Saturday, July 21, 2012

El Rito, New Mexico--El Farolito

El Farolito
1212 Main St., El Rito, NM 87530
505-581-9509
 
No Website.... 
 
Why El Farolito?  Great, unfussy food in a casual, unfussy place. 

Yes, it's indeed something to be the number one restaurant of only one restaurant in El Rito, New Mexico, not terribly far from Santa Fe.  Fortunately, this place deserves to be Number One.

We drove here from Santa Fe with friends who live in the area, and we stopped for lunch. What a fabulous place--down home; family owned; very, very casual--and cash only.

This place is truly worth it--and worth the drive (although it helps if you're in the area).

Two of us had chicken enchiladas "Christmas style," from the "a la carte" menu, one with green sauce (excellent!), one with red; our companions had combination plates.

I'm not a terribly fussy eater, but I confess to be less of a fan of dark meat than of white; I was particularly pleased, then, that the chicken in the enchiladas was all white-meat.

When we have the opportunity to visit Santa Fe again, we'll want the opportunity to go back. In addition to very reasonable prices, the service is friendly and helpful. We were all pleased, pleased, pleased.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Stock Island, Florida (Key West)--Hogfish Bar and Grill

Hogfish Bar and Grill
Safety Harbor, Key West, FL 33040 
305-293-4041

http://www.hogfishbar.com/

 Why Hogfish?  For an astonishingly beautiful sunset and very good food.

This restaurant is actually on Stock Island, and not on Key West--but it's only a ten or fifteen minute drive from the center of KW. The directions on the restaurant's website are easy to follow, so do persist, and they will get you through the maze of trailers, campers, and picturesque turns on the way.

We sought out the Hogfish Grill with our good friends during our vacation in Key West (where we'd rented a small house), having heard from someone else back in Chicago that this place was worth visiting.

This is very much a low-key, informal, island-style bar, and, let me tell you, bars are not usually my favorite kind of atmosphere. (Indeed, someday I will rail against the restaurants who instruct host/hostess to automatically direct people to the bar.  Certainly, it's to make sure that the place makes money; it's likely that some will feel obligated to order beverages whether they want to or not--so the host/hostess says, "There's a wait, but please sit at the bar, and.....," even when tables are available. Some of us just don't want to sit at the bar, thank you, and we'd prefer a choice rather than a directive. But I digress.)

The experience quickly became a mixture of splendid food and sunset ambiance: we had a fabulous view of setting sun from an outside table near the dock, and the food was equally good. Three of us had the mixed grill, which features calimari, shrimp, scallops, mixed veggies, rice, and a fish of the day (two of us had mahi as the fish and the other chose hogfish). The fourth in our party had coconut shrimp, which she pronounced "the best she'd ever tasted." (And she's constructively picky and quite an authority on shrimp, let me tell you, given her New Orleans origins.)

I had the delightful mixed grill, but I also sampled the coconut shrimp.  Our friend is right: they were the least over-breaded and the tastiest, appropriately "shrimpy" fried shrimp I'd ever had. (Yes, they were great.)

We had fried green tomatoes as an appetizer for the table, too, which were fine--if you like fried green tomatoes, which some of us did, and some of us didn't.

In all, the menu had a wide range of items--from sandwiches to salads to entrees--all of which looked very good and suitable for a variety of budgets.

Again, speaking as a not-really-a-bar person, I nonetheless have every intention of returning when we make it back to the Keys.  My Spousal Unit--who is most definitely a bar person--agrees.