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Getting to Santa Maria is easy: Take the metrobus or metro to Buenavista and walk 3 blocks west from Insurgentes. Alternatively, you can take the metro to San Cosme and walk five blocks north on Torres Bodet or Sta. Maria Ribera, until you arrive at the Alameda (you'll see the Kiosko Moro). All the places I mention are within 3 blocks of the Alameda.
Black Sheep:
La Oveja Negra
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Sabino 215, 2 blocks west of the Alameda, near the market
Tel.: 5541-0405
Open Saturday and Sunday only, from 7:30 AM until around 6 or when the meat runs out, whichever comes first.
No cards – bring cash; parking next door.
Feasting on barbacoa is a weekend tradition all over central Mexico; La Oveja Negra (see my earlier post), family-owned since the 1950’s, is where you’ll find the best I’ve eaten in Mexico. Barbacoa is best ordered by weight–I suggest a half kilo for four. The meat is served wrapped in a penque de maguey (its cooking wrapper), and accompanied by tortillas. The tender, juicy meat hits all the marks. Swathed in a smoky corn tortilla, doused with earthy salsa, this is Mexican food nirvana. What’s their secret? Only the best quality sheep are used. The family has its own ranch in the state of Hidalgo, where they raise livestock organically, as well as producing cheeses and chorizos. How can you go wrong?
Home cooking:
Pozolería La Casa de Toño
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Sabino 166, 2 blocks west of the Alameda
Tel. 2630-1084
Open Monday - Saturday 9 AM - 11 PM, Sunday until 10 PM
Two blocks west of the Alameda is the extraordinary Casa de Toño, a pozolería set in a 19th-century mansion. Thick, red pozole with all the garnishes is the house specialty, although sopes, tostadas and other antojitos are also offered. At $34 pesos for a grande, this is a bargain meal. Rooms decorated with murals and original mosaic floors create a festive, old-time atmosphere.
Mexico Cooks:
La Granadita
corner of Eligio Ancona & Jaime Torres Bodet
Open Tuesday – Sunday until midnight
This “antojerí
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Russian Roulette:
Kolobok Restaurante Ruso
How (or why) this tow-headed Siberian family landed in Mexico City is still a mystery. But here
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Mangia!:
Ristorante Pronto & Ricco
Salvador Díaz Mirón 147-C, 2 blocks West of the Alameda
Tel.: 4334-3777
Open 12-8PM daily, closed Monday
This cute Italian venue is decorated with hip artwork and serves up Italian classics at very reasonable prices. They close early, however.
¡Salud!:
Salón París
Torres Bodet 152, corner Salvador Diaz Mirón, Alameda
This traditional and friendly cantina is supposedly the place where ranchera giant José Alfredo Jiménez got his start singing in public – although some say he was only a waiter here. It is a favorite with locals and still, at times, offers live music. Generous botanas are handed out free during comida hours, so a 33 pesos beer also buys you lunch. On weekends they put out a huge, and reasonably priced buffet.
Nuts to you!:
Restaurante/Bar el Paraiso
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corner Eligio Ancona and Sabino
open daily
This friendly cantina offers a popular sidewalk ‘parrillada’ (BBQ) on Thursdays; for a three drink minimum, you can eat all the grilled meat you want and even sample criadillas (I don’t have to tell you which part of the bull that is, do I?)
Reading and writing:
Don Lázaro El Viajero
Circuito Interior 241, (near Salvador Díaz Míron,
6 blocks west of the Alameda of Sta. Maria la Ribera)
Tel. 5547 0988
Open 365 day a year for breakfast and lunch.
A neigborhood institution that teaches you English or Spanish while you eat. See my recent article:
http://goodfoodmexicocity.blogspot.com/2011/01/city-stories-restaurante-el-viajero-don.html
¡Ojo!:
Pulquería La Xochitl
Eligio Ancona, between Jaime Torres Bodet & Naranjo
This is a traditional and low down pulquería. It is friendly but I don’t suggest that women go here if they want to uphold their reputations.
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A note to my readers: See my recent article in the New York Times on Santa Maria:
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2011/03/06/travel/20110306-SURFACING.html
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2011/03/06/travel/20110306-SURFACING.html