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Mary & Tito’s Cafe – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Mary & Tito's may serve the very best red chile in Albuquerque

Mary & Tito’s, THE very best New Mexican restaurant in the world!

Old-timers whose opinions I respect consistently rate Mary & Tito’s as Albuquerque’s best restaurant for New Mexican food, a restaurant that has been pleasing the most savvy and unindoctrinated palates alike since 1963.  It takes a lot to impress some of those old-timers, none of whom see much substance in the flash and panache of the nouveau restaurants and their pristine veneer and effusive, over-the-top flamboyance.  These guys and gals are impressed only by New Mexican food the way their abuelitas prepared it–unadorned, authentic and absolutely wonderful.  If you want to evoke their ire, take them to one of the chains.  Worse, try sneaking some cumin into their chile.

Just how good is Mary & Tito’s?  In an October, 2009 span of two days, three people whose opinion on food I value weighed in, prompting me to ponder that question and not just take for granted that it’s “one of” the very best restaurants in New Mexico. World-travelers Randy and Bonnie Lake experienced an epiphany during their most recent visit, marveling at just how much better Mary & Tito’s legendary red is than other red chile they’ve ever had.  Bill Resnik who’s authored a cookbook on New Mexican cuisine was more to-the-point, asking why it hasn’t been accorded a “30″ rating–the epitome of perfection in my rating system and a rating I have not bestowed upon any restaurant anywhere.

At a spry 89, Mary still spends time at her restaurant. Photo courtesy of Sandy Driscoll.

A dining experience at such an ideal would have to be absolutely flawless with uncompromising standards and an obvious commitment on the restaurant’s part to providing a dining experience I would want to repeat over and over again.  Obviously the food would have to be more than good; it would have to tantalize, titillate, enrapt my taste buds with every morsel.  Every facet of the meal would have to be like a well synchronized and beautiful ballet in which each course is a prelude to the next and leaves me absolutely lusting for the next bite.

There have been times (many, in fact) in which a magical endorphin high from Mary & Tito’s red chile made my taste buds so unbelievably, deliriously happy that I’ve sworn nothing quite as good has ever crossed my lips.  Immediately after each meal at Mary & Tito’s, I want to repeat it, usually right then and there.  It is simply my very favorite restaurant in New Mexico and now my highest rated in the Land of Enchantment and one of the highest rated across the fruited plain.

Mary & Tito’s legendary carne adovada. Photo courtesy of Sandy Driscoll.

I’m not the only patron this loyal to Mary & Tito’s.  In truth, the restaurant’s walls could probably be covered with framed certificates and accolades feting it as the “best” in one category or another. Instead, you’ll find family photo montages along with photos of some of their loyal customers. For ambiance, this homey restaurant might not win any awards, but for outstanding New Mexican cuisine, it has secured a place in the hearts and appetites of their many guests.

Although the legendary Tito passed away in 1990, his devoted wife Mary Ann Gonzales and their effervescent daughter Antoinette still provide the hospitality for which Mary & Tito’s is renowned. Better yet, they oversee an operation that serves what is arguably the best New Mexican food in New Mexico (ergo the entire universe)–and unequivocally the very best red chile anywhere.  A spry nonagenarian, Mary remains a peripatetic presence at the restaurant, flitting to and from tables to make sure her customers are enjoying their meals.  Invariably, they all are!

Mary & Tito's green chile burrito stuffed with guacamole and rice--one of the very best burritos in the universe!

A rare sight–green chile on a burrito at Mary & Tito’s where red is best!

The red chile has culled a legendary reputation among aficionados. Slathered generously on your entrees, it is a rich red color. At first impression it tastes great, but the more you eat more of it, the more the piquant heat builds up. Oh, the wonderful burn!  Beads of perspiration glisten on my friend Ruben’s forehead with every bite, but he perseveres through that endorphin generating heat with what can only be described as a lusty fervor.  Even when the particular crop of chile isn’t particularly piquant, Mary & Tito’s red chile is always wonderful, so good some frequent guests have no idea what the green chile tastes like.  It’s been so long since I’ve had the green chile that I no longer remember what it’s like.  The red chile is available meatless for diners of the vegetarian persuasion.

Ask the vivacious Antoinette what makes Mary & Tito’s red chile so uniquely wonderful and she’ll tell you that the chile starts off like the chile at most New Mexican restaurants. The difference is in what is done with it.  Mary & Tito’s chile has been purchased from one Hatch grower for years and it’s ground from pods, not made from powder. Beyond that, the restaurant doesn’t adulterate the chile with other than salt and garlic (absolutely no cumin). There is magic in this purity.  There’s also purity in its almost mesmerizing red-orange color and if you look at the edges of your plate, you won’t see the tell-tale signs of the excessive use of a thickening agent such as corn starch.  There’s none of that in this red chile!

A guacamole, beans and rice burrito with red chile. Photo courtesy of Sandy Driscoll.

The green chile (as I remember it) isn’t quite as piquant, but it is very tasty and generously applied to your entrees. For the best of both, ask for your entree to be served “Christmas” style so you can taste both the chile rojo (red) and chile verde (green). Vegetarians can also ask for it without meat.  My friend Lesley King, the wonderful writer whose monthly “King of the Road” column used to grace New Mexico Magazine, visited Mary & Tito’s for the first time in May, 2010 and recognized immediately that at this legendary restaurant, it’s all about the chile, finding both red and green as good as could possibly be made.

My friend Ruben, who for more than a year was engaged in a Holy Grail type quest to find the best carne adovada in the Albuquerque area, is absolutely besotted with Mary & Tito’s rendition. It’s carne adovada the way it’s supposed to be with tender tendrils of moist, delicious pork ameliorated with the best red chile in the metropolitan area.  Cheryl Jamison, the scintillating four-time James Beard Award-winning author, calls the carne adovada “absolutely spectacular.”  As with most entrees, it’s served with beans and rice, both of which are quite good.

A large combination plate: taco, tamale, cheese enchilada, beans and rice

In New Mexico Magazine‘s “Best Eats” issue for 2011, Mary & Tito’s was recognized as having the best carne adovada in the Land of Enchantment.  As one of the seven culinary experts who selected and wrote about New Mexico’s best, it was the choice with which I most agreed.  Though every other honoree is worthy of “best eats” selection, Mary & Tito’s carne adovada stands out, the best of the best!

The enchiladas are certainly among the best in town and I appreciate the fact that you can have them rolled or stacked (my preference with three corn tortillas), the way they’re served throughout Northern New Mexico. Natives and newcomers alike ask for a fried egg on top of the enchiladas, a flavor-enhancer that improves on a New Mexican entree that doesn’t really need any improvement. An “extra beef” option means enchiladas with even more fantastically well seasoned beef.  With red chile, they will make your taste buds ecstatic.

The Monday Special: A large combination plate–taco, chile relleno and cheese enchilada

Burritos are nearly a foot long and served overstuffed. One of the very best burritos anywhere features guacamole, beans and rice along with the aforementioned red or green chile. It is more than half a pound of New Mexican food greatness, especially when the guacamole practically erupts when you press your fork into the burrito.  It’s become the only dish capable of prying me away from the carne adovada–except when I have the combination plate, stuffed sopaipilla, chiles rellenos… I love it all!

With chips, that guacamole is simplicity itself (avocados in their prime, garlic, lime juice, salt), but it is some of the best guacamole in town. The freshness of guacamole made daily from the best avocados is evident.

Chile relleno covered in red.

Chile relleno covered in red.

The chile rellenos are also among the best I’ve ever had, far superior to their world-famous brethren served at Mesilla’s fabled La Posta restaurant. A thin, crispy batter envelops a piquant pepper stuffed with a sharp Cheddar cheese. Each bite produces an endorphin rush and taste explosion.  The rellenos are available on the combination platter as well as a la carte.  As with other entrees at Mary & Tito’s, they’re best smothered with that miraculous red chile.

My friend Sr. Plata had the privilege of first-time visits to both Chope’s and Mary & Tito’s within two weeks of each other.  In his estimation, the chile relleno at Mary & Tito’s is far superior to Chope’s version (which is often considered THE standard-bearer for the genre in the Land of Enchantment).  New Mexicans from the southern half of the state, in particular, might consider it sacrilege, but Sr. Plata reasons that Mary & Tito’s superior red chile is the difference-maker.  He’s calls it the essence of purity and deliciousness.

A huskless tamale smothered in red chile

You won’t find sopaipillas with honey at Mary & Tito’s, but you will find a “Mexican turnover’ resembling an overgrown empanada or Italian calzone. It’s made from sopaipilla dough stuffed with meat, beans, rice and chile then deep fried. It’s Mary & Tito’s version of stuffed sopaipillas and it’s (not surprisingly) among the very best in the city.

Entrees include some of the best refried beans anywhere…and I mean anywhere in the country. They have that “prepared with lard” taste all good refrieds have. Spanish rice also comes with every entree as does a tomato and lettuce garnish. Garnish is one of those plate decorations many people discard. With Mary & Tito’s fabulous red chile, it’s just something else with which to sop up every bit of that chile rojo.

Enchiladas with a fried egg and red chile

Enchiladas with a fried egg and red chile

Your first bowl of salsa is complimentary and it’s so good you’ll certainly finish it off quickly and order another. The chips, like the salsa, are lightly salted and crisp, the perfect size and texture to complement the tomato rich salsa.  The salsa has a nice piquancy but other than tomatoes and chile, there are no discernible additives such as garlic and onion.

Only the con queso gets a less than outstanding mark at Mary & Tito’s. The cheese has that “melted Velveeta” feel and taste and is somewhat gloppy.  Authenticity and utter deliciousness,however, aren’t spared on the chicharrones which compete with those at Cecilia’s Cafe for best in the city.  Chicharrones are Pieces of pork crackling cooked until crunchy and most of the fat is rendered out.  A plateful of chicharrones and a bowl of that legendary red are a great way to start any meal.

Carne Adovada Omelet

Carne Adovada Omelet

Another excellent entree unique to Mary & Tito’s is a carne adovada omelet.  Yes, you did read that correctly.  It’s a multi-egg omelet folded over that outstanding carne adovada then covered in the red chile of my dreams.  There’s no need for any of the usual omelet ingredients when you’ve got carne adovada.

Compliment Antoinette on an outstanding meal and she’ll invariably credit “the guys in the kitchen.” Those guys, the Arguello brothers–Patricio and Louis–are following Tito’s recipes and keeping his culinary legacy alive.  They’ve been working at Mary & Tito’s since they were but teenagers, schooled under the watchful eye of Tito himself.  They’re well versed at their craft. Antoinette will, however, take credit for the terrific desserts available at Mary & Tito’s.

Salsa and chips at Mary & Tito’s

For dessert, an absolute “must have” is Mary & Tito’s take on traditional New Mexican wedding cake, a yellow cake made with walnuts and pineapple and topped with a cream cheese frosting is spectacular.  Antoinette has been making this cake for better than 30 years (though she doesn’t look much older than 30 herself) and says she’s made it thousands of times.  You won’t find any better in New Mexico.  You won’t find anything close.

In January, 2010, Mary & Tito’s was announced as the 2010 recipient of the James Beard Award’s “America’s Classic” honor. A James Beard Award signifies the pinnacle of achievement in the culinary world, the country’s most coveted and prestigious culinary award while the “Americas Classic Award” honors “restaurants with timeless appeal, beloved for quality food that reflects the character of their community, and that have carved out a special place in the American culinary landscape.” Mary & Tito’s is the true, timeless American classic–beloved in the community with the highest quality food reflecting the character of New Mexico.

Chicharones, Mary & Tito’s style. Photo courtesy of Sandy Driscoll.

Mary and Antoinette received the award at a ceremonial dinner on May 3, 2010 at Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall in New York City.  Governor Bill Richardson celebrated the honor by proclaiming May 12th “Mary & Tito’s Day” in New Mexico, a well-deserved honor for an exemplary restaurant.

While writing an article entitled “Ode to the Chile Pepper” for the September, 2011 edition of New Mexico Magazine, I had the privilege, pleasure and honor to interview the owner of the Hatch chile farm which supplies Mary & Tito’s with their fabulous chile. Leticia Carrasco is justifiably proud of the Sandia chile her farm provisions to a James Beard award-winning restaurant. She could not have been nicer–a great person supplying great chile to a great family. How fitting is that?

The James Beard Award of Excellence. Photo courtesy of Sandy Driscoll.

29 April 2013: In January, 2013 Food & Wine Magazine compiled a list of the nation’s “best taco spots.”  The only New Mexico taco spot recognized was Mary & Tito’s for which Food & Wine acknowledged the “famed secret weapon of this mother-daughter-run operation is its fiery red chile sauce–killer with succulent braised pork in the New Mexico classic carne adovada, or drizzled over beef tacos in crispy corn tortilla shells.“  New Mexico’s best tacos at Mary & Tito’s?  Why not?  They’re fantastic!

In the February, 2013 edition of Albuquerque The Magazine  celebrated the Duke City’s best desserts. The fabulous Mexican wedding cake was recognized as the “to die for dessert to remember.”  I’m not too sure what that means, but if it means the Mexican wedding cake is unforgettable, the honor is certainly well deserved.  It’s certainly one of the very best desserts in New Mexico.

Mary & Tito’s fabulous New Mexican Wedding Cake. Photo courtesy of Sandy Driscoll.

The cast and crew of This Old House, a Boston-based home-improvement and remodeling television show spent two days at Mary & Tito’s in April, 2013.  While filming a segment in Hatch, purveyors of New Mexico’s best chile told the crew that the very best example of chile is served at Mary & Tito’s.  The cast and crew proceeded to enjoy every item on the menu.  More converts!

Mary & Tito’s is one of those restaurants that elicits a craving only it can sate. It is the essence of red chile Nirvana.

MARY & TITO’S CAFE
2711 4th Street, N.W.
Albuquerque, NM
505-344-6266
Mary & Tito’s Facebook Page

LATEST VISIT: 29 April 2013
# OF VISITS: 33
RATING: 27
COST: $$
BEST BET
: Enchiladas, Chile Relleno, Taco, Natillas, Guacamole Burrito, Carne Adovada Burrito, Chicharrones,  Mexican Wedding Cake, Carne Adovada Omelet, Carne Adovada, Combination Plate

Mary & Tito's Cafe on Urbanspoon

Tia Betty Blue’s – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Tia Betty Blues, two blocks north of Gibson on San Mateo

Tia Betty.  If the name conjures images of a dowdy old woman, a face etched with wrinkles and thinning grey hair pulled back neatly into a bun, you’re probably not alone.  Not even the youthfully ribald nonagenarian Betty White can alter the contemporary stereotypes ascribed to the increasingly anachronistic name Betty.  It wasn’t always the case.  In fact, there was a time  Betty was one of the most popular girl’s name in America and not just as a diminutive of Elizabeth or Bethany.

According to the Social Security Administration, Betty was the fourth most popular girl’s name in the 1920s with more than 283,000 babies so christened.  Betty was an even more popular name in the 1930s when it ranked second among all girl’s names and was given to more than 300,000 infant girls.  The name declined in popularity in successive decades–from 11th in the 1940s, 35th in the 1950s,  102nd in the 1960s–before dropping from among the 200 most popular girl’s names cataloged by the federal government.

There was also a time the name Betty conveyed images of voluptuous sexiness, especially on the big screen (though not even animated features were exempt).  The most enduring sex symbol of the Depression Era remains Betty Boop, an animated siren able to convey both innocence and sensuality. Vivacious Betty Grable was the number-one pin-up girl of the World War II area and was heralded for having the most beautiful legs in Hollywood. Her successor as pin-up queen, Bettie (give me some license on the spelling) Page not only had gorgeous gams, she was named the girl with “the perfect figure.” 

It’s the unmistakable countenance of Bettie Page that comes to mind when you first espy the logo for Tia Betty Blue’s restaurant on San Mateo.  From the long, luxurious jet black hair with its trademark pageboy hairdo and short, pixie bangs to the shimmering red lipstick, the similarities are remarkable.  Tia Betty could be Bettie Page’s doppelganger (or at least a sexy sister).  Get past the similarities and the differences are glaring–the tattoo on the shapely shoulder, the waitress tray balancing several food orders and the red flower on the waxen hair.

The Azteca (Two shots of chilled espresso, chocolate, cinnamon, whipped cream and a touch of chipotle chile) and Cinnamon Caramel Latte

Tia Betty Blue’s was rollicking on the day of our inaugural visit.  Owner Daniel Boardman admits he once had an Aunt Betty, but she couldn’t cook.  She also didn’t look like the salacious fetish model.  Tia Betty Blue’s Duke City Fix profile describes the mysterious aunt as “the body and soul of one of Albuquerque’s newest, quirkiest, and spiciest restaurants, Tia Betty Blue’s.”  There’s no way that profile or the image on the logo belong to a dowdy old woman.  There’s no way this chic eatery and coffee shop bespeaks anything but youth.

Okay, so maybe the exterior of the converted two-story home isn’t exactly swanky, but attitudinally this is one hip and happening place.  How many Duke City restaurants do you know which celebrate “Tattoo Friday,” a weekly event in which everyone with a visible tattoo gets a discount?.  Tattoos are also celebrated on large print black and white framed photographs adorning one dining room wall.  On the opposite wall are paintings of Mexican luchadores, wrestlers whose identities are protected by colorful masks designed to evoke archetypal images of animals, heroes and gods.

Curry Chicken Salad Sandwich (Chicken, Grapes, Apple, Almond, Celery, Mint, Yogurt and Mayo Seasoned with Garam Masala and Curry Powder)

The main dining room is narrow with room for only seven two-seat tables.   Weather permitting, larger parties can enjoy New Mexico’s sunshine under patio umbrellas.  The counter at which you order is festooned in tile mosaic with four framed menus overhead: Coffee and Tea, Breakfast, New Mexican Food and Sandwiches.  It’s not an especially large menu, but where it lacks in volume, it more than makes up in authenticity and creativity.  Tia Betty prepares authentic New Mexican cuisine in-house including carne adovada prepared daily,  atole (a sweet-hot blue corn porridge seasoned with cinnamon) and large (24-ounce) bowls of frijoles or posole for hearty eaters.  The frijoles are New Mexican pinto beans from Estancia slow-cooked with salt-cured pork and topped with fiesta green chile or Tia’s housemade red chile.

Some of the creativity takes license with New Mexican cuisine, but no one will complain when they sample such deliciousness as a New Mexico Po’ Boy (housemade carne adovada, cheese, onions, lettuce, Fritos and pickled jalapeños) or a tamale boat (two steamed tamales covered in Tia’s housemade red chile and topped with Fritos).  The foul chile despoiler cumin has no place in Tia Betty’s menu.  That chile is available five different ways: red, green, vegetarian red, vegetarian green, and gluten-free chopped green.  Side dishes include such traditional New Mexican favorites as calabasitas and a small cup of either frijoles or posole.  The red chile, by the way, comes from Chimayo, which owner Daniel Steadman once called home, too.  The menu is an homage to northern New Mexican home cooking, the very best in the Land of Enchantment!

Tamale Boat (Two steamed tamales covered in Tia’s housemade red chile and topped with Fritos)

Inventiveness isn’t exclusive to Tia Betty’s New Mexican offerings.  The breakfast menu includes both a savory and a sweet version of a blue corn waffle boat.  The eight-item sandwich menu showcases several creative items including a modern take on an old favorite, a Retro Bologna sandwich made with bologna, hard-boiled egg, cream cheese, mayo, red onion, lettuce and tomato.  All sandwiches are available in a house-baked French or wheat loaf or a plain, tomato-basil or spinach tortilla wrap.

To get your day started off right, Tia Betty offers a nice selection of hot and cold coffees and teas.  All espresso drinks are made with a double-shot and served in a sixteen-ounce cup in most cases.  For a pittance you can add your choice of whipped cream: plain, chocolate, cinnamon or lavender.  From the flavored latte selections, New Mexicans will most definitely appreciate the Azteca, two shots of chilled espresso, chocolate, cinnamon, whipped cream and a touch of chipotle chile.  The chipotle sneaks up on the back of your throat with a pleasant piquancy that marries wonderfully with the chocolate.  Several restaurants throughout the Land of Enchantment have coupled chocolate and chile, but by adding coffee Tia Betty makes it a memorable menage a trois.  This is one seriously terrific latte!

Huevos con Carne (Two fried eggs over a mound of housemade carne adovada, a grilled tortilla, papas and beans)

If coffee and tea aren’t your libation of choice and you’re tired of the Coke and Pepsi market dominance, Tia Betty’s has the largest selection of specialty, vintage, small-distribution, and unique sodas in the Duke City, by far, with more than 100 different flavors of soda pop (tonic if you’re from Massachusetts) in stock.  The fridge is a veritable cornucopia of color and carbonation–from citrus flavors to colas, cream sodas, diet sodas, dry sodas, fruit-flavored sodas, ginger ales and ginger beers, kid favorites, root beers, sarsaparillas, birch beer and unusual flavors such as cucumber soda, bacon soda, peanut butter and jelly and more.  You’ve truly been assimilated if you still want a Pepsi or Coke product after all these choices.

As is often the case, the most unique item on the menu is what appealed most to me.  That would be the Curry Chicken Salad Sandwich (chicken, grapes, apple, almond, celery, mint, yogurt and mayo seasoned with garam masala and curry powder) which more than lived up to expectations.  This is certainly not your dowdy aunt’s dainty, desiccated chicken salad sandwich.  This is a grown-up, sophisticated chicken sandwich  with ingredient combinations playing on the strengths of seemingly contrasting flavors which go surprisingly well together.   This is a chicken sandwich you’ll actually remember long after you’ve lustily consumed it. 

The New Mexico Po Boy

The New Mexico Po’ Boy

The Tamale Boat (two steamed tamales covered in Tia’s housemade red chile and topped with Fritos) is an idea whose time has come and it’s an idea that makes so much sense you’ll wonder why no one else has done it before.  Think Frito pie but instead of ground beef and chile, this bountiful boat starts with steamed tamales.  The corn on corn interplay of masa and Fritos is surprisingly good, both texturally and in terms of flavor.  Chopped onions, tomatoes and lettuce top this boat, but the most memorable topper is Tia Betty’s housemade red chile, a rich, earthy blend that doesn’t shy away from heat. 

For my Kim, a visit to a New Mexican restaurant is incomplete without carne adovada (unless it’s made with cumin).  Tia Betty’s version won’t disappoint whether in the form of the aforementioned New Mexico Po’ Boy or the huevos con carne offering (two fried eggs over a mound of housemade carne adovada, a grilled tortilla, papas and beans).  The carne adovada showcases tender tendrils of pork marinated in a rich, earthy red chile punctuated by piquancy and deliciousness.  The frijoles are excellent.  It’s easy to imagine consuming a 24-ounce bowl.

Green Chile Stew Bowl

Green Chile Stew Bowl

SECOND VISIT – 23 March 2013:  My initial impression after our inaugural visit to Tia Betty Blues was that it could well be one of the very best purveyors of chile in New Mexico, but additional sampling would be required.  It was a first impression that lasted, but we didn’t find ourselves back until nine months later.  That was nine months wasted.  Tia Betty Blues is most definitely one of the very best New Mexican restaurants in the state, a restaurant we’ll visit with more frequency.  

The restaurant’s best seller is the aforementioned New Mexico Po’ Boy, a sandwich exclusive to Tia Betty Blues, a sandwich good enough to make it to my list of top sandwiches.  This isnt just a sandwich; it’s a revelation in how delicious the right ingredient combinations can be.  You’ll ask yourself why no one came up with such a creation sooner.  The carne adovada is moist and delicious–tender tendrils of pork marinated in a pleasantly piquant and very flavorful red chile.  The corn chips add a textural contrast and just a little saltiness and while pickling robs the jalapeños of their piquancy, it imbues them with a tanginess which serves as a foil to the slices of cheese.  The Po’ Boy bread is a perfect canvas for a near perfect sandwich (it would be perfect were it not just a bit on the messy side).

The Tia B. Breakfast Bowl

The Tia B. Breakfast Bowl

Tia Betty Blues doesn’t subscribe to any template of what others may think a New Mexican restaurant should be.  It dares to be different–to be inventive, to take chances.  It dares to allow chile to be chile.  That means using chile that bites back, chile that isn’t just food coloring.  The green chile chicken stew not only exemplifies the comfort food properties that make it a favorite any time of year, it accentuates the piquancy of the green chile along with its roasted flavor properties of red and green chiles. Tia Betty’s green chile chicken stew is an amalgam of papas, shredded chicken, corn niblets and black beans, all perfectly prepared and absolutely wonderful.  It’s available in portion sizes of 24- or 12-ounces.  

Tia Betty appears to have cornered the market on Fritos corn chips because they’re used, to great effectiveness, on several entrees.  The Tia B. Breakfast Bowl,  a giant bowl of papas and corn chips topped with carne adovada and two fried eggs smothered in red or green chile with shredded yellow and white Cheddar, is another one of those dishes so good you’ll wonder why you’ve never had anything like it before.  My Kim put it quite succinctly in declaring the dish “the best Frito pie I’ve ever had–even better than the Frito pie at Perea’s Tijuana Bar & Restaurant.”   In 2012, one of Albuquerque’s weekly periodicals recruited “some of the most knowledgeable food professionals” to put together a list of the city’s best dishes.  When it came to Frito pie, one judge responded “Who in Albuquerque makes one? I’d love to know!”  The majority of judges chose Bob’s Burgers This paragraph lists two Frito pies which are much better. It’s a pity those knowledgeable food professionals didn’t know about them.

Calabasitas Tacos

Calabasitas Tacos

Third Visit – 24 March 2013: Tia Betty Blue’s is the type of restaurant at which some diners will order their favorite dish time after time while more adventurous diners will eventually try everything on the menu.  The latter will find that almost every dish is favorite-worthy, including (some might say especially) the vegetarian options.  The calabasitas tacos (three blue corn tortillas engorged with housemade calabasitas, cheese, tomato, onions and vegetarian red or green chile served open-face with sides of papas and beans) are outstanding.  The calabasitas aren’t quite al dente with just a slight crunch–a far cry from the mushy calabasitas too many restaurants serve.

Behemoth burritos are also available on the menu, including The Big Chicken Burrito, a twelve-inch grilled tortilla engorged with house-stewed chicken, beans, papas, cheese, onions and tomato then smothered in your choice of red or green chile.  Christmas-style is the choice for savvy diners.  The red chile, from Chimayo, is a rich red and earthy with a hiccup-inducing piquancy you can respect.  The green chile is almost equal parts roasted green and roasted red chile.  If you’ve never had roasted red chile, you’ll find it sweeter and with a greater depth of flavor than roasted green chile.  The house-stewed chicken is terrific, but there isn’t enough of it because there’s just so much of everything else.  There’s lots of papas, lots of beans, etc.  There’s also lots of flavor.

The Big Chicken Burrito

The Big Chicken Burrito

In three visits, my Kim has had carne adovada in one form or another.  It’s Ruben Hendrickson-worthy carne adovada.  Ruben, as regular readers know, is my adovada adoring friend who has spent years perfecting this porcine perfection.  He will appreciate Tia Betty Blue’s version, made from fresh, never frozen pork sirloin marinated in that wondrous Chimayo red.  On the Huevos Con Carne dish, the carne adovada shares a bowl with two fried eggs, two blue corn tortillas, papas, bacon and red or green chile.  The combination of carne adovada and bacon is pork two ways.  That in itself is reason enough to order this dish.  The most obvious reason is the carne adovada itself which is absolutely delicious.

Tia Betty Blue’s order-taking system is as unique and fun as everything else in the restaurant. Rather than asking you for your name, your order-taker will  hand you a card from a deck of playing cards published in 1943 by the Coca Cola Company. You place the card on your table and your server will find you.  On weekends, an upstairs dining room opens up to accommodate overflow crowds.  That dining room can also be opened up to accommodate large dining parties any day of the week.

Huevos Con Carne

Huevos Con Carne

Tia Betty Blue’s is so good, it’s made the name Betty cool again.  Now if only a cool restaurant would open up somewhere that could make the elongated version of my name (no, it’s not Gilligan) cool.

Tia Betty Blues
1248 San Mateo, S.E.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 268-1955
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 24 March 2013
1st VISIT:  2 June 2012
# OF VISITS: 3
RATING: 23
COST: $$
BEST BET: The Azteca, Huevos con Carne, Tamale Boat, Curry Chicken Salad Sandwich, Green Chile Stew Bowl, Tia B. Breakfast Bowl, The Original New Mexico Po’ Boy, Calabasitas Tacos, The Big Chicken Burrito, Huevos Con Carne

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Sandia Chile Grill – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Sandia Chile Grille, a popular Northeast Heights dining destination.

Sandia Chile Grille, a popular Northeast Heights dining destination.

Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries.  Jessica Simpson and Tony Romo.  Rihanna and Chris Brown.  These are  pairings so unnatural that there’s seemingly no way they’d ever work together…similar to good food and convenience stores.   The notion of convenience store food conjures images of salty, cylindrically shaped dry meat snacks with the texture of sawdust and air-filled bags of Cool Ranch Doritos.  This is stereotypical convenience store fare, as unappetizing as donut holes.

Now mention New Mexican food and gas station in the same sentence and the likely image conjured would make all the sophomoric six year-olds among us giggle, the notion of “gas” not having anything to do with petroleum.  Visionary entrepreneur Mick Coker had the confidence in his New Mexico food products to launch his business at a convenience store-gas station in the Northeast Heights. The rest, as they say, is history. The Sandia Chile Grill’s inaugural location launched in 2004 at the Winner’s Circle gas station at Harper and Barstow. A second location on Montgomery just east of I-25 followed shortly thereafter.

Sandia06

Order your New Mexican food at this counter then watch it be prepared

From its onset the Sandia Chile Grill’s made-to-order burrito concept elevated gas station dining from a fast food grab and gobble experience to a uniquely sublime New Mexico dining extravaganza, albeit one without on-site seating. The aroma of tortillas on the grill quickly had patrons making a bee-line to the little grill that could at the back of the convenience store portion of the gas station. While relatively little space is required to operate what is essentially a to-go diner, Coker saw his business grow to the extent–as much as 4,000 meals in a busy month–that a real restaurant storefront was in order. He launched the Sandia Chile Grill restaurant at the Del Norte Shopping Center, essentially moving from the Winner’s Circle gas station not that far away.

A native New Mexican (born in Belen), Coker saw two obvious reasons for the name Sandia Chile Grill, the first being Sandia chile which grows in the Mesilla Valley. Sandia chile ranges from four to six-inches long and dries to a deep burgundy color.  It’s one of the most delicious of all red chiles and is served at such fabled New Mexican food treasures as Mary & Tito’s.   Sandia is also the name of the mountain range backdropping the city of Albuquerque.

Unique chips and salsa

Unique chips and salsa

At the restaurant, the staff has the room to operate and customers have comfortable seating in which to dine. Though much of the restaurant’s business remains carry-out, it’s nice to have an alternative when you want it. As at the service station, burritos dominate the menu: breakfast burritos, steak burritos, steak and chicken burritos, chicken burritos, pork burritos and even veggie burritos. Some burritos are named for professional wrestlers (Ultimate Warrior, Undertaker, Junkyard Dog, Mankind and the Macho Man). There are also burritos named for Mexican western characters: El Matidor (sic), Bandito, Caballero and El Jeffe. The menu also includes stuffed sopaipillas, enchiladas, tamales, rellenos and tacos–the New Mexican food essentials which can’t be prepared at the gas station sites.

One word of advice–study the menu on the Web site before you visit. There are a lot of choices! Even though the friendly counter staff won’t rush you in the least, you might not want the person standing behind you glowering impatiently and tapping her toes incessantly (as happened to me during my inaugural visit). You also can’t go wrong with a recommendation from the staff, especially if Mick Coker himself is taking your order.  Alternatively, you can take an easy (and delicious) route and order all-you-can-eat green chile chicken stew for under five dollars.  You can also eat contently in the knowledge that cumin has no place anywhere on the menu.  Nor does Mick buy and reheat any products from Sysco or Shamrock.  The only product not prepared in-house are the tortillas which are procured from the same folks who provision Little Anita’s.

Mick's Pick

Mick’s Pick

If you haven’t been to the Sandia Chile Grill in a while, you’ll quickly note several changes.  In 2009, the facility was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to can all its chiles and sauces for nationwide distribution.  In 2012, the Cokers opened a brewery–and an award-winning brewery at that.  Within months after launching, they entered seven items in a New Mexico State Fair competition, earning five medals including a “best of show” in the professional division.  The blue and red-ribbons are on display in the restaurant.  The menu also features several gluten-free items (nachos, green chile chicken stew, chicken quesadillas, chicken enchiladas, steak tacos and more).

Another gluten-free option is the Sandia Chile Grill’s unique big chips and salsa. The “chips” are fresh-cooked corn tortillas the size of 45RPM (that’s revolutions per minute for your Generation Yers) records (analog storage mediums on flat discs). The salsa is excellent with a pleasantly piquant bite courtesy of jalapeños and red chile (you’d be surprised at how infrequently New Mexican restaurants actually use chile on their salsa).  The chips are formidable enough for Gil-sized scoops of salsa.  They’re also left unsalted so you can salt to taste.

The Ultimate Warrior:  Steak, Bacon, Chorizo, Ham, Potato, Salsa and Cheese with Red and Green Chile

The Ultimate Warrior: Steak, Bacon, Chorizo, Ham, Potato, Salsa and Cheese with Red and Green Chile

Aside from the standard New Mexico restaurant offerings of red and green chile, the Sandia Chile Grill also features a “Milanesa” sauce, a white, cheesy sauce similar to the Alfredo sauce so popular in Italian cuisine. One of the burritos adorned with Milanesa sauce is Mick’s Pick, ostensibly one of the owner’s favorites. Weighing in at more than one pound, Mick’s Pick features a tortilla of medium thickness enveloping a double portion of chicken, bacon, Milanesa sauce, cheese and red or green chile (or both). The chicken is cut into very small cubes and appears to be mostly white meat; I didn’t find any sinewy pieces in the entire burrito. The Milanesa sauce complements red and green chile well, but is a stand-out on its own. 

One of the burritos named for a professional wrestler is the Ultimate Warrior, the sobriquet of a grappler considered “the ultimate archetype of strength and intensity.”  Fittingly, the Ultimate Warrior is one intensely delicious burrito, especially if it is “smothered” in red and green chile, both of which have a nice bite.  The Ultimate Warrior is engorged with chopped steak, bacon, chorizo (made on the premises), potatoes, salsa and cheese.  It’s a behemoth of a burrito, weighing in at more than a pound which means you’ll probably be taking some home.  My Kim, who used to agree with Albuquerque The Magazine‘s selection of Lotaburger‘s burrito as the city’s second best (Frontier‘s was named best) now believes The Ultimate Warrior is better.

The Big Chief: Milanesa Sauce, Steak, Cheese, Potatoes

The Big Chief: Milanesa Sauce, Steak, Cheese, Potatoes

Five different taco options are available on the menu. Even though the tacos are made with Taco Bell style hard-shelled tortillas, that’s the only comparison. The tacos at the Sandia Chile Grill are excellent. At first glance, it may appear the tacos are mostly lettuce, but beneath that lettuce is some wonderfully seasoned hamburger meat and shredded Cheddar cheese. A small plastic tub of salsa accompanies an order of tacos and it is terrific salsa at that. 

Mick Coker and his son Clinton are immensely proud of their New Mexican heritage and like most proud New Mexicans, know one of the day’s most difficult decisions is whether to have red or green chile…or both.   They help make that decision easier for their guests by offering excellent New Mexican cuisine showcasing both.

Sandia Chile Grill
7120 Wyoming Blvd, N.E.,
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 798-1970
Web Site

LATEST VISIT: 22 January 2013
1st VISIT:  18 August 2007
# OF VISITS: 2
RATING: 21
COST: $ – $$
BEST BET: Mick’s Pick, Tacos, The Big Chief, The Ultimate Warrior, Chips and Salsa


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