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La Fonda Del Bosque – Albuquerque, New Mexico

La Fonda Del Bosque within the sprawling National Hispanic Cultural Center

In the millennium year, after years of planning and lobbying, the dream was finally realized of a haven  dedicated to the preservation, promotion, and advancement of Hispanic culture, arts, and humanities. In 2000, the National Hispanic Cultural Center (NHCC), launched along the Camino Real in the Albuquerque’s historic Barela’s neighborhood.  The Center is an architectural anomaly in a largely adobe-hued area, its unique structures including a renovated hacienda-style school, a stylized Mayan pyramid with interior elements modeled on Romanesque architecture and a torreon (tower) housing a 4,000 square foot concave fresco depicting over 3,000 years of Hispanic history.

Ironically the complex chartered to preserve, protect and promote Hispanic culture had to displace several families, thereby disenfranchising some of the very families who embody the Hispanic culture in Albuquerque.  One resident–the late Adela Martinez–stared down bureaucrats and made them blink, refusing to move.  The forty-million dollar Cultural Center had to be redesigned to accommodate her family in the home she moved into in the 1920s.  Today, her family’s two small houses stand out, not like a sore thumb, but as a testament to the courage of one 80-year old Hispanic woman whose treasured memories were worth much more than the monetary treasures government offered.

fondadelbosque02

The home of Adela Martinez, a New Mexico treasure

Since November, 2000, the converted Barelas Elementary School on the sprawling NHCC complex has served as the home of La Fonda Del Bosque, a stylish 280-seat restaurant.    La Fonda, which translates from Spanish to “The Inn” almost immediately garnered recognition.  Within three years of its launch,  Hispanic magazine named it one of the 50 best Hispanic restaurants in the United States for two consecutive years (2003 and 2004).  It was also named one of Gourmet Magazine’s “Best Kept Secrets.” A higher compliment is that many locals love it, too, especially during the Sunday brunch when they can sample a greater bounty of Hispanic favorites.

Over the years, a number of catering and restaurant management companies have tried their hand at running La Fonda Del Bosque.  The most recent to take the helm is A KayTahRing Company which began operating the restaurant in June, 2012.  After several years of serving New Mexican food, the new operators are taking the restaurant in a new direction, showcasing “flavors, cooking styles and ingredients from the 27 countries comprising Central and South America and the Latino Caribbean islands” according to the restaurant’s Web site.

Dining Room at La Fonda Del Bosque

La Fonda is open for breakfast and lunch as well as for brunch on Sundays. Dinner is served only for special events when the upscale milieu really shines.   While the menu offerings may have a Latin fusion flair, the ambiance at La Fonda Del Bosque is most decidedly Southwestern with a pronounced New Mexican influence.  The centerpiece of the dining room is a wood-burning fireplace that may make you wish it was winter so you could imbibe the aromas of piñon wood.  On bright New Mexican summer days, the  tinwork light fixtures aren’t much needed because the large windows let in so much natural light.  Service is impeccable. 

The restaurant’s Web site describes the menu as “one bold statement after another.”   At the very least, it’s an ambitious menu that crosses over several borders and culinary cultures.  That’s especially true of the prix fixe menu for brunch which couples a buffet and a number of items from the menu.  Stainless steel vessels hold such buffet items as smoked salmon lox, Argentine prawn and chili quiche, seasonal fruit, Cuban Torrejas, Peruvian Ceviche Limon and twin crepes.  Don’t fill your plate too much because you’ll also have the opportunity to order an entree from the “kitchen” menu.  This menu ranges from the simple (huevos rancheros) to the complex (Seafood Valencia Paella).

Sunday Brunch Offerings Include Seafood Valencia (Paella made with chicken, chorizo, prawns, mussels and peas); smoked salmon lox; Argentine Prawn and Chili Quiche

The attentive wait staff does their best to ensure the buffet items are replenished so diners will always have fresh and warm food.  Their efforts are more successful when a passel of diners empties the serving vessels almost as quickly as the servers fill them.  Such was the case during our inaugural visit which transpired on the same day the Japanese Fall Festival was being held on the grounds of the Center.  Apparently a number of diners preferred Latin inspired cuisine to Japanese fare because La Fonda was quite crowded when we arrived.

Among the buffet items which would have stood out was the smoked salmon lox with cream cheese, capers, red onions and eggs.  Alas, the toasted bagels intended to be the canvas upon which to heap the other ingredients were stale and dry.  Still, who can resist salmon, capers and cream cheese, a triumvirate of taste. Also good were Cuban Torrejas, essentially pain perdu (French toast) stuffed with strawberry and mamey glaze, and topped with whipped Cream.   The Peruvian Ceviche Limon, fresh raw fish, calamari, octopus and shrimp served with yam and Peruvian corn was rather uninspired, a far cry from Peruvian ceviche we’ve had elsewhere. It lacked the freshness and the citrus-tinged zip of a great ceviche.

Carne Asada con Huevos al Gusto (Native to Northern Mexico): Half-pound charbroiled sirloin with 2 eggs any style, served with breakfast potatoes, adobo sauce

My choice from the menu was paella, but not just any paella. According to the menu, it was Seafood Valencia,  named for the city in Spain in which paella originated.  Valencia isn’t just where paella was first made, it’s where it’s best made.  Paella is a great source of local pride for Valencianos where it’s made so well that, much like some Italian food, its flavors improve into the next day.  Similar to the paella made in Valencia, La Fonda’s rendition has a slightly crunchy edge.  It’s replete with bite-sized pieces of chicken, seasoned pork sausage, prawns, mussels and green peas embedded in a mound of saffron-infused rice.   The portion size is more than generous, but the experience would have been even more authentic and fun had it been served in a paellera, the flat steel pan in which paella is traditionally prepared.  Exercise caution not to ladle out the paella on the buffet table (unless you really like paella) because it will count as your entree. 

Another palate pleasing entree is the carne asada con huevos al gusto, a plate native to Northern Mexico.  The carne asada is a half-pound charbroiled sirloin steak prepared to your exacting level of doneness.  In some Mexican restaurants–both in Mexico and in New Mexico–a half-pound sometimes means two portions of thinly cut, usually tough as leather steak so it’s a surprise to find a thick, juicy steak that’s almost fork tender.  Literally the term “huevos al gusto” translates to “eggs to your pleasure,” but really means “eggs made the way you want them.”  The breakfast potatoes are excellent, but the adobo sauce lacked any real punch.

Tiramisu and white chocolate truffle

The brunch menu also includes a dessert bar featuring such sweet-tooth favorites as tiramisu, truffles, and fruit tarts.  The tiramisu would never be mistaken for the tiramisu made at Torinos @ Home, not by a long stretch, but it’s better than out-of-the-box.

La Fonda Del Bosque offers catering services for special events such as weddings and anniversaries. With a patio which can accommodate as many as 1,500 guests, it’s a perfect venue for a good time.

La Fonda Del Bosque
Hispanic Cultural Center
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 247-9480
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 30 September 2012
# OF VISITS: 6
RATING: 17
COST: $$
BEST BET:  

La Fonda Del Bosque on Urbanspoon

Pasion Latin Fusion – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Pasion Latin Fusion Cuisine on Lomas

In my experience, food and passion always intertwine.
Passion is food for the soul’s mood at any particular time.”
Tammy Mollai

As an unabashedly proud native New Mexican, I can accept that New Mexican food isn’t for everyone. What’s much more difficult to accept are misbegotten stereotypes and outright misinformation (if not prevarication) about the food of enchantment. While trawling the internet, I came across a site called LTH Forums, a self-professed “Chicago based culinary chat site” in which a recent Windy City visitor lamented his dining experiences in Albuquerque. His assessment: “New Mexican cuisine if fine, but Mexican food in Albuquerque can be less than Chicago. The main thing to remember is that nearly all the cooks in New Mexico that are of Mexican descent hail from the Chihuahua state, so all the cooking is standard, a little boring, and muddled with Tex-Mex.”

Another misinformed nay-sayer piled on: “I have often commented that much of NM cuisine is a far less vibrant version of the original Mexican recipes from which they were derived over the past few hundred years. Chile is too often used to mask a lack of creativity or quality ingredients. The comida nativa can be an incongruous blend of Spanish, Mexican, and Native American influences that was historically limited by an unforgiving climate.” Lack of creativity? Lack of quality ingredients? Incongruous blend? These Chicago sophisticates obviously didn’t visit the restaurants celebrated on this blog.

Owners Elvis Bencomo and Monica Martell

Perhaps we New Mexicans are partially to blame for at least some of the misinformation, lack of information or failure to promote all that is great and exciting about the diversity and deliciousness of our cuisine. Check out some of the forums and chat sites in which the cuisine of New Mexico is a topic of discussion and some locals weigh in with recommendations ad nauseum for the same restaurants. You’d think all we have to offer visitors to the fair city of Albuquerque is the Frontier Restaurant and El Pinto, both very popular, but hardly the be-all and end-all for Duke City dining. No matter how internet savvy visitors may be, when they strike out on their own after visiting the Frontier and El Pinto, they’re bound to strike out.

Thanks to my faithful readers, I rarely strike out. The restaurants you recommend invariably turn out to be so good, I’m happy to share them through this blog. Take for example a recent recommendation by fellow IT professional Chris Reddington. It was a recommendation peppered with passion, fittingly for a restaurant in which passion is on the menu. It’s imbued in the ambiance and it’s in the heart and soul of its owners.  It’s redolent in the ingredients and spices which give the food a lively, enticing and exciting flavor profile. Even the name bespeaks loudly of passion. Welcome to Pasion Latin Fusion.

Quesadilla al Pasion: Flour tortilla with roasted poblanos, chorizo and onion served with a creamy corn dipping sauce

Pasion Latin Fusion is the brainchild of owners Elvis Bencomo and Monica Martell, a husband and wife duo with (dare I say it again) passion for the melding of diverse and dynamic Latin flavors. It’s unfortunate the Chicago visitor who maligned the cooking of chefs from Chihuahua hasn’t experienced Elvis’s culinary talents. He’d certainly think twice about ascribing a lack of culinary prowess to Chihuahua’s chefs, not all of whose cooking is “standard, a little boring and muddled with Tex-Mex.”

Elvis is originally from Chihuahua and to say he’s a culinary genius may be a vast understatement. He’s a classically trained chef, but that’s a starting point. The genesis of his culinary creations is his creativity, imagination and willingness to experiment with ingredient and flavor combinations. He’s a true student of the craft, constantly reading and researching what it takes to create the foods that reflect his passion. It’s unlikely he ever studied Peruvian Ceviche 101 at his culinary alma mater, but one bite of his ceviche of the day and you might swear you’re in Peru. His arepas are reminiscent of those prepared in Venezuela, his chimicchuri as good as you’ll find in Argentina.  Get the picture?

Requeson: Ricotta style cheese served with fresh corn tortillas, roasted garlic and peppers

Monica, the statuesque hostess with the radiant smile is originally from Chicago (how’s that for irony), but admits to growing up culinarily unadventurous, preferring a diet of burgers and fries to some of the legendary foods of the City of Big Shoulders. Today she’s happy to have broken the chain (my friend Ryan Scott was so proud when he interviewed her on his wonderful radio program) and loves to try new and different dishes. Elvis is more than happy to oblige with a menu unlike any in Albuquerque–one in fact that’s reminiscent of Peruvian and Latin fusion restaurants we’ve visited in San Francisco and Las Vegas.

Together Monica and Elvis not only make beautiful food together, they actually enjoy working together. When I asked them to pose for a photograph and my camera stalled, Elvis commented that he didn’t mind, he could hold Monica forever. How’s that for passion? When we asked about the high quality of the grapes served with one dessert, they smiled broadly and admitted to have upped their consumption of grapes (along with wine and cheese) after having seen the animated movie Ratatouille. How can you not love that?

Atun Ceviche: Tuna, Habanero/Coconut Sauce and Lime Sorbet Served with Garlic Tortilla Chips

Pasion is situated in the Lomas edifice which once housed Capo’s, a long time Albuquerque Italian food fixture. Few remnants of its predecessor remain in the striking milieu that is at once both festive and romantic, the former bolstered by upbeat salsa music and the latter facilitated by low light. Appropriately the exterior signage includes a single red rose, a symbol for romantic passion. Fireplaces suspended from the ceiling are both attractive and functional, adding the promise of a crackling flame on a blustery evening. Colorful wall hangings and framed photographs festoon the walls. Two tiered seating includes both booths and tables.

The menu is an eye-opening melange of Latin fusion with elements of Cuban, Haitian, Mexican, Peruvian, Venezuelan, Spanish, Mariscos, Argentinian and even New Mexican ingredients used in sundry and creative ways. As with true fusion, menu items combine those elements–Argentinian chimichurri with Nicaraguan grilled steak, for example. It wouldn’t be a true fusion restaurant if diverse, sometimes disparate culinary traditions, elements and ingredients didn’t form an entirely unique genre. Pasion is a true fusion restaurant, not one which offers menu items from several Latin speaking nations.

Ceviche of the Day: Tuna, green chile red onion and passion fruit marinated in lime, lemon and orange juices

Start your Pasion experience with the agua fresca of the day. Many Mexican restaurants throughout the Duke City offer a pretty standard line-up of aguas frescas, typically horchata, limonada, sandia and melon. Many are not made in-house. At Pasion, the agua fresca of the day is not likely going to be the same old, same old you can find elsewhere. Instead Chef Elvis might surprise you with a virgin margarita agua fresca, complete with a salted rim, or he might combine several seemingly disparate flavors to create something uniquely wonderful.

Antojitos (appetizers) are similarly non-standard fare, an impressive assemblage of innovative deliciousness. You’ll want to order the generous offering of any two appetizers or two ceviches or a combination of the two for $13.95. The Quesadilla al Pasion should be one of the two; it’s one of the very best quesadillas you’ll have anywhere, certainly not the type of which Napoleon Dynamite’s grandmother referred to as a “dang quesadilla.” Your passions will be inflamed by a grilled flour tortilla engorged with roasted poblanos, chorizo and onion served with a creamy corn dipping sauce. With or without the dipping sauce, the flavors coalesce to create a veritable party in your mouth.

Green Chile Hamburgesa: New Mexico ground beef in a fresh sesame bun with a green chile thousand island dressing, spring mix, tomato, onion, applewood bacon and Oaxaca cheese

Requeson, a cheese typically eaten on crackers or spread on bread, is a Latin American favorite Elvis utilizes in his own inimitable manner.  Instead of using it as a spread, he nestles it in fresh corn tortillas where it serves as a taco filler  along with roasted garlic and peppers.  While there’s nothing unique about cheese in tacos, requeson itself is a unique cheese, perhaps best described as a “kissing cousin of ricotta.”  It’s a fresh cheese made of milk and has a semi-sweet flavor and a soft, grainy and moist texture.  A three taco appetizer order of requeson will blow you away.  The garlic and peppers are perfectly roasted and imbued with sweet underpinnings which serve as a wonderful counterpoint to the requeson.

Thanks to visits to Peruvian restaurants in San Francisco, Mexican style ceviche (typically made from raw fish marinated in citrus juices and paired with cilantro, onions and chopped tomatoes) has been a source of ho hum for me. In Pasion, my passion for ceviche has been rekindled. The menu offers two standard ceviche offerings and a ceviche of the day. They start off much like other ceviche–as seafood (tuna or shrimp) marinated in lime, lemon and orange juices. Then the Chef’s creativity takes over, adding jalapeños, ceviche and plenty of oomph. The Atun, for example, is a ceviche made with tuna, habanero/coconut sauce and lime sorbet served with garlic tortilla chips.  The habanero/coconut sauce most assuredly has a pleasantly piquant bite coupled with the tropical sweetness of coconut.  The lime sorbet is crystallized so it doesn’t melt messily over the ceviche.  Instead, it imparts a refreshing coolness that complements the other ingredients.  This is genius!

Pavo Adobo: Turkey leg marinated in pineapple juice and adobo with a cranberry marmalade

During our inaugural visit, the ceviche of the day was fashioned from sashimi quality tuna, New Mexican green chile, red onion and passion fruit, a melding of briny, savory seafood with incendiary chile and sweet passion fruit.  The garlic tortilla chips are made from both flour and corn, the best of both tortilla worlds.  These chips are superb–by themselves or as scooping instruments for the ceviche.  Not since the San Francisco ceviche treat at Destino Nuevo Latino  have I had such a fabulous ceviche.  If this culinary essay was put to paper, it would probably have drool trails courtesy of my fond reminiscences.

The only nit (and it’s infinitesimal) is that the scintillating menu offered one of my two must-haves, preventing me from ordering something I hadn’t had before. That must have is, of course, a green chile hamurgesa. In my quest to locate every New Mexico Green Chile Cheeseburger Trail worthy burger under the Land of Enchantment’s turquoise skies, very few green chile cheeseburgers escape my notice. To no surprise, Pasion’s rendition is uniquely wonderful, a true two-fisted behemoth: New Mexico ground beef in a fresh, sesame bun with a green chile thousand island dressing, spring mix, tomato, onion, applewood bacon and Oaxaca cheese. It’s Trail worthy!

Pork Adobo: Crispy Pork Served Over Arroz and Chicharos with an Orange Mojo

During Thanksgiving we’ll have even more reasons to give thanks if we can convince Chef Elvis to prepare an entire turkey in the style of his outstanding Pavo Adobo. This is the antithesis of the dreaded desiccated turkey leg that’s leathery, tough and flavorless. The gams on Pasion’s turkey would make Jessica Biel glower with envy. A single turkey leg, uncharacteristically moist and delicious, is marinated in pineapple juice and adobo that imbue it with a wonderful earthiness reminiscent of Caribbean cuisine. Alas, a single turkey leg isn’t nearly enough. You’ll want an entire bird marinated in the Pasion magic. The turkey leg is served with a better than you’ll ever have on Thanksgiving cranberry marmalade.

Another adorable adobo entree, offered as a special during a visit in December, 2011 showcases the versatility of pork.  The Pork Adobo plate is a tall mound of crispy pork served over arroz (rice) and chicharos (peas) in an orange mojo sauce.  The pork is indeed crispy, but it’s not dry in the least and it’s imbued with the addictive adobo.  The arroz y chicharos with an orange mojo is worthy accompaniment.  The orange mojo isn’t nearly as tart and acidic as traditional Cuban mojo.  Instead, it has just enough tanginess to be discernible and it imparts a zesty, but not overpoweringly tart quality to each forkful of long-grained rice and spring-fresh pea.

Los Tacos (Fish): Banana chip breaded white fish tacos with chipotle sauce, pickled cabbage and avocado in a flour tortilla

If you’ve ever lamented the absence of fish taco greatness in the Duke City area, fret no longer. Los Tacos at Pasion are the true antithesis of the desiccated fish tacos that are the bane of all pescatorians.   Two large flour tortillas are engorged to the bursting point with white fish lightly breaded in a banana chip batter and served with pickled cabbage and ripe avocado drizzled with a pleasantly piquant chipotle sauce.  On the side is a fresh garden salad with lettuce, cucumbers and pickled onions with two lemons you can squeeze onto either the tacos or the salad ingredients.  The tacos are moist and delicious with flavor combinations that will literally explode in your mouth. 

Pasion’s delicious tribute to the island nation of Cuba is in the form of a Cubano, the sandwich which has become an almost de rigueur offering at restaurants which proffer sandwiches.  Most Cubanos have become so similar as to be almost as blasé  as the plain ham and cheese on which they are loosely based.  At Pasion, the Cubano is an elegant sandwich brimming with delicious ingredients: slow braised pork, ham, Swiss cheese, pickles and whole grain mustard pressed in a bolillo bun.  Bruce Schor, a long-time friend of this blog and erudite epicure gave it the ultimate compliment: “The Cubano for me was very close to the Cubanos I learned to love in Union City NJ, the second largest Cuban expat community after Miami.”  It’s the very best Cubano I’ve had in Albuquerque.

Molletes (Mexican style bruschetta)

Another  “sandwich” option is Molletes, a Mexican-style bruschetta prepared two different ways.  One version is made with chorizo, black beans, roasted poblano, queso Oaxaca and avocado pico de gallo.  The meat choice on the other is steak which is accompanied by sliced yellow squash, queso cotija, cilantro mojo and tomato.  Eating a mollete is akin to eating an open-faced sandwich as all the ingredients sit atop the bruschetta.  The ingredients aren’t held together by some cheesy blanket.  Eating them can be a messy proposition, albeit a delicious one.

Acompanamientos (sides) include papas de yuca,  the starchy South American tuber distantly related to the humble potato and not the yucca (New Mexico’s official state plant).  These papas are served with your choice (ask for both) of spicy ketchup or chipotle aioli.  Cut and fried to resemble French fries, you’ll quickly discern the textural and flavor differences between fries made from yuca and fries made from potatoes.  You’ve had your fill of traditional French fries.  Now appreciate something uniquely different and delicious–yuca fries.

Papas de Yuca: Yuca French fries served with spicy ketchup or chipotle aioli

The postres (desserts) menu is a continuation of the menu’s creativity, four items of pure, unbridled temptation. The pastel de queso, a goat cheese style cheesecake with mango caramel, may be the best of the lot. It’s a better goat cheese cheesecake than was ever conjured at Rosemary’s Restaurant in Las Vegas (one of my highest rated restaurants in America before it closed). When it arrives at your table, your first inclination might be to believe the kitchen sent out something else, perhaps a scoop of ice cream drizzled over by Gerber baby food. That “scoop” is a large roundish mound of sweet and savory goat cheese, as good as any chevre dessert you’ll ever have. There’s very little crust to get in the way here. It’s mostly goat cheese cheesecake the way it should be.

The other of my two passions (aside from green chile cheeseburgers) is bread pudding, a dessert some consider an anachronism. Pasion offers an Aztec Bread Pudding con Cajeta (a reduced goat’s milk caramel) with a hint of red chile that will convert even the most ardent of bread pudding protagonists. This is one of the richest, densest, most flavorful bread puddings in New Mexico, one which just might make it to Larry McGoldrick‘s top ten. What elevates this bread pudding above the rest is the red chile which imparts just a bit of that back-of-your-throat heat great chiles have. It’s not a piquant heat, but that heat is certainly noticeable. The cajeta is the only thing that can and should top this bread pudding.

Pastel De Queso: Goat cheese style cheesecake with mango caramel

Yet a third dessert that might never achieve the sure to be fame and popularity of the aforementioned duo is a dessert ceviche Monica told us has been ordered only a handful of times.  The dessert ceviche changes with the seasonal availability of fruits.  During a December, 2011 visit, the fruits in-season were apples, grapes, bananas and pineapples, all of which were fresh paragons of each fruit.  A velvety blanket of deliciously sweet-sour creme fraiche is a perfect foil for the sweetness of the fruit.  It’s a dessert very much reminiscent of Bionicos, a very healthful Mexican dessert.

Azteca Bread Pudding Con Cajeta: with a hint of red chile and a milk caramel sauce

Every once in a while, the city’s burgeoning and exciting culinary scene needs an infusion of passion.  That’s what you’ll find in Pasion, one of the most creative and  unique restaurants to grace the Duke City dining scene in years.  It’s the type of restaurant the citizenry should promote to visitors who believe those ill-conceived stereotypes about our cuisine.

Pasion Latin Fusion Restaurant
722 Lomas Blvd, N.W.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 503-7880
LATEST VISIT: 31 January 2012
1st VISIT: 18 September 2011
# OF VISITS: 3
RATING: 24
COST: $$
BEST BET: Quesadilla al Pasion, Ceviche, Papas de Yuca, Green Chile Hamburgesa, Pavo Adobo, Requeson, Atun Ceviche, Los Tacos (Fish), Pork Adobo, Molletes, Cubano, Pastel de Queso, Azteca Bread Pudding con Cajeta, Fruit Ceviche

Pasion Latin Fusion on Urbanspoon

Guava Tree Cafe – Albuquerque, New Mexico

The Guava Tree Cafe on Yale Boulevard just south of the University of New Mexico

A few years ago, my friend Bill Hanson, a gastronome of the first order, was hosting several of his Costa Rican employees  at Intel’s Ocotillo plant.  Like me, Bill delights in introducing his friends to new culinary adventures.  Unfortunately, not all our colleagues are similarly inclined (despite one of our corporate values being “risk-taking”).  One of them convinced the “Ticos” that the restaurant they should not miss for a “true American dining experience” was Claim Jumper, a regional chain and slight upgrade from Chili’s.

Ever the gracious host, Bill acquiesced to the Ticos’ request.  I’ll let him describe the rest (from his gastronomic blog The Tao of Chow): “As each dish was produced and delivered to the table I sank further into my chair as the American decadence of over indulging was displayed in glorious Sysco provided plates heaping with food. Each dish could have easily have served three people as I sat and wondered how much food was actually consumed versus how much went into the dumpsters out back.”

Two hungry patrons waiting to order

If the Ticos were disappointed in any way with the cavalcade of calorie-laden comestibles brought to the table, you’d never know it.  To break bread (or arepas) with a Tico is to experience Pura Vida, the vibrant joie de vivre that is not only the national phrase of Costa Rica, it’s the national attitude.  Pura Vida translates literally to “pure life,” but the actual meaning is more akin to “life is good!”  Ticos live life to the fullest.

Pura vida is the attitude Diego and Mari Barbosa have infused into the Guava Tree Cafe, a Latin American restaurant on Yale Boulevard just south of the University of New Mexico.  Though neither are from Costa Rica (Diego is from Colombia and Mari is from El Salvador), they met in and lived in the scintillating Central American tropical paradise for eight years. Their philosophy is that “food is art and food is life.”   Their vision is for the Cafe to be a neighborhood gathering space in which their guests can enjoy each others’ company in the spirit of pura vida while enjoying slow-cooked home-style food, the best kind.  They invite guests to make this space their own and promise to have something good to eat whenever you visit.

Latin Tamale: Pork tamale wrapped and cooked in a plantain leaf along with black beans and rice

The Guava Tree Cafe opened in November, 2010 in a converted old home.  An ADA friendly ramp takes you past a small porch and into a brightly colored, multi-hued cafe which seems to resonate a welcoming attitude.  Immediately as you walk in to your left you’ll find Diego manning the counter where you’ll place your order. Diego is an accomplished barista, brandishing his brewing skills while taking orders. The menu is scrawled on two black slate boards which flank the counter.  A glass pastry case displays decadent post-prandial deliciousness such as cheesecakes.  Though they would tempt Job, you probably won’t have room for dessert after your meal.

The dining area consists of only a few tables in personal space proximity to one another.  A thickly-cushioned crimson couch will keep you comfortable if you have to wait for a table to come available.  Lively Latin music plays in the background, not too loud for conversation and not loud enough for dancing should the spirit of pura vida overcome you.  Once you place your order, expect a bit of a wait.  The Guava Tree prepares food to order.  You won’t find food sitting under a heat lamp here!

Luciano: Grilled provolone cheese, house-roasted red peppers, with South American chimichirri on wheat.

While you wait, you’ll want to luxuriate in a cafe con leche (Spanish for “coffee with milk”), a strong coffee mixed with scalded milk.  Sometimes called Cuban coffee, it’s the type of coffee which will envelop you warmly as you contemplate how strong coffee can be so mellow.  Usually sweetened to taste, it’s the type of coffee which goes well with Latin American cuisine and the pura vida attitude.

The menu is segmented into three sections: sandwiches, arepas and tamales, and soups and salads.  Sandwiches are described as “8-inches full of flavor.”  They’re crafted on fresh bread pressed panini-style (perhaps even in an authentic Cuban grill known as a “plancha”) and wrapped in thin butcher paper. The specialty of the house is the Cuban Sandwich, Miami-style heaven.  It’s crafted with home-roasted pork shoulder which has been marinated for several days until “it’s all happy” (which the chef can tell by it’s singing of the “Tico Tico” in the fridge).  The pork is sliced thickly and combined with sweet or “bolo” ham, Swiss cheese and pickles on the flat, crunchy bread.

El Guava Pollito: Shreded Chicken Breast, Swiss Cheese, Caramelized Onions, Mushrooms, Greens and Tomatoes, with Guava Tree's signature garlic sauce on wheat

The Cuban Sandwich so enamored Larry McGoldrick that Albuquerque’s premier contributor to Urbanspoon described it as “the absolute best that I have ever had anyplace in this universe or its parallels.”  That’s high praise indeed from a well-traveled bon vivant who’s not often given to hyperbole.  If anything, Larry may have undersold this Cuban Sandwich.  It is one of the very best sandwiches of any kind in the Duke City.

The roast pork, in particular, is superb, more than several orders of magnitude better than the pre-sliced variety offered on many sandwiches throughout the Duke City.  The bolo ham is cured and sweet, a complete antithesis the overly-salted hams which seem to be in favor among sandwich purveyors.  The crusty exterior and soft inside texture provide a delicious home for outstanding ingredients prepared exceptionally well.  The  Cuban Sandwich is truly a little piece of Miami heaven Duke City diners will love.

The Cuban Sandwich: Home roasted pork shoulder, sweet or "bolo" ham, swiss cheese and pickles, then grilled to a flat crunchy meal

Vegetarians who may feel left out by the dearth of sandwiches crafted with them in mind will love the Luciano, a plancha-pressed beauty on wheat bread.  Layers of flavor is an apt description for this panini piece of art.  A generous smear of chimichirri (a flavor-packed green sauce made from finely chopped parsley, minced garlic and a host of other seasonings) starts the flavor parade which is ameliorated by grilled provolone cheese and house-roasted red peppers.

I’ve often lamented the dessication of dishes showcasing chicken.  With few exceptions, show me a sandwich, pizza or pasta dish in which chicken is used and I’ll show you a dry and dull dish.  It’s as if some chefs are out to prove chicken is not an aquatic fowl.  Guava Tree’s El Guava Pollito sandwich proves chicken doesn’t have to be desert-dry.  The shredded chicken breast is moist and succulent, obviously the product of the chef’s attentiveness and mastery over temperature and time.  The chicken is absolutely bursting with flavor and would be good on its own, but its greatness shines when melded with Swiss cheese, caramelized onions, mushrooms, greens and tomatoes.

Plantains

The vast diversity of the countries and cultures comprising Latin America means there are so many things to explore and learn about the cuisine.  Even among nations bordering one other, the same dishes are often prepared in vastly different but always delicious ways.  New Mexicans might be surprised at tamales the way they’re prepared throughout Latin America.  It’s not corn husks which sheath the masa-covered ingredients but banana leaves which impart a delicious herbal flavor and uncommon moistness to food prepared within them.  Within the masa of Guava Tree’s tamales are the incomparable roast pork, a vegetable medley and sweet peppers.

Among the most ubiquitous of dishes served throughout Latin America are the tasty triumvirate of black beans, rice and sweet plantains, all three of which are prepared well at the Guava Tree.  My Puerto Rican friends in the Air Force could subsist on this tasty trio, but American tastes which are more accustomed to heavily seasoned flavor profiles might not be as enamored. Perhaps that’s one reason the three are served as sides and not as main entrees.

The Guava Tree Cafe invites you to partake of a piece of la pura vida as well as some of the most delicious sandwiches and sumptuous surprises in the Duke City.

Guava Tree Cafe
216 Yale Blvd, S.E.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
(505) 990-2599
Web Site
LATEST VISIT: 20 May 2011
# OF VISITS: 1
RATING: *
COST: $$
BEST BET: Latin Tamale, Plantains, Cuban Sandwich, El Guava Pollito, The Luciano

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