Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
ICGA Farm Economy Temperature Survey shows farmers concerned
Ohio drought conditions putting farmers in a bind
IPPA rolls out apprentice program on some junior college campuses
Dairy heifer replacements at 20-year low; could fall further
Safety expert: Rollovers are just ‘tip of the iceberg’ of farm deaths
Final MAHA draft walks back earlier pesticide suggestions
ALHT, avian influenza called high priority threats to Indiana farms
Kentucky gourd farm is the destination for artists and crafters
A year later, Kentucky Farmland Transition Initiative making strides
Unseasonably cool temperatures, dry soil linger ahead of harvest
Firefighting foam made of soybeans is gaining ground
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
On the road to dinner  delight in New Mexico

When the lovely Catherine and I slipped out of steamy Illinois for a driving trip to New Mexico on June 30, the last item I tossed into her car was a rain parka. The reason was simple: Wherever we travel, we bring rain.

This trip’s first day, a fast scoot to Oklahoma City, Okla., brought downpour after downpour.

“This makes 16 straight days of rain,” moaned the hotel clerk that evening. “If you’ve got some trick to make it stop, the room’s free.”

Jet black clouds rolled eastward down I-44 the next morning so we paid the $79 tab and lit westward for sun, friends and Albuquerque, N.M.

By midday, the Texas plains baked in crackling heat that we towed with us to Albuquerque, the city’s first 100-degree day in years.
After a long visit with friends Monday, and despite cloudless, ocean-blue skies 50 miles in every direction on Tuesday morning, I replaced the car’s worn wiper blades. “Uh,” noted the guy who insisted on installing ‘em, “you know it doesn’t rain here in the summer, right?”

Oh, it will, my friend. It will.

While he worried about my sanity, I worried about his food. I don’t do hot—salsa, chile (itt’s chile, not chili, in the Land of Enchantment) and the like. The lovely Catherine, however, does, so I knew we’d be roasting our insides as well as our outsides while in New Mexico.

And, true to course, Catherine, impressively, jumped headlong into the salsa bowl while I stuck just a toe in it.

Even more impressive were the menus of the dozen or so restaurants we surveyed while walking around the city’s touristy Old Town in search of supper one night. Every menu touted its locally-raised, organically-raised or locally-raised organic food.

And it wasn’t just the black bowtie places bragging about their perfection. Even the humblest corner joint proudly advertised its food’s origin – as well as their other attraction: $3 margaritas.

New Mexicans have discovered what should be apparent to all us fork-holders: If Ronald MacDonald can make a fuss over his chain-delivered consistency, they can make a fuss over the nationally-known quality of Niman Ranch meat, Maytag blue cheese and other fresh, organically-grown ingredients.

This was especially so in Santa Fe, N.M., one of the nation’s most inviting, food-friendly state capitals. You couldn’t swing a breakfast burrito there and not hit someone dieing to tell you where they had just enjoyed the best meal of their lives.

None lied; every morsel of every meal in Santa Fe – from the Fourth of July’s $6 “Pancakes on the Plaza” to one evening’s big-splurge-of-the-trip, $140 dinner – was equally delicious and detailed.

And, at least to my untrained eye, but well-trained belly, the more fresh, high quality ingredients listed on the menu the longer the line waiting to get in.

Lunch the following day in Taos, N.M. was no different. While we purposely museum- and gallery-hopped until 2 p.m. to hit an out-of-the-way Mexican place after the afternoon crowd had thinned, the crowd was still thickening when we finally were seated at 2:30 p.m.

The meal, again, was superb. My three, enormous, “hand-ground” blue corn tortillas, laden with “only the freshest local ingredients,” were to die, or kill, for – if I was willing to die, or kill for $7.95.
The short drive from Santa Fe to Taos was as stunning as both cities’ food because a rare and powerful thunderstorm lashed most of New Mexico the day before to flood the mountains in clean, bright light.

Two days later, with rain in the forecast for most of New Mexico, our work was done so we headed downhill to meat-and-potatoes Illinois.

The views and opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and not necessarily those of Farm World. Readers with questions or comments for Alan Guebert may write to him in care of this publication.

This farm news was published in the July 18, 2007 issue of Farm World, serving Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan and Tennessee.

7/19/2007