Gil's Thrilling (And Filling) Blog

Follow the Culinary Ruminations of New Mexico's Sesquipedalian Sybarite. 742 Restaurant Reviews, More Than 4000 Visitor Comments…And Counting!

About This Blog

Sugar Nymph's Bistro in Penasco (Photo Courtey of Deanna Nichols)

Famed tenor Luciano Pavarotti once said, “One of the very nicest things about life is the way we must regularly stop whatever it is we are doing and devote our attention to eating.”

Hola! I’m Gil Garduño.  Welcome to Gil’s Thrilling (And Filling) Blog.  I chose the site vanity “nmgastronome” because it truly reflects my passion for the cuisine of the Land of Enchantment–and hopefully describes the level to which my palate has evolved after having visited and evaluated more than 1,000 restaurants in the past ten years or so.

Gastronome - A connoisseur of good food; someone with a refined palate; a person devoted to refined sensuous enjoyment (especially good food and drink); an epicure.

In this blog’s nomenclature, there is hopefully an implicit reflection of the continuous improvement of this Web site.  In the past ten years, this site has evolved from a rudimentary HTML version of an Excel table to a site in which you could find detailed, one-page reviews of many of your favorite restaurants in New Mexico.  This blog is the latest in the evolution of Gil’s Thrilling (And Filling) Site.

Mary & Tito's guacamole and rice filled burrito served Christmas style.

Mary & Tito’s guacamole and rice filled burrito served Christmas style.

When we moved back to New Mexico on May 15, 1995, our first priority wasn’t where to live, but where to eat.  Having been away for the better part of 18 years, there were so many old favorites with which to reacquaint ourselves and so many exciting new prospects we just had to try.  By year’s end, we had visited 75 different restaurants.

As a chronic “compiler of lists” (a consequence of being meticulously organized) I began using an Excel spreadsheet to track the various restaurants we visited.   That rudimentary spreadsheet included short “Zagat style” comments intended to serve as mnemonics that triggered what we liked or didn’t like about a particular restaurant.  Sometimes those comments were so cryptic that they meant something only to me (pretty much as intended).

In 1995, the internet was in its relative infancy, but I applied my then rudimentary HTML skills to create a Web site in which to enter my musings.  Though the format lent itself to tracking restaurant visits much better than a spreadsheet ever could, it somehow didn’t dawn on me that my reviews would be available to anyone savvy enough to use a search engine.  It didn’t take long before Gil’s Thrilling Web site was “discovered.”

I was privileged enough to have been mentioned on Roadfood.coma few years ago.  Here’s what Michael and Jane Stern of Gourmet magazine and roadfood.comhad to say about this Web site: We came across a delightful website called Gil’s Thrilling Web Site, written and maintained by Gil Garduño. It’s mostly about good Roadfood-type eating, especially in Albuquerque, and it is a joy to browse. We recommend a visit!

I’ve been mentioned on Chowhound more times than I can count and in the past two years (2007-2008), I’ve also spent some time on the phone with Food Network researchers, advocating for New Mexico’s culinary scene.

While recognition from respected local and national publications seems to give my site a modicum of validation, the biggest kick I get is in getting e-mail from adventurous diners who visit my site.  I hear most often from newcomers to the Land of Enchantment who have used my reviews to discover New Mexico’s restaurants, but appreciate e-mail just as much from lifelong New Mexico residents who recommend restaurants I may not even have heard about.

So, what qualifies me to review and write about restaurants?  I have no “professional training” that qualifies me to discern the subtle nuances inherent in various foods, nor am I by trade or practice, a professional chef.  I’m merely a gastronome, someone who loves and appreciates good food…and dining at nearly 1000 different restaurants since 1995 should give a modicum of credence to my opinion–but no more credence than YOU have.

Unlike the pretentious pundits who wax poetic about the latest epicurean trends in the culinary world (those who would, for example, describe a meal at McDonald’s as a “gustatory repast in the ubiquitous Scottish restaurant emblazoned with saffron ellipses”), I’m not particularly impressed by nouveau cuisine, the very pronunciation of which reeks condescension. I’m an ordinary guy who likes to eat good food at reasonable prices and expects to be treated relatively well while doing so.

See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil

Unlike some food critics (pictured), I don’t blindly acquiesce to the latest trend, turn a deaf ear to recommendations from people who don’t tread the well beaten path, and I don’t hold back in criticizing–if warranted–the “anointed” restaurants frequented by the nouveau riche.

I’ve been lucky enough to have traveled extensively and availed myself of the opportunity to partake of the finest local cuisine available in such hotbeds of culinary presentation as San Francisco, New Orleans, Boston, Chicago, and Las Vegas (yes, Sin City where all the celebrity chefs go).

Please review my rating system which explains how I arrive at my ratings.  It’s not exactly scientific and I don’t take into account anyone else’s opinion of the restaurants in which we dine, not even the opinion of my faithful dining companion and wife Kim whose palate has matured tremendously over the years.  Your opinions may certainly differ as there are no rights and wrongs in my ratings, just opinions–mine.

This Web site lists only restaurants I’ve visited this century (since January 1st, 2000).  I have deleted the short synopses of restaurants (such as the dreadful Chinese buffet restaurants in Albuquerque) I have no intention of ever visiting again.  I also eliminated most reviews on corporate chain restaurants, partially in the spirit of “if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all.”

As much as possible, my reviews will begin to incorporate images of the restaurants we visit.  Mastering HTML has been easier for me than remembering to remove my camera’s lens cover before I shoot a picture.  Fortunately, much better photographers than I have shared some of their wonderful images.  The photo of the Sugar Nymphs Bistro in Peñasco, for example, is courtesy of the brilliant Deanna Nichols.

Please note that a caption will display when you run your cursor over any image.

Note: Please read “Welcome to Gil’s Thrilling Blog” for more information.

  • Tommy says:

    Hmmm… you might be onto something, Jim. 2403 ain’t right (that would be around Cutler Ave., according to Google maps). Near Menaul is getting better – I know it was much north of Lomas. Actually, I just did a virtual cruise via Google maps and it reminded me of recent actual cruises I’ve made driving in this ABQ neighborhood trying recall where this mystery place was. From what I see (the buildings, just the feel), I came up with West side of San Mateo, one side or the other of Los Arboles Ave. This is what looks/feels right:

    Just south of Los Arboles, consider where you see Indian Teepee. It was that kind of building.

    Just north of Los Arboles, consider where you see Premier Nails & Spa/Kim Ngoc Jewelry Repair.

    Does that do anything for anybody? I’m trying to describe about where I recall the restaurant, but also the kind of quaint, 1-story building (wider north/south; shallow east to west). I don’t mean to be too anal about this. A picture would be great, but a tall order. Maybe I should give up and just leave this a a good memory …

    March 14, 2012 at 2:44 PM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Hello Tommy

      I finally visited Silvano’s and spoke with one of the family members who own the restaurant. She confirmed that the original Silvano’s–on the south side of Lombas two blocks west of San Mate–preceded AND succeeded Los Cuates at 5016-B Lomas. She also told me that the second Silvano’s was on San Mateo north of Cutler and south of Menaul on the west side of the street. One of its neighbors to the north was a great record shop called the Sound Warehouse. As Jim Millington points out, one of the former tenants after Silvano’s vacated was indeed Froggy’s which was also short-lived.

      Gil

      March 21, 2012 at 8:30 PM
  • Bob of the Village of Los Ranlchos says:

    My gut said Silvano’s preceeded Los Cuates at the corner of Monroe and Lomas, i.e. on the North side of the street. The entrance was on the west side, i.e. off Monroe St. and not quite as “elaborate” as today. I had a friend confirm my memory as well by simply asking ‘Where was Silvano’s on Lomas?” We’re talking the ’70′s. I also recall, but not specifically nowadays…LOL… a ‘dark cloud’ came over the place….something about a safe being broken into with surprizing allegations being made.
    (Alas, maybe there was another one at another time elsewhere….LOL)

    March 15, 2012 at 5:13 PM
  • Roland says:

    BOTVOLR, Cocina de Carlos was the restaurant that prececded Los Cuates at Monroe and Lomas in the original building. Los Cuates operated in that building for several years and then added on and remodeled, I believe. Silviano’s was originally in the strip mall across the street and a little bit east toward San Mateo in a tiny little space with just a few tables. I ate at both places back in the 70′s.

    March 16, 2012 at 2:25 PM
  • Bob of the Village of Los Ranlchos says:

    Eee ho laah again Roland! YES! Cocinos de Carlos sounds familiar too, but maybe later???? Hee ho…maybe it’s Los Anos or the fact that, OK…I’ll (blush) confess, I never eat on the South side of any street so I can’t recall it being there!!!! Slainte (aka Salud) per St. Paddy’s Day!

    March 17, 2012 at 3:47 PM
  • Ashley says:

    You should check out the La Risa Cafe in Ribera, NM. I’ve only been a couple times, but would love to go more if it were any closer to Albuquerque. They have delicious made from scratch food and their desserts are even better! It’s definitely worth the drive if you can make it.
    http://www.thelarisacafe.com/TheLaRisaCafe.com/Home.html

    March 19, 2012 at 3:11 PM
  • Tommy says:

    Well, well, well …

    Gil, I don’t know you (wish I did) but you da man. So, Jim Millington was right after all. Who knew? That location just didn’t seem right – too far south. But here are now 2 data points that point to the same place. Your meeting w/ the Silvano family member is confirmatory. I’ll be damn! I really appreciate your doing this leg work – that’s really the only way to do it right. You proved my memory’s still working pretty well. I KNEW it was on the west side of San Mateo.

    Sound Warehouse I kinda remember. Froggy’s may be “Froggy’s Photos” (a prof. photography shop?). So, I guess the new question I’ll pose here:

    Who among us ever visited Silvano’s #2 on San Mateo ?

    March 21, 2012 at 9:18 PM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Thanks, Tommy. Your memory is quite remarkable. Froggy’s was actually Senor Froggy’s. I found an excerpt (below) from an Albuquerque Journal article in October, 2000 which confirms Silvano’s was followed by Senor Froggy’s which was succeeded by Joker’s Pub. The address was 2509 San Mateo, N.E.

      It’s no joke: Joker’s Pub will be a “neighborhood-style” pub serving jumbo hamburgers, extra-large hot dogs, overstuffed sandwiches and an assortment of crunchy bar food in the former location of Senor Froggy’s and before that, Silviano’s. Senor Froggy’s on San Mateo near Interstate 25 had been closed for more than a year until Jerry Wiley, former owner and manager of Ned’s Restaurant & Bar, thought it would be an ideal location because there is little competition in the area. (Ned’s was sold last spring.)

      There’s a lot of information on Google about Joker’s Pub, but nary a photo.

      March 21, 2012 at 9:44 PM
  • Jim Millington says:

    I ate at the number 2 location of Silvano’s several times but never liked it nearly as much as I did the original even though the building was much nicer. My vague memory back through the mists of antiquity is that everything was heavier and drier. I really can’t be much more specific. I actually ate at Senor Froggy’s once too, I remember it as being pretty empty and specializing in Frog Legs, not the hottest and most sought after item in Albuquerque.

    March 22, 2012 at 2:48 AM
  • Tommy says:

    I love this site, mainly cuz I’m a nostalgia freak. OK, who wants to continue down memory lane? To do this trip, it’ll help if – like me – you grew up in the North Valley. Go back to the 60s. See if you recall a nondescript white box-type building (about the size of a one-car garage) on the SE corner of 2nd St. & Osuna Rd. This was the Lark Bar. As a kid, I was of course too young to go to the bar. I had friends in Zia Gardens (just north of there). Growing up on Pueblo Luna Dr. (73oo N. 2nd St.), my mom used to send me down to Tower Market (NE corner, now a Circle-K) on my bike for cigs once in a while. 2 things: the cigs were only 35¢ and the clerk sold ‘em to ME (a kid) w/o even batting an eye. My, how times have changed. But I digress …

    Now let’s move to, say, the late 60s/early 70s. It’s not the Lark Bar that’s so interesting but rather the little hole in the wall joint just south of it (east side of 2nd St.): the original Sadies Cocinita. This was a classic cocinita w/ one small dining room. I used to watch Sadie run that old cast iron grill now on display at its N. 4th St. location. She cranked out some awesome chili from that spot, perfected her trademark salsa, and always had amazing sopapillas. I sensed at the time that the place was way too small for its own good and that it would outgrow the venue.

    Sure enough, it eventually moved into Valley Bowl (just south of its present location on N. 4th St.), which worked out pretty well for a while. I guess the rest is (as they say) history.

    It so happens I went to school w/ Sadies’ niece & knew her nephew well. It always amazed me now well the Lebanese culture mastered NM chili – took it to an art form.

    Oh, back to 2nd St. Some years later, the little hole in the wall what once was Sadies’ Cocinita was rejuvenated by Elsie Gutierrez (Gutierrez’s were my neighbors down at the end of Pueblo Luna Dr.). Elsie ran the little joint for a while – don’t recall the name of it nor how long it stayed in business. What I can tell you is that – when I was a kid – I’d go to her house to play w/ one of her sons (“Danny”); she’d be making flour tortillas and offer me one. Friends, those were the real deal! Heavenly!

    Just to finish off, what’s left of the original Sadies’ appears to be the little yellow building that is NM Auto Sales (per Google Nov. 2007).

    March 22, 2012 at 9:30 AM
  • Roland says:

    Tommy, Was Ms. Gutierrez’ place called the Mexican Carryout Kitchen. I remember it from the 70′s in a little place like that on 4th. It later moved across the street into a larger facility. They made dinnerplate size stuffed sopapillas with lots of chili inside and smothered. It was delicious.

    I also remember an Italian place on Claremont between 2nd and 4th (I think) called the Casa Buon Apetito. All of the sauces were homemade. It was a great little Italian place, family owned and operated.

    Then I remember a place on San Pedro just north of Lomas called the Taco Sombrero. It was run by an older Hispanic couple. They made the best food and there were only about 10 tables in the place. Today I think it is a shipping store.

    March 22, 2012 at 12:50 PM
  • Tommy says:

    No, you’re getting ahead of me (smile). That was gonna be my next venture. So let’s go there. Mexican Kitchen. You have the time frame about right – early 70s. North 4th St. – I’m gonna say 4924 (just north of what now appears to be US Porcelain; east side o’ the street). Like all good Mexican joints, in time they become used car lots. In this case, it’s now a used car lot but I can’t make out the name.

    Here’s what I most remember about that place. Firstly, it was rather small, though twice the size of the original Sadies. What I most remember about is was their stuffed sopas. When you ordered one of those bad boys, it came to your table on a plate that it covered. I said “covered” – as in “from side to side”. I remember the first tine I went there w/ a buddy of mine and he recommended that plate. As I recall, options included green or red and beans & rice. He warned me I’d never finish it and man was he right. If my memory’s right, they eventually moved across the street and operated there for a few years. Eventually, they went out of business and Garcia’s moved in (where they are now). Does this seem like the right history? That’s the say I think it went. Anyone remember stuffed sopas at the old Mexican Kitchen? Starting to make me hungry just thinkin’ about it …

    March 22, 2012 at 3:57 PM
  • Jim Millington says:

    Dear Tommy,
    You have lost me. I remember the Mexican Kitchen very, very well. Back when I worked at a very famous (infamous) subsidiary of the Pubic Service Company everybody always wanted to go out for lunch at the Mexican Kitchen. On planes from Dallas I listened to people talking about how they couldn’t wait to get to Albuquerque to hit the Mexican Kitchen. I was dragged there at least once a week. God, how I hated that place! Back when I loved ALL New Mexican food (especially Silvano’s) I couldn’t believe such huge piles of crap. As much as I loath Chili’s and Applebee’s this was far worse, but there was a lot of it for cheap. So, if you gagged a little on each bite, they made up for it on volume. I may be the only person in the universe who felt this way.

    March 22, 2012 at 7:36 PM
  • Tommy says:

    Hmmm…

    Well, maybe I remember the food differently – that happens. The Mexican Kitchen I remember was pretty good and the main point I was trying to make was their huge stuffed sopas – almost the size of small couch pillows. No where at any other place I’ve been (including places that offered stuffed sopapillas) did I ever see that. It was phenomenal.

    I’m willing to respect your memory of a not-so-great taste/presentation. But did I get the location right?

    March 23, 2012 at 8:20 AM
  • Jim Millington says:

    It was on North 4th street, west side, 4924 would be the wrong side.. Actually I have been searching for it for several years as I can’t believe such a popular place would ever close. I believe, but am uncertain, that it was 4917 which is now Garcia’s Kitchen. It may even have been Garcia’s Mexican Kitchen then but everyone just called it the Mexican Kitchen. Our memories are probably the same, everything was huge, which everyone but me loves.

    March 23, 2012 at 9:38 AM
  • Tommy says:

    Jim,

    I do agree that the “new” Garcia’s is on the west side of the street (just north of what was the Church of Christ – white building is still there). But my place was on the EAST side. This may be one of those deals like the old Silvano’s where my usually-good memory insisted it was on the West side of San Mateo. And sure enough …

    In this case, the building I’m remembering was on the EAST side of 4th Street – pretty much across from the present Garcia’s, as I described above. When I do Google Maps, I see the very building at 4924. It’s actually not a used car lot, but an insurance company (National Insurance Centers).

    So I searched on US Porcelain and spoke w/ a Hispanic gentleman who had that business (it’s closed now). He totally confirmed my memory: the place just to the north of him WAS the Mexican Kitchen – mainly had burritos & stuffed sopapillas (he recalled). He confirmed that there came a time when they moved directly across the street and were there a number of years before Garcia’s bought them out (or some other way took possession of the property).

    Oh, I contacted the insurance company and spoke w/ a nice woman who told me she was born in ’76 (therefore didn’t remember the Mexican Kitchen). She did, however, tell me that she’s been there 10 years and that, before the insurance company moved in, the place had been a dentist/chiropractor’s office (How’s that for a combo?).

    More than we wanted to know but there’s the history.

    Where to next?

    March 23, 2012 at 10:47 AM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Hello Tommy

      The Mexican Kitchen was located at 4917 Fourth St. N.W. In 1997, the Albuquerque Tribune’s restaurant critic Jolene Gutierrez wrote the following review on her Chowmondo column which included a terrific description of the stuffed sopaipillas:

      Mexican Kitchen
      4917 Fourth St. N.W., 344-5315
      No alcohol. Major credit cards, checks. Smoking, non-smoking. Hours 9 a.m.-9 p.m. daily.
      North Fourth Street has always been a road of urban-rural incongruity, a cluttered collection of feed stores and bowling alleys, neighborhood taverns, strip malls, antique dealers, and auto parts stores. The Cavalier Motel. Moses Kountry Health Food Store. Bob’s Burgers.
      And it has always been home to some of Albuquerque’s more definitive New Mexican restaurants: the first Gardunos, Casa Benavidez, the now defunct Antonio’s and the ever-expanding Sadie’s. And, since 1970, the Mexican Kitchen.
      Often people have stumbled upon this place only when the long wait at Sadie’s sent them down the road in a desperate search for salsa and chips.
      But here there are no margaritas, no turquoise-and-pink chic, no zip, no zing. It’s rough around the edges, rough when you’re not Gardunos. The amount of ambience here could be stuffed into half a chimichanga.
      But it is a place that serves up lots of food oozing in cheese and chile and baskets of crunchy, puffy sopaipillas. It is food that would make a weight-watcher cry, a paper towel greasy.
      Mexican Kitchen loyals don’t care that the dining area resembles your uncle’s den, shaded in browns and ambers and decorated with sports trophies, mirrors, hanging plants and flea market paintings, holy cards tucked into their frames.
      The menu here is fairly basic: combo platters ($7.70), burritos ($3.30-$7.60), carne adovada ($7.70). Even the Chef’s Special ($7.70) is your basic taco, cheese enchilada and chile relleno, a crusty thing with a chile as tough as leather and always, always, bounteous servings of cheese, cheese and more cheese.
      My favorite dish here is good old greasy stuffed sopaipillas ($6.60), an enormous square the size of a James Michner novel that’s filled with creamy potatoes, ground beef, slices of sweet-hot green chile and beans, and covered with more chile and a gooey glop of melted cheese. It is not a dish for the cholesterol-conscious.
      Mexican Kitchen generously serves up vast baskets of sopaipillas, but, alas, honey is served in those messy little packets.
      Breakfast is also served here, and the huevos rancheros special for $2.99 ought to keep you chugging clear through dinner.
      Service here is as eclectic as the stuff that lines the walls: Some are dedicated and energetic; some tired and simply going through the motions. Perhaps the uneven service is no surprise in a place that never quite found the same fame its restaurant counterparts down the road have. But if you’re traveling North Fourth, it’s still worth a try.

      The Mexican Kitchen was relatively short-lived. It opened in 1970 and lasted less than two decades.

      Gil

      March 23, 2012 at 8:21 PM
  • Bob of the Village of Los Ranchos says:

    Well…Jimminee Cricket…I don’t care what the Silvano family member says! I’m stickin to my ‘membrance’s location! And what about the folderol with the safe? LOL

    As penance for the above, I offer this: Apparently this samwich recipe was made for Adam Sandler to make in the movie ‘Spanglish’ which I never saw….(for NM Newbies: Spanglish is a complicated, translation creation for stuff that did not exist when Spanish was created, e.g. karroh (caro) for car; tshehkeh for check (for younguns: a piece of paper one gives to another in lieu of cash); etc.) My question is: is there something missing re the samwich? http://tinyurl.com/6tnq4nr For me, it would be more relevant if you spread some ‘smashed’ avocado (which is in the title but absent from the recipe) on the toast and added, du-uuh, some chopped…not minced/pureed….green chile!!! Muy Sabrosa!!! Otherwise, what’s so Spanglish about it?

    PS: Did that SoundWareHouse on San Meteo become one of the first rental places for video tapes for VCRs?
    “Chow”

    March 23, 2012 at 1:43 PM
  • Roland says:

    Tommy, My memory of the Mexican Kitchen is like yours. It was in a building, small, on the East side of 4th. The first time I went there, I ordered the combo and a stuffed sopa smothered. The waitress asked me if I was sure that was what I wanted to do. I assured her that yes, I wanted to order that (because the only stuffed sopas I had ever seen were quite small). Imagine my amazement when she brought out the combo with a taco, enchilada and something else with beans and rice. Then she came back with another dinner plate covered with the largest sopa I had ever seen, covered in green chile, cheese, lettuce and tomato. I had a lot of carryout after I ate part of the very delicious sopapilla. Her regular sopapillas were wonderful with honey. I’m sorry Jim had such a bad memory. My friends and I loved that place. I do remember when they moved across the street. I also remember that everytime I saw the lady who owned and ran it, her hair was always perfectly “coiffed”. I never understood how she could be in a hot steamy kitchen all day and keep her hair in place like that. Good hairspray, I guess. She was a very nice lady and I miss her and the MK to this day.

    March 23, 2012 at 6:03 PM
  • Tommy says:

    Great to read your comments & memories, Roland. I LOL as I read your story. Your memory resonates w/ mine on the Mexican Kitchen. Like I said: it was a friggin’ couch cushion. UNbelievable!

    March 23, 2012 at 6:13 PM
  • Tommy says:

    Excellent review, Gil – nice find. Joline’s (not Jolene) review was spot on (she nailed the stuffed sopa).

    Anyhow, this speaks to Mexican Kitchen #2 (now Garcia’s), as we’ve descried earlier in this post. The review kinda gets to one of my angles on this place which I didn’t really bring up. Back in the day (back in THAT day), some of us didn’t have a lot o’ walkin’ around $$$ and a place like MK, all the nuances in Trib’s review notwithstanding, was easy on the wallet (to say the least). That’s also what made it a great place.

    March 24, 2012 at 3:03 PM
  • Roland says:

    Gil, Thanks for posting. Like Tommy said, it brings back the memories of college days, few dollars, lots of food, decent chile and a lot of it. Even now, I would savor some of that. I understand that part of the reason it closed was due to a tragic death in the family.

    March 25, 2012 at 12:33 AM
  • Tommy says:

    OK, who wants to pop over to Bernalillo for a quick trip down Memory Lane? For this one, you’ll need to go back to the 60s (when I was a kid). The place in my memory was Anita’s (or possibly “Anita’s Cafe”). My family would sometimes go there after church on Sundays. Considering the trip was all the way from the North Valley, it had to be both good and not expensive – and it was both. This super-quint little place was the quintessential Mexican Cocinita – located on the SW corner of an intersection (dirt roads back in the day). I’m gonna go out on a limb and say it was on the corner of W. Avenida Bernalillo & Calle Placitas.

    I can’t tell you details about the fare because I was too young but it was classic (I do remember delicious sopapillas) and this goes down as my earliest and fondest memory of a GREAT Mexican place. We’re talkin’ small – there might have been 6 tables in the place. Unfortunately, it’s long gone now. If I have the intersection right, there appears to be a small metal-roofed casita there now. Does anybody remember this place?

    March 26, 2012 at 2:44 PM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Hi Tommy

      Molokai Girl’s blog includes several pictures of Anita’s Mexican Food, which I’ve passed dozens of times. Now you’ve piqued my interest. I’m determined to find an old-time Bernalillo resident who can tell us all about Anita’s.

      Bob of the Village People, there were a number of naturalist camps in the area, including one in Placitas and one in Corrales.

      Gil

      March 26, 2012 at 8:21 PM
  • Bob of the Village of Los Ranchos says:

    Ok Tommy….while I don’t remember, or wasn’t here for, Anita’s Cafe, how about across from Our Lady of Sorrows Church on 313 and a little to the North there being a former convent (at least that’s what I was told) that was, in about ’69, an “intimate”, as they say, fine dining venue http://tinyurl.com/btuhh5t .
    The last time I was in that relatively unused building was for a “Let’s back the RailRunner” scamming meeting held by NMDOT. Nevertheless, it still made my mouth water if I had the money, for such a “let’s get away for a candlelight dinner” venue given its traditional interior architecture. Sad the Milagro place and Coronado Cantina with its patio for exquisite Sandia/Valley views have faltered. For now, let’s give a Salud for Blade’s Bistro and Praire Star. Ooops, and Tamaya for those who can afford it! Say, wasn’t there a naturist camp a few miles up Camino Real as well?

    March 26, 2012 at 4:15 PM
  • Tommy says:

    Wow, Gil – you keep coming up w/ these incredible finds! That was absolutely stunning. And here I thought the building had become a house. Now I see that the actual location was SW corner of W. Calle Don Francisco & San Felipe Rd. The place is more north than I remembered, but I did have “the SW corner of an intersection” right.

    Molokai Girl’s camera phone shot was good. I was able to get some screen shots via Google Maps and pasted them into a little PowerPoint file for perpetuity. Seeing the old facade of Anita’s in Bernalillo really blew my hair back (what hair I have left). The food & ambiance in that little joint were crazy good, unmatched in most of today’s venues. I wish I could go back in time to that place. This was my nostalgia dose for the week. Big sigh …

    March 27, 2012 at 9:01 AM
  • Michael Bernstein says:

    Hi Gil,

    Do you know of any good Cuban restaurants in Albuquerque?

    You obviously haven’t reviewed any, but I was wondering if you might have heard some recommendations you would be willing to pass along.

    April 10, 2012 at 6:44 PM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Hi Michael

      For some reasons Cuban and African restaurants don’t seem to last very long in the Duke City. That said, the Havana Cafe on Menaul has received high acclaim from other critics and it’s been around for about two years. I’m well overdue in visiting.

      Though not exclusively a Cuban restaurant, the Guava Tree Cafe on Yale has a wonderful menu with several traditional Cuban entrees as well as a great cafe con leche. Another outstanding fusion restaurant with some Cuban-influenced items is Pasion Latin Cuisine on Lomas.

      Your Web site and life experiences are quite impressive. I have several colleagues and friends who served in the Israeli defense forces and have the utmost respect for them.

      Gil

      April 10, 2012 at 7:53 PM
  • Michael Bernstein says:

    Thanks for the quick reply and the kind words. I really need to update that site, as I am now striking out on my own to build a startup.

    April 10, 2012 at 8:14 PM
  • Walt Pomrenke says:

    Hello Gil, Long time no speak. Still depending on your wonderful reviews to keep me satisfied. Thought you might like some firsthand info from phoenix. Since You cover some phoenix areas I found out Dick Portillo is opening 3 Portillo’s in the phoenix metro area with the first to open @ Oct. The locations are Tempe, Chandler and they want the 3rd in Surprise, Glendale area. this came from the VP who was looking and buying the properties. more when I find out.

    Walt

    May 8, 2012 at 5:41 PM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Thanks, Chief

      That’s great news. Portillo’s hot dogs, Italian beef and chocolate cake are reasons enough to visit Phoenix even in the summer. There must be something about the Phoenix heat that draws in regional purveyors of great hot dogs. There’s a Ted’s Hot Dogs (the best hot dogs in Buffalo, New York) in Tempe.

      I’ll actually be in Phoenix next week on a business trip–always a day early and a dollar short.

      Gil

      May 9, 2012 at 8:34 PM
  • Susan Miller says:

    I’m a pretty devoted follower of your blog. My husband has just been diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes which has caused some modifications to our (extensive) dining out. We are currently visiting my sister in Carmel, CA and I have been impressed by how many good restaurants here are willing to substitute for the starch in a menu item and in many cases offer to do so on the menu. Could you start asking restaurants in greater Albuquerque if they are willing to make that easy for diners?

    May 9, 2012 at 6:48 PM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Hi Susan

      Thank you very much for the kind words about my blog. I hope to always live up to your trust.

      Albuquerque has one restaurant, Cafe Riviera on San Mateo which offers an extensive diabetes friendly menu. We have yet to visit it, but trusted sources have given it big thumbs up.

      Though they don’t expressly state it on their menus, many restaurants in the Duke City are willing to make special accommodation for diners with health concerns. One of my best friends and frequent dining companions has had Type II diabetes for years and generally asks for and receives an extra vegetable instead of a starch.

      Here’s a link to an excellent article on successful restaurant eating for Type II diabetes. Frankly, it’s got great advice for any and all diners concerned about healthful eating.

      Best of luck.

      Gil

      May 9, 2012 at 8:26 PM
  • newmexicotoitaly says:

    I have been reading your blog and taking your advice for a long time, but until I started blogging, didn’t realize it would be nice of me to say THANK YOU!!!

    May 13, 2012 at 3:57 PM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Hello Hope

      Thank you very much for your kind words. I look forward to reading about your adventures in Italy. You’ll be the second expatriate New Mexican in Italy I’ll be following. Jessica Lynn Torres moved to Italy a few months ago with her husband and has been having a blast: http://www.jessicalynnwrites.blogspot.com/. I envy the great adventures you’ll have.

      Best,

      Gil

      May 13, 2012 at 7:37 PM
  • newmexicotoitaly says:

    Wow – thanks for sharing that info – it truly is a small world!

    May 13, 2012 at 8:06 PM
  • Richard says:

    Hi Gil,

    Cool site. I wish I lived in the area to take advantage of the restaurants. :)

    Thanks,

    Richard

    May 31, 2012 at 10:11 AM
  • newmexicotoitaly says:

    Nice new look to your blog!!!

    May 31, 2012 at 7:59 PM
  • Greg Devejian says:

    Greetings Gil,
    Your blog has been our standard for several years but are having difficulty with the new format. Please consider posting a tutorial.
    Many thanks
    Greg

    July 1, 2012 at 11:36 AM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Greetings Greg
      A Blog User’s Guide has been added to the menu on the banner (right next to the USA Restaurant Index). Please let me know if the user’s guide answers the questions you have about using the blog. Let me know also if I missed anything or if confusion still exists on one of the blog’s features or functions.

      Thank you for suggesting the user’s guide.
      Gil

      July 12, 2012 at 2:18 AM
  • jessica says:

    I totally remember eating the huge stuffed sopaipillas at Mexican Kitchen in the 70′s and also the original Silviano’s. Thanks for the reminders. I had completely forgotten about Mexican Kitchen. There was another good one, i think it was El Encanto, on Rio Grande just north of Central, on the west side of street.

    July 13, 2012 at 4:51 PM
  • John Shipman says:

    For my taste, the San Antonio Crane Restaurant has the best carne adovada south of Rancho de Chimayó. Located directly behind the Buckhorn, this place was formerly known as Acosta’s. Small but honest, with five tables inside and several more outside on the front porch. Tamales with the smoothest masa and plenty of meat. Standard disclaimer: I have no financial interest in this establishment, I just eat there at least once a week.

    July 31, 2012 at 12:36 PM
  • Jim Millington says:

    As Mr. Jobs would say,”Wow!” I am glad you are back. I hated sitting around trying to decide where I should practice my favorite hobby, eating. We are on our way to Boston and points north to see the leaves for the second time and the first time since 2002 so we will be consulying you reviews for the area.

    October 1, 2012 at 5:21 PM
  • Bob of the Village of Los Ranchos says:

    Way to go Jim…While New England is chock-full of great restaurants, I’d have to go here http://www.nmgastronome.com/blog/?p=5408 Woodman’s, for what we cannot get out here…Fried Clams. As an aside, one of my comments notes a side trip I’d recommend as well. Be safe…check out the progression of changes for leaf peeping here http://www.yankeefoliage.com/ Have a colorful time!

    October 1, 2012 at 6:36 PM
  • Jim Millington says:

    Thank you Mr. Bob,
    I tried hard to take your advice on fried clams but landing at night and driving up to Portsmouth in the rain I was lucky to find the lane stripes and missed all the cut offs to get to Woodsmans. on the way back for a few days in Boston it was daylight but the driving rain made visibility worse so I settled for great fried clams at Brittaney’s Cafe in Lincoln and awful ones at the Fish House Grill in Bar Harbor. The rest of the time weather was fine and food especially fine though the Child Bride said (loudly and repeatedly) that she would never return to Montreal again even to eat her favorite Portuguese dishes at Douro. She later recanted and announced that she only meant after midsummer.I thought the weather and foliage were both great all through NH, ME, QC, VT and Mass except for those two unfortunate days.

    October 18, 2012 at 1:33 PM
  • Bob of the Village of Los Ranchos says:

    Alas, if nothing else, ya can count on good old New England weather for ya, BUT it’ll be a reason to take the Child Bride back for her Duoro visit. In the meantime, Y’all can read Call the Darkness Light to whet your appetite to visit where the mills of New England took off in Lowell, MA to tour its history http://www.nps.gov/lowe/index.htm . In addition, she will find that even in this town of only 90K, the Portuguese were a distinct neighborhood along with the French-Canadians, Irish, Polacks, and Greeks http://tinyurl.com/8hxoqhp. Beyond that and to vitalize more of Baaastan check out Massachusetts: A Novel, both by obsessive-compulsive author, Nancy Zaroulis!

    October 19, 2012 at 4:31 PM
  • JohnL says:

    Gil,
    The Timbuctu Bistro seems to have disappeared from your blog. It’s not listed anywhere tho I can still pull up your review in other ways. Is this a consequnce of having to switch the company that hosts your blog?

    December 5, 2012 at 2:37 PM
    • JohnL says:

      WHOOPS! My Bad!! I was looking for the Timbuctu Bistro in the Albuquerque Reataurant Index. It is listed under the New Mexico Index.

      December 5, 2012 at 2:44 PM
  • Kerry Moore says:

    Gil, LOOOVVEE your blog. When I travel up north, I use your recommendations. I did notice you don’t have any reviews from SE New Mexico. You need to come down to Roswell and check out our local hole-in-the-wall restaurant Billy Ray’s and try the Chile Relleno Stuffed Ribeye. Yes, that’s a Relleno physically stuffed in side one of the best steaks you will ever have!! Chef Todd Alexander has quite a flair for NM Style Cuisine. He also serves up a SW Beef Wellington, unlike any you have ever had. He wraps a chile and cheese topped beef medallion in side a flour tortilla and flash fries it to perfection. Billy Ray’s is also home to “Mine that Bird” Kentucky Derby winner. So on most nights, you can have an excellent meal while listening to a great story about a horse that should have never won the derby. Check out his reviews on tripadvisor: http://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g47182-d415546-Reviews-Billy_Ray_s_Restaurant_Lounge-Roswell_New_Mexico.html

    January 24, 2013 at 11:06 AM
    • Gil Garduno says:

      Hi Kerry

      Thank you so much for the kind words about my blog. I’m happy you’ve found it useful during your visits up north.

      Alas, our in-state travels have been curtailed in the past few years as we’ve been caring for our precious dachshund who has had pretty serious health issues. If her health was better, I’d be on my way to Roswell right now. Bill Ray’s sounds like my kind of restaurant and any chef inventive enough to craft the dishes you describe is someone I’d like to meet. Thank you so much for a great recommendation.

      Gil

      January 27, 2013 at 9:30 PM

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