Tag: beer

Mexico #4: Howdy, Cowboy

In Tizimin, I was driving around the main square, and I noticed there was an awful lot of horse shit in the street. “What happened here?” I wondered out loud. “Did we just miss a parade?”

That was a little bit of a joke for my mom, who was in the passenger seat. See, she and my brother* are all nature-y, and go hiking around in the woods looking for animal dung so they can figure out what the animals have been up to. So I was being an urban tracker. I started following the horse shit, but soon I lost the trail, and I had to check the bus schedules anyway.

As we were driving out of town, we found the parade. Or we found the tail end of it–a huge mob of people on horseback, waiting for the procession to move forward. It was a good two blocks of horses, all edging and prancing and shuffling around. Moms, kids, and loads of cowboys were all saddled up and ready to ride.

Horse Parade

I’ve never seen so many horses in the Yucatan. Aside from the Pollo Vaquero logo, you just don’t see a lot of cowboy imagery in the Yucatan. That whole open-plains, rope-and-ride, oompah-music kind of scene doesn’t happen here, because there aren’t a lot of cows.

Horse ParadeExcept for around Tizimin. I’m not sure how or when the ranching industry got started here, but the forest has been cleared, and I guess cows graze around in the tall greenery somewhere–I haven’t actually seen a lot of them, but I have eaten their meat, at an excellent restaurant in Tizimin. It was heartwarming, seeing all this Western wear–plaid shirts, big hats. I grew up around that, and even if I’m a city slicker now, I do like horses. If my previous posts were about seeing odder things than expected, this afternoon was all about being surprised by a more familiar thing.

Horse Parade

And then, this guy. He looks completely Arab, and not just because he was a foot taller than everyone there. Lebanese and Syrians came to the Yucatan in the early 20th century. This guy’s family must’ve gotten into ranching at some point.

Horse Parade

You might’ve noticed a lot of beer cans in the previous photos. Yup, a beer company was sponsoring the whole shindig. These guys just skipped the horses and rode the truck.

Horse Parade

I’m a terrible reporter. I have no idea what the parade was for (though we did see a statue of the Virgin being carried down one of the streets). I just liked the pretty horses.

*Regular readers of this blog may know, but it never hurts to remind: my brother just wrote a great book for hiking around in the woods looking for other animal sign: Bird Feathers: A Guide to North American Species.

*Flickr set from this trip
*Mexico #1: Where the Party at?
* Mexico #2: Partying on…and on
*Mexico #3: Party Favors
* Mexico #5: Snack Break!
* Mexico #6: Back Roads

Best of RG IV, in which I give props to Queens

Joanie and Chachi seem to have stepped out for a moment. Or I’m not hearing their dopey dialogue in my head right now, which I guess is a sign my health is improving? Gosh, those antibiotics were pretty intense.

Anyway, this blog is ostensibly about how much I love Astoria, but the poor nabe hasn’t gotten too much specific attention of its own.

This essay in praise of the local supermarket won’t make you yuk it up the way talk of aggressive thong underwear does, but, people, we should learn to be serious sometimes, yes? Especially about something as essential as groceries.

A moment of somber silence, as the screen goes wiggly and we’re transported back to the cramped aisles of Trade Fair…

January 27, 2004
Astoropolis

Why do I love my neighborhood so? It’s all about the groceries. (Has “It’s all about…” ever had those words tacked on the end?)

When I first got off the train in Astoria, when I’d first arrived in New York and was looking for an apartment, one of the first things I saw was a huge mass of glossy black eggplants, all beautifully stacked in a pile that went well above my head. I love stacks of vegetables. There’s nothing more gorgeous to me than a produce stand in the wee hours of the night (and in Astoria, the stores are open in the wee hours), when all the bruised things have been chucked and all the fresh stuff is neatly arranged. So, considering that most other neighborhoods I’d visited could offer nothing more than a few over-waxed oranges and a limp bunch of scallions, I was totally sold.

In the last five years, you’d think I would’ve discovered all the food there is to buy in my neighborhood, but I keep finding new things. Or learning more about different cuisines and finally realizing what that whole dusty shelf of dried potatoes was for, for instance (next research stop: Peru). And every year a new group of people move in, bringing all their food with them: Brazilians, Yugoslavians, Mexicans (in that order, I think). Could they be showing up just to keep me entertained? Sometimes it feels that way: “Tired of gyros? Try my adorable cevapcici!” “Perk up–taste these cheese-and-shrimp-filled pies!”

Over the years, I get more things pinned down (usually with help from Peter, who has even more free time than me): best source of tamarind concentrate and verdolaga (Hidalgo), only source of reasonably crusty well-leavened bread (small Portuguese loaves at Trade Fair), good mint at the Lebanese grocery (look for sign in Arabic saying “we have Moroccan mint”), fish sauce at the produce place under the tracks, stupendous bacon from the Romanian orange-window place, duck fat from the Hungarian deli. But even as I’m poking around, finding New Zealand honey and green coffee beans and forty kinds of beer, this little know-all-eat-all frenzy is building in me… The more I discover, the more I know I haven’t found. And don’t even mention Flushing or Elmhurst.

So this all culminated recently when I visited the Trade Fair Near Tamara (as opposed to the Trade Fair Near Me). Now the TFNM is stupendous enough, with a great array of treats, including loofahs for scrubbing yourself in the proper Middle Eastern way and numerous brands of dulce de leche, as well as that Portuguese bread, but it is nothing compared to the one at 30th Ave. and 31st St. I’d gone to the TFNT once a few years ago, but it didn’t seem worth a special trip. And I’d been a little deterred from going in because Tamara calls it the Trade Scare, and says she’s had to abandon her basket and run screaming out the door because of the crowds.

But I had a small inkling of its treasures when I was trying to rustle up some goat for Karine (for her own carnivorous New Year’s project), and the guy on the phone at the TFNT spoke to me in Spanish for some reason and told me they had it in the regular meat case. At the smaller TFNM, you could only order from the butcher, and they were out of it anyway. Karine picked up her goat (right inside the front door–which seems like a sketchy, un-temperature-controlled place to put your meat case, but soooo instantly gratifying) and came to my house raving about the place. Apparently they’d expanded.

The first time I visited post-expansion was on a quick errand for Tamara. I was gone for what must’ve been hours. I roamed aimlessly, running my hands over stacks of legumes in every color, every imaginable spice in bulk, Lebanese olive oil for $4 a bottle, up and down every aisle. I doubt they had anything that couldn’t be found elsewhere in Astoria, but here they had it all in one place: Pillsbury Ready-Puff Pappadums next to mulukhiya next to banana leaves in the freezer case, above which hung about thirty kinds of dried Mexican chiles. Whole lamb carcasses next to D’Artagnan duck breasts. Organic Valley European-style butter next to those big green tins of Egyptian ghee. Baltika Porter for 99 cents. Banana-flavored tobacco for the sheesha pipe. One aisle still bears the standard-issue “Spanish products” that Trade Fair must send from HQ in the suburban Midwest, to label the Goya stuff. But at the TFNT, “Spanish products” also includes Peruvian huancaina and chile pastes.

There are some serious logistical flaws–“Trade Scare” is no joke. The aisles are just wide enough for one cart, the lines are often eight people deep, the produce section (more of a produce prison) can be reached only by one tiny passageway, and some children always seem to be screaming on aisle 6. I know there are bigger, more amazing international groceries out there, but I don’t live an eight-minute bike ride from them. I live next door to the people who shop here: The Egyptian families buying mulukhiya and Cheez-Its, the men on their cell phones asking which kind of chana dal they should be getting, old ladies shaking the coconuts in the produce section (oh wait, that was me). I feel very lucky, if a little overwhelmed, to live in the Independent Republic of Trade Fair.

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.