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El sabor de México: North Fair Oaks, Redwood City

  • Eat & Drink
  • Feature
  • Food
  • May
  • south bay
Beyond the parklike boundary walls of Atherton and Menlo Park, Middlefield Road opens up onto a Latin American Mayberry of storefronts in Popsicle colors, clusters of young guys in hoodies with patchy mus­taches, and the pervasive smell of grilled chicken. Welcome to Little Michoacán, where most residents can trace their heritage to one of three places: Aguililla, Uruapan, and Apatzingán, a trio of towns that dot Michoacán’s arid, hardscrabble corn-and-rancho country known as La Tierra Caliente. In the 1940s, Salinas farm fields lured La Tierra’s laborers; Redwood City’s now defunct S & W Cannery may have coalesced workers around today’s Little Michoacán. Pork and its apotheosis, carnitas, rule the table in La Tierra. So do the filling, one-pot dishes typical of poor regions everywhere. Here, the most common is morisqueta, a blistering chile stew with local variations, whose name refers to the bed of plain boiled rice that serves as starchy relief. Also look for quail, abundant in La Tierra’s chaparral; the fresh-corn tamales called huchepos; and hardy enchiladas—thick tortillas dipped in chile rojo and accompanied by a hunk of seared bird. These husky dishes are rooted in a rustic landscape.

TAQUERÍA GONZALEZ
Biografía: Born in Michoacán’s capital, Morelia, José Cortes met his wife, co-owner Yolanda Valencia, in Aguililla, where he had a pushcart specializing in birria. In Redwood City, demand at weddings and quinceañeras for Cortes’s goat soup was so high, he and Valencia figured they could make a living from it.
Atmósfera: Vinyl tablecloths shine with the patina of elbows, the Morelia Monarcas soccer team has a shrine on the back wall, and blown-up snapshots trace the switchback road to the hill town of Aguililla. The vibe is guileless and the setting homely, like a Michoacano truck-stop café, with food to match.
Especialidades: Birria—the house specialty—is superb, a consommé-thin broth with the numbing burr of cloves, ladled over a mass of shredded goat, soft and sticky like carnitas. Quail enchiladas tend toward rusticity: Wizened, deep-fried birds lie next to chile-dunked tortillas and hunks of russet potato. And morisqueta, Michoacán’s one-pot classic, is a hefty serving of stewed pork loin and beans, washed in a chili sauce with the seared taste of blistered tomato skins—a dish whose sheer size threatens to immobilize even the burliest truck driver. 3194 Middlefield Rd. (at 5th Ave.), Redwood City, 650-365-6405

PANADERIA MICHOACAN
Biografía: Pedro Baez began working in an Aguililla bakery at age eight. He opened the original Panaderia Michoacan on El Camino in 1978. Nowadays, his daughter, Rosa Garibay, manages four bakers who shape everything by hand daily. And Baez? At 75, he shuttles between Redwood City and his avoc­ado grove in Uruapan.
Atmósfera: Think mom ’n’ pop corner market—dim lighting, tight quarters, and a steady flow of regulars. Look for the self-service trays and tongs near the checkout. You need timing to find the good stuff at this bakery tucked into a corner grocery, where shoppers score roasted sweet potatoes and lotto tickets.
Especialidades: Soft bread rounds called cemas are the house specialty. If you’re lucky, you’ll stumble on still-warm rounds of pan de huevo, lightly sweet loaves sporting caps of rigid streusel tinted gold or bougainvillea pink. That lurid paste runs through elotitos, sweet rolls tapered to resemble corncobs, stamped with scalelike kernels. But looks can fool you: Brown and collapsed, pan de queso (cheesecake) has the gorgeous, glowing sweetness of butterfat. 2940 Middlefield Rd. (at Berkshire Ave.), Redwood City, 650-364-9993

TAQUERIA APATZINGAN
Biografía: Owner Arnolfo Parzo was trained as a vaquero (cowboy) on a rancho outside Apatzingán and drifted north at 19. He also owns a second restaurant on Chestnut Street in Redwood City.
Atmósfera: Blue-collar types and the occasional cluster of tech workers seek out carnivorous bliss in this high-ceilinged taquería, with a meat market, grocery, and money-transfer hub next door. The massive menu board offers a bewildering grid of columns, splashed across the green, white, and red of Mexico’s flag.
Especialidades: Luckily, you can ID the best-looking meats through the glass fronting the steam-table bins. Those include barbacoa, intensely beefy fibers with the richness of short ribs; and carnitas, smooth and pliable as a stick of softened butter, suffused with the glow of rendered pork fat. For all the animal options, you can score some decent huchepos, Michoacán’s sweet and salty fresh-corn tamales. They’re doused in crema thinned out with brine from pickled jalapeños—delicious licked from a plate-swabbing forefinger. 3305 Middlefield Rd. (at 7th Ave.), Menlo Park, 650-365-7174

RINCÓN TARASCO
Biografía:
Married Aguililla natives Isaias and Socorro Valencia launched Rincón Tarasco in the early ’70s. The name is a tribute to a famous plaza in Morelia.
Atmósfera: Faded, salmon-pink damask on the tables, curtains that look like somebody’s auntie ran them up on the Singer, and Michoacano expats exchanging friendly banter between tables.
Especialidades: Begin, like the locals do, with cecina—strips of thin, salty dried beef—splayed out with fingers of queso cotija and pickled carrots. The chiles rellenos are excellent. Twisted, green-tasting pasillas have cores of buttery cotija cheese and a glaze of tangy crema perfumed with a hash of onions and carrots. Despite occasionally stringy flesh, deep-fried huilotas (quail) have a gilded richness that goes well with the lush, tart tomatillo sauce. Order coffee, and the waitress delivers a mug of boiling water and a jar of instant—a fitting end to a meal of frank, unpretentious flavors. 3200 Middlefield Rd. (at 5th Ave.), Menlo Park, 650-216-9212

CHAVEZ SUPERMARKET CARNICERÍA
Biografía: Raised on a rancho outside Aguililla, owner David Chavez parlayed a single Redwood City meat market into a chain of half a dozen South Bay groceries.
Atmósfera: A tidy, well-stocked grocery hung with piñatas of the likes of Dora the Explorer and SpongeBob SquarePants. Check out the folk murals above the bustling carnicería.
Especialidades: The meat counter is a major draw, and its pork carnitas (made on the premises) are among the best on the street. Don’t expect crusty hunks slick with lip-coating fat: The Michoa­cano ideal is plush but dry, more pork roast than rillettes, tenderness collapsing into satisfying stickiness. Buy it in bulk to take home, or devour it—smeared with the carnicería’s complimentary salsa, swaddled in pieces of warm tortilla scored from the restaurant next door—right outside, leaning against the hood of your car. 3282 Middlefield Rd. (at 7th Ave.), Menlo Park, 650-365-6510

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