Girasoles is one of the few alta cocina restaurants in the Centro Historico. It's also the only upscale restaurant I'd been to before. It was the last night before we left for Oaxaca and we needed something easy and close to our hotel in the Centro Historico. I gave my wife the choice between several places, including traditional restaurants like Santo Domingo. She chose Girasoles because of its proximity, though I warned her that on my previous trip I left underwhelmed. Then again, my palate had developed since that trip and I might be more open to non-traditional Mexican. My palate wasn't my problem, though. My original impression was correct: the food at Girasoles just isn't that good.
The menu sounds interesting with both original and traditional dishes not found elsewhere. Like a few other midscale restaurants in Mexico City, the serve various insect dishes, including escamoles (ant roe), chapulines (grasshoppers), and gusanos (larvae). We stayed away from the Fear Factor dishes.
I started with the sopa de pistache, a cream of pistachio soup garnished with rose petals. It was the best dish of the night, mildly sweet and creamy with a subtle nuttiness and an almost imperceptible floral flavor. My wife got the enchiladitas de jamaica, a dish allegedly from the coast of Guerrero. Tortillas were wrapped around hibiscus flowers, coated with melted manchego, and laid in a pool of salsa verde. In the middle of the six little enchiladas, a pile of fried jamaica and huanzontles (a green/herb that was in seasons while we were in Mexico) garnished the plate. It was an interesting dish, but the flavors didn't meld that well. The sum of the parts seemed more than the whole.
In an effort to show that I'm doomed to repeat my mistakes, I ordered the mole de tamarindo con pavo, the dish I believe I ordered on my first trip to Girasoles. The turkey breast was a little dry and the sweet and tangy sauce had little complexity. The dish seemed very basic and was served with white rice. Blue corn tortillas came in a basket for making tacos.
My wife ordered the filete de huachinango empanizado en huanzontles: snapper covered with a crust of the herb and sitting in a pool of squash blossom sauce. A small pile of fried jamaica garnished the plate. The fish was fishy and all the other flavors were too muted. The herb crust was too thick and tasted a little burnt.
The biggest mistake of the night, though, was ordering dessert after such a mediocre meal. We got the pay de petalos de rosa. The nearly solid pie filling tasted of nothing but sugar. Even the garnishes of rose and strawberries were flavorless, as was the jamaica coulis. It was as if someone had replaced the dessert with a wax facsimile. It did look pretty, however.
Adding insult to injury, the next evening in Oaxaca, both my wife and I received the worst case of Montezuma's Revenge in recorded history. Well, our recorded history. My wife even passed out in the shower and threw up on herself. We believe that Girasoles was the cause since we both started feeling ill on the bus.
extramsg wrote:My wife even passed out in the shower and threw up on herself.
Santander wrote:I pointed to them and made a simpering Baylessian grin and sideways headshake (with stoner intonation, Oklahoma-edged Mexican Spanish, and Cosby-esque emphasis on each syllable of "chi-po-tle pep-pers").
thaiobsessed wrote:Any updates on Mexico City? I've read through about a half dozen old posts.
We are staying in the Condesa district.
On our list thus far...
Upscale:
Pujol
Izote
Traditional:
El Bajio
Fonda El Refugio
Breakfasts:
Sanborn's
We'd like to go to some good bakeries
We'll definitely be going to the Bazar Sabado and Mercado la Merced.
Any suggestions/critique of our itinerary?
Thanks
thaiobsessed wrote:Any updates on Mexico City? I've read through about a half dozen old posts.
We are staying in the Condesa district.
Kennyz wrote:Re. Izote, I went too, pretty much because everyone from America goes there on account of every guide book and foodie website saying we should. It was one of the bigger disappointments of the trip
Bill/SFNM wrote:Near the Zocalo is one of my favorite restaurants in the world: El Danubio - for mariscos.
Bill/SFNM
JimInLoganSquare wrote:thaiobsessed wrote:Any updates on Mexico City? I've read through about a half dozen old posts.
We are staying in the Condesa district.
In Condesa, Mrs. JiLS and I stopped into Restaurante Matisse on Amsterdam on our trip in August 2009. We were just hungry, it was about to rain, Matisse was open, and it was a fun little look at the way this place that opened in 1996 reflects the (much older) Jewish culture of Mexico City, of which Condesa/Hipódromo have been an epicenter over the years. Good matzoh ball soup, decent sandwiches. It's charming and it's right there when your feet hurt from walking through Condesa and Roma and Hipódromo. I am sure someone will now brand me a Philistine twit for liking this place, but I, Mrs. JiLS, the two large families with various celebrations that were occupying the upstairs private dining rooms. and a horde of other guests were all having a blast on a rainy August afternoon in this little blue enclave.
I have to assume you'll get to Centro Historico, and there you should visit my favorite lunch counter (like I've tried them all, but anyway): Café La Blanca. Best chilaquiles I've had anywhere, fantastic soups, and also the cheapest (but very good) chile en nogada. They have a businessman's lunch special that is ridiculously affordable. They will try to sell you an extra plate of bread you don't need, but even that's so cheap, why not? You might also want to hunt down one of the many places in the Centro that specialize in roast turkey. There's a whole block full of them I've walked past several times, just inside the western end of the Centro, but I've always been just a bit too full too partake at those times. The Aztecs loved turkey, so even though I'm sure from what I've observed in the windows this is the Mexican equivalent of a Butterball, it's a culturally significant experience you should relish (even though I have not). And the carving of the turkeys is easy walking distance from where the Aztecs carved the hearts from their screaming victims in the thousands. So, you've got that going for you.
Go to Alameda Park, and find the huge helado stands near the music/dance stage at the north side of the park, where Hidalgo (street bordering the north of the park) meets Trujano. It's great stuff, and at least on the weekends, it's like a permanent State Fair. There are folkloric dancers, rock bands, Mexican bands, pickpockets, guys selling drain traps, miraculous shoe shines that last six months (I can attest to this), unashamed PDA's (old school meaning of that acronym), cheesy overpriced crap trinkets for the gringos and the feebleminded, hamburguesas for those with a death wish, utter chaos and fun galore. Plus, while in the area, you can check out one of the world's few museums that exhibit just one work of art (if you don't count the little rotating exhibits of local, contemporary art stuck in the vestibule of the main gallery, and I do not). At Balderas and Colón.
And of course, there is always Angus Butcher House (Official Website of Angus Butcher House; set speakers to "high")
Matisse Restaurante - Condesa
Amsterdam 260
Colonia Condesa
Café La Blanca
5 de Mayo 40
Colonia Centro
Museo Mural Diego Rivera
Plaza de la Solidaridad (at Balderas and Colón)
(Angus you will need to find for yourself!)
thaiobsessed wrote:Next up was El Tizoncito. This place is a chain and they recommended the outpost at Tamaulipas 122 at our hotel. The pastor was terrific. The cone (with onions below, pineapple on top) is cooked by hot coals housed in a metal box behind the meat. The tortillas are also passed over a brazier with hot coals. We loved the pastor here (and had a return visit for standard tacos de la bola and tacos gringos (on flour tortillas with chihuaha cheese). The cebollitas were good, too. I almost took a video of the taco preparation--it was very fun watching these guys in action sending a piece of the pineapple flying and catching it in mid-air.
Kennyz wrote:The tacos al pastor at that very same El Tizoncito changed my idea of what they could be. I've never tasted a version half as good as those.
I read this whole blog and these are my thoughts.
One should NEVER stay in or near the Zona Rosa. It is seedy and cheesy and I don't think it will ever return to the glory it enjoyed during its heyday. The only place worth going there is La Fonda el Refugio for amazing authentic Mexican, which was mentioned (you have been here) and then cross over to go to the Insurgentes Silver market. Why these people came to eat in Mexico, and ended up eating at some Chinese place in la Zona Rosa is beyond me??
The places to stay would be in Polanco or Condesa. Polanco is more ritzy but you can walk everywhere and there are tons of amazing restaurants to choose from. Polanco is also close to all of the museums. Condesa is very bohemian and I agree, it is like Greenwich village. Lots of young people, outdoor cafes, and you can walk everywhere. There is a famous street that it is built around called Amsterdam which used to be a horse race track so it is a huge circle with cafe's shops and bars. I love going to eat there on friday or saturday. You can also rent an eco bike for the day (there are many stands all over).
San Angel, as you know, is a great place to spend the day. They mention Bazaar de Sabado, but neither San Angel Inn to have lunch, or Diego Rivera's house where you can see his studio. You cannot come to San Angel and not do the latter 2 things as well.
Coyoacan was mentioned and it is a nice place to spend the day and see the Casa Azul, and Trotsky's home. Nice place to walk as well and great cafes.
In the Centro, Danubio is great for seafood, especially langostinos al mojo de ajo, but this place is old and the waiters have been there just as long. So if you go there, do your research on the place and order quickly and efficiently. It is always packed and the waiters are in a hurry. Cafe Tacuba (you have been there also) is great for authentic mexican.
Top of the line restaurants would be Pujol which is listed as one of the best restaurants in the world (we took you all there when you came for Thanksgiving one year) or Shu (no explanation needed here).
Izote and El Bahio were mentioned as well and while they are both pretty good, they would not be my first choices by any means.
Good taco joints would be El Farolito, el Tizoncito, or El Califa.
......... And those are my thoughts ; )
RevrendAndy wrote:I'm surprised there's no thread for Mexico City so I may as well start it (apologies if it's buried in the dank dark caverns of LTH).