Restaurant Reviews

The Authenticity Myth

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My dining companion, Jay Francis, is married to a Mexican woman and has just returned from a family wedding in Mexico City. I ask Jay to read the menu and tell me which dishes he would consider authentically Mexican. The first two items on the appetizer menu, seviche Costeño and ostiones diabla (oysters au gratin), pass Jay's authenticity test. The remaining six appetizers -- crab cakes, a spinach artichoke dip, fried calamari, queso fundido with flour tortillas, nachos, and shrimp stuffed with cream cheese -- do not.

The tacos, enchiladas, soups and salads are all Mexican enough (with a few exceptions). There are three purely Tex-Mex entrées: fajitas de camarón, fajitas de pollo and fajita prime sliced. But we puzzle over some of the others: huachinango Pontchartrain with brown butter sauce and lump crab meat? Pollo Cuernavaca, "chicken breast topped with artichoke hearts in a mustard pepper sauce"? Filete forest, "mesquite grilled prime tenderloin smothered in a pepper mustard garlic wine sauce"? Is this Lou-Mex or French-Mex?

If you have eaten in an upscale restaurant in Mexico City, you know what's happening here. This is exactly the kind of Europeanized food that elite Mexicans favor. For diners in Mexico City, authenticity is hardly a concern, but in Texas, this kind of European-style Mexican food is simply ludicrous. Who wants to go to a Mexican restaurant and eat a bad imitation of French food?

Let's give the place a chance, Jay suggests. So we order the two most Mexican-sounding dishes we can find. I get the huachinango Azteca, a red snapper fillet with cuitlachoche (the Mexican gourmet corn fungus), and Jay gets carne asada tampiquena. The snapper is a little dry, and the cuitlachoche is mixed with artichoke hearts. I'm not sure if artichoke hearts are an authentic Mexican ingredient, but the dish is so boring, I don't really care. Jay's dinner, on the other hand, is very interesting, and I help myself to a "little taste."

"There was a restaurant in Mexico City in the 1930s called Club Tampico," Jay tells me. "It was like the Brown Derby of Mexico City. The owner was from Tampico, and he served this dish, carne asada tampiquena. It became famous all over Mexico." On Jay's plate, which is now sitting in front of me, there is a grilled steak, an enchilada with a little chile sauce, rice and refried beans. The steak is tender and juicy, and the enchilada and chile sauce make a perfect complement. It is a robust, if somewhat familiar, combination. "My theory is that carne asada tampiquena worked its way up to Texas in the 1930s, where it became known in Tex-Mex restaurants as the combination dinner," says Jay.


According to scholars of Mexican-American studies, Houston's "Immigrant Era" ended in the 1930s. But in some American cities, the "Immigrant Era" is just beginning. That's why, right now, the most authentic Mexican food in the United States is probably in Chicago. There are more than a million Mexicans in Chicago, more than in Houston or San Antonio, and most of them are newly arrived. The Mexican restaurants I have visited in Chicago's Pilsen district are unconsciously authentic; the owners serve the same stewed goat and pork in chile sauce as they did in Mexico, simply because they have no other frame of reference. Rick Bayless, the chef and owner of Frontera Grill in Chicago and probably America's foremost authority on Mexican food, discussed the phenomenon with me one day over lunch.

"When somebody from Mexico moves to Texas or California, the Chicano community is there to teach them how things are done," says Bayless. "But that doesn't happen in Chicago. The Mexicans here are almost all first-generation, and they still cook the way they did in Mexico. There's nobody here to show them what Americanized Mexican food is supposed to be like."

In Houston, newly arrived immigrants play a different role.


At Matamoros Meat Market No. 4 on Washington Avenue, I stand before a glass case filled with glistening pieces of roasted buche (pork stomach), deep-fried chicharrones (crunchy fat) and several choices of stewed meats in long trays. There is a sign that says, "barbacoa $5.50, barbacoa de cachete $5.99." I know that Tejano barbacoa is made from a long-cooked cow's head, but I ask the guy in front of me what "cachete" means. He says it means cheek meat.

We strike up a conversation. His name is Marcello Martinez, and he says he works in an office off Highway 290. He has driven all the way to Matamoros Meat Market to buy his lunch. "It's that good," he says with a smile. Today he is ordering the pork and green chile stew. "It's kind of like pozole, but with potatoes," he says. "And it's very spicy." I ask him what are the brown things that look like prunes in the carne deshebrada (shredded beef brisket). "They are big pieces of chipotle peppers," he says. "And they are unbelievably hot." Some restaurants offer things like barbacoa and carnitas on the weekends, but at Matamoros, you can buy them every day, which makes the place a favorite among local Mexican-Americans, and especially among recent immigrants from Mexico.

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Robb Walsh
Contact: Robb Walsh

Best of Houston® 2024

Best Of Houston® 2024: Best Restaurant in Memorial

Photo by Caroline Fontenot
Best Restaurant in Memorial: Bar Bludorn

Just west of downtown, the old neighborhood of Memorial is rapidly gaining momentum as a dining destination. Case in point, Aaron Bludorn, one of Houston’s buzziest chefs and restaurateurs, made the super hood home to his latest concept, a sophisticated tavern with mod takes on American bistro food with a Third Coast touch. Along with delightful dishes like country ham beignets, cornmeal-crusted snapper with potlikker broth, and hanger steak frites au poivre comes Bludorn’s world-class service, with staff that warms and welcomes guests, a thoughtfully curated beverage menu, and flawless attention to detail.

9061 Gaylord
832-271-8264
barbludorn.com
KEEP THE HOUSTON PRESS FREE... Since we started the Houston Press, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Houston, and we'd like to keep it that way. With local media under siege, it's more important than ever for us to rally support behind funding our local journalism. You can help by participating in our "I Support" program, allowing us to keep offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food and culture with no paywalls.
The Houston Press is a nationally award-winning, 34-year-old publication ruled by endless curiosity, a certain amount of irreverence, the desire to get to the truth and to point out the absurd as well as the glorious.
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Things To Do

Upcoming Houston Food Events: Old Fashioned Week and a Diwali Feast

Feast on a vibrant Diwali menu at Musaafer.
Feast on a vibrant Diwali menu at Musaafer. Photo by Raydon Creative
Mark your calendars, because you don’t want to miss these deliciously fun culinary happenings:

Le Jardinier, 5500 Main, is partnering with the organic wine grower Famille Perrin Winery for a special dinner on Tuesday, October 15. Guests can taste the richness of Southern Rhône Valley wines ( ($140 per guest) enhanced by executive chef Felipe Botero’s five-course Seasonal Expression tasting menu ($185 per guest) featuring poached lobster, roasted squash with mimolette cheese, pan-seared scallops, tea spiced duck breast and seasonal peach mousse. Reservations can be made via Resy, OpenTable or info@lejardinier-houston.com.

On Wednesday, October 16 from 6:30 to 10 p.m., Brennan’s, 3300 Smith, will be joined by special guests Jack Choate from Heaven Hill Distillery and members of Southern Smoke Foundation for an evening of food, drink and stories celebrating Elijah Craig Old Fashioned Week. Tickets ($125, with $15 donated to SSF) include welcome bubbles and passed appetizers followed by a three-course paired dinner, with features including Shrimp Rémoulade paired with straight and toasted rye; an entree choice of Wood Grilled Beef Tenderloin in Creole Au Poivre or Pecan-Crusted Gulf Fish paired with an Elijah Craig Old Fashioned; and Bananas Foster alongside a toasted specialty cocktail.

The 20th annual H-E-B Wine Walk will take place on Thursday, October 17 from 6 to 9 p.m., inviting guests to sip, nosh and stroll down Market Street while supporting charity organizations including New Danville, The Woodlands Waterway Arts Council and Montgomery County Food Bank. Expect dozens of culinary offerings from area restaurants, chefs and caterers, wine displays with industry experts, craft beers, live music and wine experiences over three blocks. General admission tickets are $79, with VIP Premium Lounge tickets priced at $135.

La Fête du Champagne is back for its second year in Houston, celebrating wines of the Champagne region through a series of immersive events, tastings and dinners. On Friday, October 18, guests can enjoy a Laurent-Perrier Grand Siècle – The Art of Assemblage Lunch at Navy Blue, 2445 Times, at noon ($425 per person); or a Champagne Lanson Dinner at Bar Bludorn, 90611 Gaylord, at 6:30 p.m. ($950 person). On Saturday, October 19, guests are invited to a bubbly sharing La Fête Dinner at Bludorn, 807 Taft, at 6:30 p.m. ($725 per person).

Musaafer, 5115 Westheimer, invites the community to celebrate Diwali, aka the festival of lights, offering a special menu from October 18–November 1. Created by chef Mayank Istwal, the feast showcases elevated renditions of classic dishes throughout India’s vibrant regions alongside festive sweets and artisanal cocktails infused with flavors of saffron, cardamom and rose. In addition to the menu, guests can enjoy an immersive cultural experience and late-night dancing at a “Bollywood Burnout” on October 25, beginning at 10 p.m.

Etoile Cuisine et Bar, 1101-11 Uptown Park, will host a very special 12th Anniversary Wine Dinner at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 24. Chef Philippe Verpiand will feature four courses, withf lobster, foie gras, roasted rack of lamb and more alongside cherry-picked wines. Cost is $124 per person, plus tax and gratuity. Reservations are required by calling 832-668-5808. 
KEEP THE HOUSTON PRESS FREE... Since we started the Houston Press, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Houston, and we'd like to keep it that way. With local media under siege, it's more important than ever for us to rally support behind funding our local journalism. You can help by participating in our "I Support" program, allowing us to keep offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food and culture with no paywalls.
Brooke Viggiano is a contributing writer who is always looking to share Houston's coolest and tastiest happenings with the Houston Press readers.
Contact: Brooke Viggiano