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Los Cabos Mexico

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When The Temperatures Soar

August 12, 2016 by Akiba 3 Comments

Every summer, there’s a shift that happens when our preferences switch from hearty food to lighter fare. Fish is a good choice because what little heat cooking is involved is fast. On these very warm summer days, the last thing I want to do is crank up the oven so to beat the heat, I have created two light fish recipes that are my go to meals for hot Cabo summers.

Fish with Pico de Gallo (2 servings)

  • 2 firm white fleshed fish fillets – any good quality firm white fish works such as Cabrilla, Snapper, Flounder, Halibut
  • 2 cups of pico del gallo: (dice 4 roma tomatoes, 1/2 small white onion, 1                   jalapeno, juice of 2 limes, pinch of minced cilantro and a little salt)
  • 3 T butter
  • 1 cup dry white wine

Directions:  Prepare the pico de gallo and cook in a medium sized skillet and cook for 3-5 minutes, add the butter and cook another 3 minutes finally adding the wine. Once the alcohol aroma dissipates (about 2 minutes), add the fish fillets and spoon the sauce over the top.  Cook for approximately 3 minutes (depending on the thickness of the fillets), turn off heat and put the lid on.  Let the fish set for another 5 minutes or until it pulls easily apart with a fork.

Pico de Gallo

Pico de Gallo

Fish with Lemon and Capers (2 servings)

  • 2 firm fish fillets such as Cabrilla, Snapper, Flounder, Halibut, Salmon
  • 3 T butter
  • 2 T olive oil
  • 1/2 medium white onion minced
  • 1 small jar of capers with brine
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 2 – 3 T  finely chopped fresh parsley
  • 2 – 3 T finely chopped fresh dill (optional)
  • 1 lemon – juice and zest
  • Fresh chopped parsley and dill for the garnish

Directions:  Dice the onion and place in a cold medium sized skillet with olive oil and butter (see note below) turn on the heat to medium and slowly melt the butter; cook until the onion is transparent.  Add the capers and the brine from the jar and cook for 3 minutes and finally add the wine.  Once the alcohol aroma dissipates (about 2 minutes), add the parsley, dill, lemon zest and juice along with the fish fillets.  Spoon the sauce over the fish and cook for about 3 minutes (depending on the thickness of the fillets).  Cover and let sit for 5 minutes or when the fish pulls apart easily with a fork.  Garnish with fresh parsley.

Cabrilla with Lemon, Caper, Parsley Sauce

Cabrilla with Lemon, Caper, Parsley Sauce

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Both of these dishes are great on their own but also work well served over rice, wheat berries, bulgur wheat or quinoa because they are quite soupy.  If you use salmon, another option is to toss it with pasta.

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NOTE:  The legendary Italian cookbook author, Marcella Hazan, wrote:

ALWAYS START COOKING ONION (OR GARLIC) IN A COLD PAN.

Marcella taught that starting those aromatics in a cold pan means they cook up more gently and gradually, creating luscious, tender onions and light-gold garlic that never tastes overwhelming or acrid.

Posted in: About, Eat, Learn, Recipes Tagged: dill and capers, Fish, fish with lemon, fish with Pico de Gallo, Marcella Hazan, parsley

Hierbabuena Restaurante – Devoted to Local and Organic

July 21, 2016 by Akiba 2 Comments

 

Welcome to Hierbabuena Restaurante

Welcome to Hierbabuena Restaurante

While Los Cabos is not want for great restaurants (it’s easy to frequent the busy towns of Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo), for those who venture out, the pay-off is discovery of a diverse and passionate dining culture. I had been hearing glowing reports about a restaurant located in the small town of Pescadero near Todos Santos.  After a day at Cerritos Beach, we headed for Hierbabuena Restaurante which is set in a beautiful and bountiful organic garden where almost all of the ingredients are sourced for creative and healthy dishes. Beyond the modern outdoor façade, an airy rustic space awaits.  It has a casual feeling as there are no walls or windows and it is cooled by Pacific Ocean breezes. The seasonal menus shines a spotlight on what’s fresh right now and you can expect crisp, fresh salads, seared vegetables, locally caught wild fish, organic chicken, steak, brick-oven pizza and traditional Mexican dishes.  What they don’t grow, they source from their local neighbors, independent farmers, where there is an abundance of organic produce such melons, strawberries, figs, guava and sapote.   MenuGardens

The garden is brimming with vegetables and flowers that flourish under the watchful eye of the owner, Marcos Ramirez, who brings his culinary and gardening skills to Hierbabuena from years in Napa Valley.  He was raised in his mother’s Mexico City market restaurant where he was influenced by an array of fresh products from all over Mexico.  At 15, he went to work as a dishwasher and throughout his young life, he experienced nearly every position in the restaurant business and was introduced to many different types of cuisines.  This led to his ultimate goal of being a restaurateur.

Produce for Sale

The concept is very basic: to offer the freshest, ingredients with little manipulation so the natural flavors shine.

Marcos menu page pescado

Wild Yellow Tail Caught Locally

Pizza

Fresh, ripe tomatoes and spicy basil for a killer pizza

Carrot Ginger Coconut Soup

Carrot Ginger Coconut Soup

Marcos menu page berza

Arugula Salad with Shaved Parmesan, Nuts and Pomegranate

There is a full bar that is separate from the dining area where fruit and herbs such as mint, basil, rosemary and cilantro are muddled, infused and simply snipped for pretty and fragrant garnishes.

Mojito with Fresh Mint

Mojito with Fresh Mint

Marcos proudly offers Mexican wines from Ensenada, Guadalupe Valley and Guanajuato but he also includes wine from Italy and Spain.  Marco’s project for next season is to do a wine tasting one day a week with all Mexican wines – Mexican terroir – which are concentrated and complex, full-bodied and aromatic, generally with a higher alcohol content than European wines. The northern end of the Baja California peninsula is, in fact, one of the New World’s oldest wine-growing areas. Jesuit priests cultivated vines here in the 18th century, and the first commercial winery, Bodegas de Santo Tomas, opened in 1888.

Hierbabuena Restaurante is a celebration of the very finest of our regional food products. Marcos takes the concept of “farm-to-table” seriously, working with the freshest ingredients from his gardens and the nearby farms to design the seasonal menus.

Directions:  Turn just past the Pemex/Oxxo on the road to Rancho Pescadero. Hierbabuena is about 2/3 of the way to the beach from the highway.

Open from 12:00 noon until 9:00 pm – Closed Tuesdays

Closed month of September

Chamomile

Posted in: About, Eat, Learn, Shop Tagged: farm to table, Guadalupe Valley, Hierbabuena Restaurant, Hierbabuena Restaurante, Huachinango, Mexican wine, Organic, Pescadero

NEPTUNOS MARISCOS, MUSIC AND DRINKS

July 14, 2016 by Akiba 1 Comment
Luis

Luis Soto – Owner and Mixologist Extraordinaire

When we arrived at Neptunos, a fresh local seafood restaurant, we were warmly greeted by Luis Soto, the owner, bartender, host and more.  Born in Mazatlan to a very poor family, Luis worked wherever he could to put himself through night school to become a civil engineer.  He moved to Cabo and worked at many jobs from busboy to cook in the restaurant business to eventually become the manager of Passion Club and Lounge in the Cabo Me Hotel on Medano Beach before opening Neptunos.

Luis built his restaurant from the bottom up by hand and was planning to open in October of 2014 when Hurricane Odile hit.  He had to start over as everything was in ruin but he persevered.  Using recycled wooden shipping pallets, he designed the restaurant space to be open with a billowing fabric pergola that gives the feeling of being on a sailboat. Luis discovered that the wooden pallets are perfect as herb and vegetable planters and he is in the process of making green walls with edibles.Neptunos

I guess you could say that Neptunos is a humble restaurant but it makes up for it with a lot of charm. The seasoned chefs Juve and Tino know quality seafood and how to prepare it. My husband and I had been hankering for a good Huachinango (whole red snapper).  I called ahead and was told that three “just caught” red snappers from a local fisherman had made their way to the restaurant that morning.  Our Huachinango arrived at the table in all its glory, cooked to succulent perfection and traditionally served with rice, tortillas, steamed vegetables and salsa.  Also, the chips and guacamole were outstanding (I don’t say this lightly because I am definitely a guacamole snob).  We ordered Gin Martinis and Luis poured two lovely drinks and then disappeared from the restaurant for a few minutes on a runner to pick up a bottle of Bombay Sapphire just in case we were in the mood for more.

Huachinango

Huachinango

Octopus

Chefs Juve and Tino

Seafood Platter

Seafood Platter

Drinks

Bloody Mary’s with Spicy Prawns

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Fresh Catch of the Day

Luis’ passion for what he is doing is evident and he makes you feel welcome immediately when you step into his realm.  He has a vision and is well on his way to achieving his dreams through hard work and perseverance.  I plan to return and eat my way through the menu and become a regular customer and friend to Luis Soto at Neptunos.

Menu in Spanish

Menu in Spanish

NOTE:  This weekend they are closing their restaurant but setting up a “pop up” restaurant for a biker’s convention/rally located in the Cultural Pavilion parking lot in Cabo San Lucas.  There will be bikers from all over the country with music Thursday, Friday and Saturday from local groups and musicians from La Paz, Mazatlan, Mexico City and Guadalajara.  The event closes on Saturday night with a very famous Mexican band, Inspector.  The band Inspector from Monterey, Nuevo Leon fuses classic Jamaican rhythms with the feel of Mexican pop. Their style is a blend of ska, reggae, nostalgia for the 1960s rock-n-roll and the great romantic groups of the 1970s, in addition to a romantic style of their own. They are part of the musical movement called the Avanzada Regia.

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Neptunos is located around the corner from the Bungalows Hotel near the Pedregal farmers market and Prosan.  Bungalows Hotel Location

Open from 2 pm to 10pm
Located in Calle Libertad #806 Col. Lienzo Charro in Cabo San Lucas

Reservations:  624 114 2424     or    143 4033

Note:  Thank you to Kathy and Gary for your recommendation to Neptunos – Well done!

Posted in: About, Eat, Learn Tagged: Huachinango, Inspector, Luis Soto, Neptunos, Seafood Los Cabos
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