SC - Friday the 13th/Full Moon Flu?
    Angus 
    angus at iamawitch.com
       
    Sat Oct 14 07:12:32 PDT 2000
    
    
  
Bear replied to my comments:
> > and Lord Stefan replied:
> > > I don't think I would use the enchilada sauce. Around here 
> > most of the
> > > resturantes do not serve any kind of sauce on/with their tamales.
> > 
> > where's "around here" ;-)
> 
> Stefan is in Austin, where, many years ago, I found one of the local
> Pancho's Mexican Buffets serving sauces of satisfactory fire rather than
> their usual bland fare.  Curiously, the place was run by a Hispanic family.
I remember that place. It was ok. The usual chain type tex-mex fare. It closed
down several years ago. I think there is a Rosie's Tamale House there now
in its place. A hometown place that now has several resturants and now
has take-out around Austin.
Austin has probably hundreds of Tex-Mex resturants. I've eaten at only
a small subset of them. There are literally streets where you can find
a different Tex-Mex resturant on each block.
Recently there have been more and more resturants that specialize in
dishes of interior Mexico, Central America and South America.
One thing I do miss is New Mexico type Mexican food. The only place I
know of in Austin that specialized in that closed down some years ago.
  
> > most of the restaurants that I've been to here in Atlanta have served
> > tamales with a sauce on them, usually either a red sauce, similar to
> > enchilada sauce, a "brown" sauce which I can't identify or a 
> > mole. 
Atlanta! I'm not sure that's much better than New Jersey. :-) 
But then, some of the best Chinese food I've had was in Salt Lake City
Utah. The transcontinental railroad finished near there and there were
apparently a number of chinese laborers who stayed in the area. 
 
> I've found very few places which serve mole.  The common sauces are picante
> or salsa colorado (red), salsa verde (green, usually with green chilies) and
> chili sauce (brown).  Queso (cheese sauce) can usually be requested.
Those are the usual ones. The latest "yuppie" thing though seems to be
offering half-a-dozen or more different hot sauces. Various greens, reds
and browns ranging from mild to fiery hot.
- -- 
Lord Stefan li Rous    Barony of Bryn Gwlad    Kingdom of Ansteorra
Mark S. Harris             Austin, Texas           stefan at texas.net
**** See Stefan's Florilegium files at:  http://www.florilegium.org ****
    
    
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