was in the back of a pickup truck, which, I just happened to notice, had no license plates. Ah, lawlessness. Ah, critters (it was a ringtail civet, my brother wagers). Ah, hippie hunters.

The desert air is harsh, yo. I spent my first couple days crying, but not because I was filled with emotion over being on my home soil. (Though that particular breed of long-hair does somehow give my heart a little nostalgic twinge. “My people!” I can’t help thinking. Maybe this is as simple as the fact that my dad has a ponytail. He does not, however, have a giant beard, Carhartt overalls and an unregistered 1970s Ford pickup.)

In Santa Fe, I got to meet the fabulous Gwyneth Doland, one of my role models in food-writing style. Can I just say that it’s completely unjust that a woman as witty as she is is going unappreciated in Santa Fe because they’re too damn sincere there? It’s even more unjust that someone who has busted her ass writing for lo these many years (she even ran her own damn magazine, the lovely La Cocinita) does not have agents and editors fawning at her feet. Sure, I may have written 800,000 reviews of beachfront resorts, shrimp taco vendors and old adobe casitas, but I feel pretty damn slack compared with her portfolio of pee-yourself-hilarious columns, compiled over, what, a decade? Again, I’m reminded of the shit you can actually accomplish if you don’t eff around in grad school or your favorite bar-in-the-subway.

Anyway, where was I? Oh, yes, in Santa Fe. I have some scribbled notes to myself in my notebook from two nights ago, but it devolves into such a rambling manifesto that I’ll put it in a separate post.

And, just in case you think I might not complain about my job, I do want to emphasize: Remember, I have to go to all the bad places too. That’s all I’m going to say, because this blog is already veering too close to Great Moments in Regurgitation.

But, wait, I can’t help myself. I’ll just leave you with the following advice: try, try, try to avoid throwing up green chile, whatever you do.