Category: Travails of a Guidebook Author

Was this what I ate?

Ever since my trip to Mexico last November, when a hitchhiker had me nibble on some mysterious forest critter, I’ve taken to looking at cute little animals and trying to imagine them without their fur, and smoked and stapled to a wooden board. This one looks like a good candidate:

It’s an agouti. I still have to look up the Mayan word it. It is awfully, awfully cute.

(For the full story, see the November archives–search for “What kind of meat do they eat in _your_ village?”)

Photos You Won’t See in the Book

For now, there are only three, but they represent the less tourist-friendly, seamier side of north-central New Mexico quite well.

First, we have a scene that could have been taken straight from my middle-school years (in NM, it’s mid school, not junior high, for some reason). I was never one of the bad kids who skipped school to drink beer and listen to heavy metal; in fact, I was given detention in fifth grade for, during another slow moment in “gifted” (read: “do nothing”) class, saying, “…sucks!” down the hall in response to Mario Martinez saying, “Heavy metal!”. But I am perfectly familiar with where you might want to go drink the beer and listen to the music, if you had the opportunity, and I came across just one of those spots while hiking with my mom on my first day back home:

And even though I wasn’t a metal fan, I could still not deny that the best band ever was Kizz [sic]. Snicker.

While in Espanola, home of the low-rider, on my March trip, I encountered all of the town’s (and New Mexico’s) social problems handily summarized for the nonliterate:

That bottom ideogram is a bottle in a crumpled paper bag, just to clarify.

And, finally, lordy, the shocking revelation that there is something under the Virgin Mary’s skirt:

Photo quality is terrible on that one because we were in a dark little adobe church, and I couldn’t use a flash. But that’s the church-keeper helpfully answering one tourist’s oh-so-innocent question with way too much information. Alas, I couldn’t get a pic of Jesus’ amputated legs because the angle was all wrong–you’ll just have to trust me.

A Public Dis

This is a little petty, but what are blogs for if not petty venting? One day in Albuquerque, I encountered several shockingly inhospitable bed-and-breakfast owners, and it put me in a very bad mood. The worst of the lot was Adobe Garden B&B in Los Ranchos.

Now this looks like a nice enough place–it’s recommended in one or two other guidebooks, and maybe also in the CVB listings. It’s near a few other must-visit B&Bs, so I put it on my to-cruise list. I pull up, gather my credentials, and ring the bell. Some guy opens the door a tiny crack and peers through. I start my spiel: “Hi, my name’s Zora, and I’m a writer for Moon Handbooks [extend hand with business card]. I’m working on a new guide to Santa Fe and Albuquerque, due out next spring. I’ve heard good things about your place, and I’m wondering if I can take a quick look around.” I smile winningly. I am dressed in a nice silk skirt and color-coordinated tank top and shoes. I do not look threatening, crazy or disreputable–only a little sweaty and still a tad sunburned.

The guy opens the door a teensy bit wider, then laughs nervously. Hmm, is he maybe just a guest? Or the simple-minded brother of the owner?

He finally opens the door all the way and asks me in. “You’d better talk to my wife,” he says, and laughs nervously again. I wonder if I’ve unwittingly arrived in the middle of a drug deal, an orgy or the septic tank overflowing.

His wife comes along, and I give her my spiel, and hand her my card. (Hubby didn’t take it.) She looks me up and down, and says, “Huh. Moon Handbooks? Never heard of them.”

Now, it’s true, Moon is not the best-known name in guides, even though it’s been publishing since 1973–before LP and Rough Guides by many years. Usually people who don’t know what Moon is phrase it a bit more nicely, as in, “Moon Handbooks–I’m sorry, but I’m not familiar with that line–can you tell me more about them?” Because typically someone in the travel industry recognizes that they should be savvy about the various outlets for publicity their business might have. (And not to draw easy comparisons about general savviness and cosmopolitanism, but in Santa Fe, a very high number of people knew about Moon guides, or at least pretended they did.)

Anyway, I forge ahead with my spiel, and again ask to see a room or two. The woman says, “Hmmm, let me see…” and starts walking into the dining room. Then she turns around, looks me up and down again, and says, “Actually, no. We have no rooms to show you.” Not apologetic, or regretful that she’s passing up the opportunity for a guidebook writer to say something nice about her place. More in the vein of, “No way, you scam artist. I can see right through you.”

Her husband is laughing inappropriately again. I ask for a brochure at least, and she reluctantly gives me one, and physically hustles me toward the door. “Why don’t you drop off a copy of your book?” she practically sneers. I have to explain that, duh, I haven’t written it yet, but she’s not really listening as she and her husband slam the door (and probably triple-lock it) behind me.

Now, maybe I’m being paranoid, and something else entirely was going on, but I’m pretty sure they were the paranoid ones, and were convinced I was trying to case their house or something. For chrissake, if I were trying to scam them, I would’ve claimed to be a writer for Frommer’s or something everyone knows, right? I’m just hoping that the next time they go to a bookstore, they notice the presence of Moon Handbooks, and feel a pang of regret. Or they Google my name and see that I have written other travel guides and can be trusted to see their precious place.

End of public defamation. Please visit the Moon Handbooks website for more information.

By contrast: the New Mexico Diet (TM)

It’s so true: Driving makes you fat.

By the end of 15 days in New Mexico in rented Ford Focus, I felt like a sluggish, sunburned blimp. (The air up there is thin–I got a redneck sunburn on my first long drive, propping my arm on the driver-side window frame.)

Here’s the terrible conundrum of writing a travel guide: I never get to eat at the really good places. I already know that, say, the Frontier is not to be missed in Albuquerque, so I can’t waste my time having a breakfast burrito smothered in green chile stew there. Instead, I have to go the Range, because it’s got mixed reviews but looks cute, and is a little out of the way–is it worth driving to? The answer is no, it turns out, and I waddle to the car just a little more slowly than I did after my previous meal, the third of the day.

I never thought I’d complain about a job that gave me an excuse to eat wherever I want and write it off on my tax return. But I am, and I will continue to do so until NYC bicycling revives my metabolism and stops my gut from looking poochy.

The other weird thing about writing travel guides is that I often end up in situations where I’m thinking, “Um, should I be seeing this?”

I visited this nice little spic-and-span motel on “West Central” (read: the stretch of Central Ave. where no tourist ever goes, so they have to put up big biz-improvement-commission-sponsored neon signs saying “West Central” to make it look important), and ended up getting personal tour of the proud owner’s personal apartment, including his children’s rooms, and the kitchen where his wife was cooking dinner. There was also another kitchen upstairs, he was happy to show me. Along with the laundry room. Being behind the scenes was weird enough, even without counting in the decor: sparkling white shag carpeting, white leather sofas, chrome and shiny black accents (think black glass vase with all-white fake flowers), a spiral staircase, giant photos of the man’s daughter at her wedding (she’s a doctor, doing her residency in California). Glitz-o-rama. But it was sort of sweet that the guy was so proud of his motel (the Sandia Peak Inn, for the record–though it’s nowhere near the mountains) that he couldn’t resist showing me the whole damn thing. And it is a really nice little motel. I urge you to patronize it on your next visit to West Central, Albuquerque.

Another moment where I didn’t know whether to look away or stare in fascination: We’re inside the old Spanish church in Truchas, a tiny village in the mountains north of Santa Fe. This church is rarely open–we’ve snuck in behind a tour group from the folk art museum. The tour leader is up near the altar, talking about all the old folk art, some of which is from the seventeenth century, on display. Some guy raises his hand and asks, “Can you explain why Jesus is wearing a skirt? I’ve never seen that…”

Indeed, there’s a crucifix up on the wall, and it’s dressed in this purple satin full-length skirt, trimmed in gold sequins. The group leader looks, looks again, and forges on: “Well, as you know, the idiosyncracies of each santero [carver of wooden saint figures] are distinct, and this tradition may just have happened in this village as the result of someone’s taste….”

Then, about five pews back, someone pipes up to interrupt the stream of bullshit. It’s the little old lady who’s been taking care of the church for the past 20 years.

“Actually,” she says, “Jesus is wearing a skirt because he has no legs.”

And then she bustles up to the altar and starts pulling up Jesus’ dress. Of course I can’t look away.

Jesus has just stumps–apparently his delicately curved calves and slender ankles were too fragile and snapped off during some clumsy handling or overexuberant procession. (Think how bad the guy who accidentally amputated Jesus’ legs must feel.)

As if that weren’t enough, the woman proceeds to lift the skirts of every santo on the altar, and there are a lot of them: no one is disfigured like Jesus, but there are some pretty nice carvings on Saint Lucy’s and Mary’s nether regions. Who knew? But I don’t suppose it’s appropriate for me to go looking under the skirts of statues next time I’m in church. Better leave it to the experts.

This leads to my next post: pictures that won’t appear in Moon Handbooks Santa Fe, Taos & Albuquerque

The Amsterdam Diet (TM)

I’m not in the habit of weighing myself, but after ten days in Amsterdam, I’m sure I lost weight. And it’s not an isolated incident: this happens on every trip. It also happens to Peter, who was the first one to identify this seemingly contradictory phenomenon.

Here are the apparent components of this miraculous weight-loss system:

1) Beer, and lots of it
Amsterdam, like everywhere else until the late nineteenth century, had no reliable drinking water, so everyone drank beer. Looking at the canals today, I’m still not sold on tap water. So, beer it is, with nearly every meal.

2) French fries
Or Belgian fries (vlaamse frites), as they’re called. So good, they’re twice-fried. And served with garlic mayo. Sometimes I get the satay sauce too–y’know, for protein.

3) Herring
The only remotely “healthy” thing in the diet: raw filets of this luscious fatty little fish. If you think herring only comes in pickled, think again. In the Netherlands, you can get it at street carts, served with diced onions and sort-of-sweet pickles, on a squishy white-bread bun. Carb-fearers can go bunless, but it’s harder to get all the things in your mouth together.

4) Fizzy water
OK, I lied. It’s not all beer, all the time. I take an occasional break with Spa Rood (Spa with a red label), the best fizzy water ever because the bubbles are HUGE and almost violent. And maybe they keep me feeling full.

5) Stroopwafels
Feeling low? Give yourself an insane sugary boost with a caramel-filled crispy cinnamon cookie. Then go pass out when the sugar disperses. Or you can keep the high going with a little…

6) Koffie verkeerd
Coffee with tons of steamed milk. I actually can’t drink too much of this because it gives me flashbacks to the summer of ’95, when I nearly killed myself with coffee. I worked till about 2am every day, then shot the shit with my fellow bartender, Ed Coughlin (Ed, where the hell are you?), till 5 or 6am. Then we woke up around 2pm (handily, we were sharing this totally dodgy attic apartment with no bathroom, just two mattresses on the floor and an Ikea leatherette couch we’d scrounged) and drank coffee till 5pm, when we went to work. Oddly, I was nauseous almost every single day. Then one day, I didn’t drink any coffee. And I felt great. Hey, stomach lining: Sorry I’m such a slow learner. But I think I was really skinny that summer, between all that coffee and the menthol cigarettes.

7) Whoppers
Burger King is a Dutch chain, right? I’ve never eaten so many Whoppers as I have in Amsterdam, always in pursuit of the elusive Free Whopper after consuming ten, but always misplacing my punch card. One bite of a Whopper gives me a little Proustian flashback to 1994, when there was still a flower vendor on the Leidseplein, and the weather was bizarrely hot and all I did all day was make sandwiches and try to keep my arm cast from getting wet.

Alongside this daily menu (consume in any order, in any quantity), you must do one thing:

**Bicycle everywhere.**

I think the biking covers a multitude of sins, though why biking should work better to keep you fit in Amsterdam than in NYC (where I also bike everywhere, and for longer distances) is beyond me. Maybe all those little tiny bridges add up to more effort in the long run?

Also, I think it helps significantly if you:

**Sleep until after noon.**

This way, you end up eating only a couple of meals a day, because it’s impossible to find anything to eat after midnight except for at the Texaco (which, for the record, is the only place to buy cans of Heineken in the wee hours…or did Rod say they quit that?).

You may notice that I don’t really deal with pot, which, honestly, is all anyone thinks of when you say the word Amsterdam anyway. Marijuana was an integral part of the Amsterdam Diet back in 1994 and 1995, but now it’s barely a factor. In any case, I think it’s fine to incorporate it into your plan as long as you can be either 1) so jaded about it as to not yield to the munchies (never, ever buy anything but frites from Febo) or 2) high only after midnight, when there’s nothing to eat. As for all the other drugs you think of when I say Amsterdam, they’re all of the naturally slimming variety anyway. Dancing is very, very good for you.

I can’t say I’m proud of the way I eat and drink in Amsterdam, and occasionally I do eat really good and proper meals at nice restaurants or cooked at people’s houses (in fact, there’s a whole book floating around out there with my restaurant recs).

But I can’t argue with weight-loss success. I could publish a detailed book on the Amsterdam Diet, but for you my friends, special price of free. Just let me know how it works out for you.

Fab!ulicious

Just to give you a sense of context, that’s the current motto of Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport. Yes, Fab!ulicious, with the exclamation point. When has an airport ever been so cool?

And when has a city ever been so cool as on April 30, Queen’s Day? According to the Metro paper (Amsterdam is so cool, it got this fluffy daily commuter tabloid years ago, well before NYC did), more than 400,000 people came out on the streets in Amsterdam on Saturday to celebrate the queen’s birthday, the Netherlands’ biggest national holiday. That’s more than half the city’s population. Some 160,000 people came in from elsewhere on the train.

Total number of arrests that day: 60.

I don’t see something like this happening in the States, ever–and not just because we don’t have a queen. (The name of the one here is Beatrix, by the way–Trixie, for short.) But in Amsterdam, it’s totally normal for everyone from 3-year-old kids to twinkly eyed grannies to push out into the streets and canals in their best House of Orange gear and party like rock stars. I even saw a Sikh wearing a bright orange turban. (And the Dutch complain immigrants don’t assimilate enough!)

As a bonus–that is, alongside all the public beer vendors, blaring techno and disco anthems, boats full of aging rock stars playing live sets, people wearing orange feather boas and so on–Queen’s Day produces what’s probably the world’s largest yard sale. Something about vendor’s licenses (and a lack of yards) prohibits people from selling their junk on the street the rest of the year, but on this one day, it’s a flea free-for-all. Days before, people start marking out their patches of sidewalk with tape and chalk; you can practically hear people sorting out all their useless crap behind their doors.

I didn’t wake up early enough to see the good stuff, I admit (the night before is Queen’s Night, when everyone goes out to clubs)–but there was something so bizarrely heartwarming about all this optimistic commerce, even at 3pm, when the only stuff anyone had left was totally useless. And in between people selling puffy-shoulder leather jackets and decks of 49 cards and raspberry tarts rendered in ceramic were other entrepreneurs: an 8-year-old girl busking with her accordion, for instance, and a booth selling Polaroid photo ops of you sticking your head out from between Princess Maxima’s legs (Will you be the next royal child?”).

With everyone high on something, or just plain drunk or giddy, all the bizarre street action and the steady roaming around through crowds, it felt a lot like Burning Man. But, and here’s the heresy, it was better, and precisely because money was changing hands. I didn’t think I was much of a capitalist, but commerce honestly did improve the experience, and not just because there was someone prepared to sell me a super-dense and delicious orange-frosted donut or a pancake cut into the shape of a crown and covered in orange sprinkles. (Also, by the way, there was a lot of pumpkin soup and fresh orange juice being sold–because they’re, duh, orange.) Because I could choose who to give my money to, I didn’t have to accept pointless kitschy trinkets with a smile as part of a “gift economy”, as I do at Burning Man. Instead, I could laugh my ass off at some enthusiastic Dutch guy doing his best third-world salesman impression (“You buy! My friend! Special price!”) after we picked over his 1970s Dutch cookbooks and vinyl suitcases and said no thanks. We could give a euro to the accordion girl, and maybe she’d do better in the future. We could stop every two blocks and buy another beer, rather than having to schlep them on our backs all around the desert, or risk dying of thirst. We could nod sagely at the dangers of accumulating too much stuff as a woman ankle-deep in golf balls, hair straighteners, egg cups and other flotsam, wailed, “I can’t give this stuff away!” (And I could buy a perfectly decent pair of sandals from her for one euro.)

I guess it makes me a grumpy, art-hating anti-idealist, but even though I’m fond of the temporary dreamland of Black Rock City, I do like cities the way they function now–especially Amsterdam, which is almost ridiculously too functional. And even when it’s not Queen’s Day, there are enough kooks in the streets and enough do-what-you-want attitude that it’s kind of like BRC year-round. I’ve been going to Amsterdam since 1994, and envying so many things about the place all along (No working poor! Bikes everywhere! Topless women on billboards!), but I do appreciate it more after having been to Burning Man, because it’s comforting to know that this ideal place that 30,000 people strive for every September is at least partially existent over here in Europe all the time. I’m perfectly willing to carry my wallet around for that.

Ow.

Yesterday, when my nose was all clogged up, I bought some chile from this guy in Chimayo, a little village that happens to be a heavy-duty pilgrimage site (there’s a church with healing dirt in it), as well as a super-sketched-out heroin zone, although that’s subsiding a little. I’d meant to just dash in and grab some red stuff and run, but this guy wanted to do his whole spiel, feeding me pistachio nuts and making me try all the different roasts and so on: “Yeah, you’re really going to trip out on this one, chiquita!” I won’t stoop to trying to spell his accent phonetically, but one of the great things about the NM idiolect is that even old-school Spanish dudes and super-cool cholos use hippie language. So, soon enough, we were rapping, and he’s telling me about all the heavy dreams he’d been having, and how he’d been tripping out on these totally spiritual customers he’d had the day before. One was this really intense lady who’d come running up and pushed everyone else out of the way, and asked for the hottest thing he had. He showed her the powdered green chile, and she grabbed a pinch and went and snorted it. So, of course, he then tried it later on, and damn, it cleared him right out. After the pain subsided, of course. He said his one nostril was totally clear, while his other one still sounded like a spark plug not quite firing.

To congested me, this is sounding pretty good. But for the record, I’ve never even seen powdered green chile before. It reminds me of some friend of a friend’s story about trying to sell burnt-up banana peel to his friends as “Turkish black dust,” or “TBD” on the streets. So maybe I just stumbled onto a little Chimayo specialty—I must’ve missed the part where the guy asked me if I liked to party.

And a tiny part of me is thinking, Gosh, if I stick this green chile up my nose, I can write about it on my blog. Which then reminds me of how I once saw Jeffrey Steingarten talking about how even though he does seem to get up to crazy stuff in his essays, he tries never to make a story, only follow one. Snorting powdered green chile does smack of making a story.

….

So I just did the half-assed thing, and snorted a little bit. Not very far up my nose, because I’m a chicken. And it burned like a mother. But now it feels kind of good, in exactly that same pleasure:pain ratio as good hot food ingested the normal way, through your mouth. I kind of want to try it again.

Winding down in Santa Fe

Yes, I went to Aqua Santa. Yes, it was all that. (Fennel and olive and blood-orange salad! The pasta with the clams and lamb sausage and helllllla garlic! Lillet up the wazoo!) But NO, those fuckers didn’t have the Meyer lemon mousse. They knew I’d love them anyway, with their cute little flowery thrift-store granny plates, and their butter-yellow walls and their gigantic kilim as the only decoration in the whole room, oh and their fireplace. I had a passionfruit panna cotta instead. I _guess_ that’s OK.

I also went to Tiny’s, a local [New] Mexican institution. Now, Tiny’s—there’s a restaurant you can judge by its exterior. I mean, with a name like that, it’s gonna be good. And the interior was straight from my childhood. It wasn’t an exact replica of my local of yore, Pete’s, aka “The Home of the Half-Breed,” which was the clever name for the steak-enchilada combo plate. But the spirit was the same, in the stucco-texture glossy white walls hung with bad Southwestern art, with lighting a little too bright in the resto and too dim in the lounge. As an added bonus, there was also a large-scale model train running around the central chandelier, and a vast collection of ceramic novelty flagons, all gnomes and pheasants and Bavarians gathering dust. Every person in the place, man and woman, had very obviously dyed hair.

One brassy lady could be me in 40 years, grabbing her wine glass back from the waitress to take one last sip…even though the waitress had brought her a whole fresh glass. Of course she made a saucy joke about it as she did it—but who orders wine in a restaurant where you’re going to eat cheese and chile and fried dough? Only a serious alkie, that’s who. She looked like she was enjoying her night out with her lavender-haired lady friend, so who am I to judge?

I had a big mess o’ chile and cheese in the form of chiles rellenos, a tasty dish in which tortillas, a typical building block of any NM dish, are replaced by deep-fried egg batter. Brilliant. But any sinus-unclogging the chile might have done was surely canceled out by the mucous-enhancing powers of the dairy products. (Did I mention I’ve contracted a hideous cold? I drive around all day sneezing and hoping I don’t drive into oncoming traffic in that second when my eyes squeeze shut.) But even though my green chile didn’t have the instant-healing benefits it’s usually credited with, it was worth it just to sit there and savor all the New Mexican charm, such as the waitress saying, “See ya, Shorty!” to a guy who really was short, and the sound of a heavy ceramic plate hitting the glass tabletop, just as the server gives the obligatory, “This plate is very hot” line. And the band setting up in the lounge saying, “Testing, testing” for the fortieth time.

And the sopaipillas so hot out of the fryer I couldn’t touch them right away. The waiter even brought me butter with them, which I have never, ever encountered. I tried a little, but, for the first time in my life, I have to say they’re better without butter. Just honey. Coming so soon after saying for the first time that I might’ve preferred walking to riding my bike for one particular moment, I feel like the whole world is sort of slipping on its axis. But maybe that’s just the Sudafed talking.

Speaking of the world slipping on its axis…[rant starts here], I’ve been splitting my time between 97.3 KISS FM and 104.1 (“Latino and proud”) for all my latest hip-hop needs, and I heard the song that officially makes me old and cranky: its refrain and tune is taken from one of my favorite Talking Heads songs, but in this case, it’s about gettin’ with his lady: “Sugar on my tongue/Yippee yippee, yum yum.” Normally this doesn’t bother me—it’s the march of progress and postmodern repurposing and all. I didn’t get in a lather like some people when what’s-their-names used “Every Move You Make” as an RIP for whoever-it-was-who-got-shot. At least they meant well. But dang, I hope David Byrne made some cold cash off his song getting sold out for pure skank.[end rant]

Off to bed. Home soon. Home to the land of pavement, where there is no mud, nor big jumpy dogs. Nor men who wear shotgun shells on their belts. Nor green chile, alas. There’s always a trade-off.

I HATE when that happens…

By which I mean I hate when I eat a crappy dinner, and then come out and realize I should’ve eaten at the fantastically gorgeous, well-priced and delicious place just down the block.

I fell victim to my own indecision and hunger, the very thing I hate when traveling with other people. I missed lunch, then sat around all late afternoon emailing and working, and so was ravenous and incoherent when I stepped outside. The animal-hairy B&B owner (herself very nice and clean) had mentioned several places in the area, a couple of which I was curious about anyway, and one new one that I hadn’t heard of — Aqua Santa, right across the street. So I wandered out, and didn’t see Aqua Santa, so bore left toward the other two places I’d been curious about.

But this was C-grade curiosity, really. Both of these places came with warning signs: one had a big photo of mariachis out front, and no menu; another had a menu featuring veal marsala, and hand-written notes of praise, all faded, tacked to its board. The former was totally packed and boisterous-looking, and I didn’t feel up to a Mexican party bonanza, even if it was well loved by locals, as the B&B owner claimed. So I went for the latter, despite heavy misgivings.

In the school of judging-a-book-by-its-cover restaurant reviewing from the outside, from which I like to think I’ve earned a PhD, all its pros could also be cons, and vice versa: dorky name (Dinner for Two…even though they also serve lunch), random location, low-rent atmosphere, low- and high-brow menu (veal marsala, but also an escolar special, with saffron risotto), open kitchen, little white tree lights, chef boasting of CIA credentials on menu.

One or two of these elements could be the sign of a hidden gem; all of them, in retrospect, mean disaster. I think because of Kabab Cafe, which looks a little unpromising from the outside, I have a weak spot for this kind of dressed-down, seemingly amateur setup. I got burned on a similar guess in Montreal last spring, but unfortunately that didn’t spring to mind when I hesitated on the doorsill of Dinner for Two. I just spun a heartwarming tale of East Coast chef trying to make it in the Wild West, and went in.

This was the sort of meal in which I mentally compose a positive-spin review for the guide, trying at every turn to justify it, but really…no. No “If Casa Sena is out of your price range, but you still want some multicourse pampering…” No “throwback charms (entree price includes soup or salad) add value while delivering modern cuisine…” Certainly no “surprisingly good selection of wines by the glass.” My waiter–who said, “Here is my wine menu, and here is my food menu,” so perhaps he was his waiter–was out of my requested Viognier, so brought me another one that was incredibly bad-smelling, in a way I didn’t know white wine could be. He offered another, better one, but it too tasted as though it had sat in the fridge for ages–and I’m not really a picky wine person.

I guess I’m coming off like a snob, but it’s been a long time since I’ve been in such a low-rent but trying-hard restaurant. There’s something odd about a menu that describes a dish as “warmed white bean stew.” I mean, I hope it’s warmed. Did they know they needed an adjective at the beginning, so just used a Mad Libs menu writer?

I usually associate pretentious with extremely expensive, separating-the-elite-from-the-peons sort of restaurants. This was pretentious in the way that the star of the local community theater production of a Mamet play is pretentious. Dude, you’re wearing the same suit the guy wore for Death of a Salesman, and it hasn’t been cleaned, and it’s only your relatives in the audience, and they’re not getting all your cocaine jokes. I appreciate your enthusiasm and dedication, but have a sense of perspective. In the case of Dinner for Two, “sense of perspective” would mean perhaps not playing Handel’s “Water Music” in your industrially carpeted dining room that seems to be inside a trailer. The black tablecloths and red carnations were very Adam Ant. My waiter was wearing all black. The windows were insulated with plastic sheeting.

Anyway, they were trying sort of hard, and that in itself is not a terrible thing. I got the fresh-black-pepper treatment (though not with the largest peppermill I’ve seen so far in this town, to their credit) on my maybe-it’s-even-bottled blue-cheese baby-greens salad (“That’s my favorite,” purred the waiter when I ordered). Then I got my escolar wrapped in bacon, perched atop my saffron risotto and a spray of baby asparagus. On top of it all was a cheesy pink orchid. “Oh, beautiful!” I couldn’t help exclaiming in that horrible contrary way I have, and hate myself for. Surely the guy can see I think it’s heinous. I ate it all. It wasn’t a big portion, luckily. It tasted like when the corporate caf or your dining hall caters a fancy reception. Not totally egregious, but every bit mysteriously tastes exactly the same.

(As a side note, if that escolar does its Olestra-like thing on me, I will be very, very upset.)

Then the dessert course–I ask what they are, but I hear nothing I want. Bananas Foster done tableside–For Two, natch–is by far the most appealing; cherries jubilee is the other a deux option…I thought it was extinct. So then I’m in the awkward position of having to say, “No [none of those things sound good, and I’d rather end my meal with a dry piece of toast than have one of those boring desserts], thanks. Check, please.”

Forty dollars later (wait, wasn’t this supposed to be the bargain option, according to the review I was writing in my head?), I stagger into the street, thinking vaguely how I might feel better if I just threw up. Two nights ago, I spent $40 on a meal in a marginally less dodgy place, but walked away happy–at least then, I’d ended with a really good bread pudding and an espresso with a beautiful crema. That place, Il Piatto (since we’re naming names), was not a superlative Italian restaurant, but it was satisfying–the sort of one-step-above-mediocre place that locals like because it happens to be in walking distance and they know everyone, and the sort of place that visitors appreciate because there are so many locals there, and in the case of New Mexico, it’s not serving enchiladas, which you may be well sick of by Day 4 of your Santa Fe sojourn. At Dinner for Two, I couldn’t tell whether the clientele was local or visitor, but one table (of two others besides me) was riveted by a story of a man who drank tequila with ketchup, as he’d apparently run out of mixers. I think the woman telling it, in her 50s, was maybe recounting a college story, but it could’ve also been from a recent trip to Mexico. It was hard to hear over the Handel.

After Dinner for Two, I figured I’d better put in an appearance at the local piano bar, since it’s right across the parking lot from where I’m staying. I looked forward to nursing a strong drink in the dark. No such luck–Vanessie is the airiest, loftiest, pale-piniest piano bar in eight states, and the crowd was all straight people from some healthcare convention. The white-haired ones were drinking things with creme de menthe, but that’s as campy as it got. I pretended to get a cell phone call and ran out before someone could take my drink order.

Out in the parking lot was when I realized my real error. Or rather, had the salt ground into my wound. Across from the Ikea piano bar was Aqua Santa. Modest sign (why I hadn’t seen it before), in that attractive serif font where the tail on the Q curves under the next letter, and a little silhouetted sheaf of wheat between the two words, all of which are graphic design shorthand for modern, artisanal, hand-crafted. Warm cream walls. Kiva fireplace. Woman with pink-streaked hair listening seriously to older mentor-like artsy woman at one table. A mob of happy, winding-down people at another table, sipping dessert wines. I ask to look at a menu, and the waiter, all young and charming and serious, but not too serious, says, “Here, take it with you…and a card.”

Nice heavy parchment. Minimal use of adjectives. The wine list takes up two-thirds of the page and is all old world. Lillet is the house aperitif. The food is just one or two things in each course, but I could eat all of them: creamy cauliflower soup with Parmesan breadcrumbs. Fireplace roasted beets, endive and dried apricot salad. Linguine with Manila clambs, lamb sausage, bread crumbs and Pecorino. Braised shepherd’s lamb with roasted garlic, polenta and hazelnuts. AND, hell YES, panna cotta with passion fruit and blood orange. Oh, and Meyer lemon mousse. And all of it cheaper than at DfT.

I almost wanted to sit down and eat dinner all over again, but the kitchen was clearly cleaning up. So I asked what days a week they’re closed. Sunday and Monday, alas. So I have to wait two days to dine with my true love. Aqua Santa, I apologize for anything that’s come before, for all my dining indiscretions–I was desperate…and you’d better have that Meyer lemon mousse on Tuesday.

Santa Fe skyline


I may sound grumpy, but damn, it sure is pretty here. This is the downtown skyline, from left: the Loretto Chapel, allegedly the first Gothic structure built west of the Mississippi, of course by a French colonialist bastard, Bishop Lamy; the St. Francis Cathedral, weirdly stunted because Lamy ran out of cash and good will before he could build the spires; and the Inn at Loretto faux-pueblo hotel, built on the ruins of the old Loretto nuns’ girls school, so allegedly mean-spirited women in wimples haunt the halls.