The food in Argentina is both stunningly good and
confoundingly awful. It sorta depends on
what you order. Food, as it is anywhere,
is a social and communal experience. The
people who prepare it take great pride in it and the people who share in eating
it, enjoy it. So the last thing I want
to do is insult the sensibilities of anyone who reads this. Food is an intensely personal
preference. Everyone has their own
tastes. That being said, don’t bitch at
me, I don’t want to hear it.
Obviously, anyone who knows a smidgen about Argentina knows
how sinfully delicious the beef is. I’ll
get there in a minute, with the minor caveat that vegetarians (I’m looking at
you Lauren) will struggle in this city, but its not impossible. The place I want to start is the food of
Italian origin. The two largest
immigrant populations in Buenos Aires are Spanish and Italian. And the culture that governs the VAST
majority of the food prepared here is the Italian tradition.
Every single café or resto in this city serves pasta. All of them.
You can’t avoid it. In fact, the
culinary culture of this city makes it next to impossible to avoid carbs. Atkins addicts, avoid at all costs. You can’t walk a block in the capital without
passing a bakery. Walls full of delicious
pastries, breads and desserts. The
diabetic me is cringing at the potential of a future without a foot. They are all delicious, and they’re
everywhere, so self control is the measure of the day. To add to the carb binge comes every corner
café, which far removed from the American definition of café, will serve you
coffee and pastries as well as sandwiches, pastas and grilled meat. Every.
Single. Restaurant. In. This.
City. has pasta on the menu. When in
doubt, order it. It’s a decent standby.
The problem is, the Argentines can’t cook Italian for shit. And its not their fault. Let me explain why. With such a massive influx of south
western-Mediterranean cultures flooding this city, it was only obvioius that
the city took up the mantle and an Italian food culture was born. (While the residents speak Spanish, this
seems to be a remnant of early colonialism as I haven’t been able to find
paella or ceviche anywhere) The problem,
for me, is that it was so far removed.
From so many things. So far from
Italy. Far from the US, where I’m used
to that version of Italian. But most of
all, too far south for the spice trade to come through the port. And as a result, most of the food in this
city is pretty bland. Like I said, not
their fault, but a matter of circumstance.
There is just an absolute dearth of spices here in Buenos Aires. The stuff I see at the grocery store? Black and white pepper, oregano, parsley,
garlic, salt and occasionally spicy red pepper.
Basically, the exact same spice cabinet a frat house has. Actually, that’s not true, I’ve never seen
oregano in a frat house. Basil? Forget it.
Cinnamon? Never. And heaven help you if you want a curry.
The next issue I take is how the food is prepared. Italian food, such a staple of this culture,
is not overwhelmingly difficult to prepare.
Mario Batali might take issue with that “easy” comment, but at the level
its prepared in a standard sit-down restaurant, it’s not hard. Tomato, oregano or basil, garlic. Boil pasta, cover in sauce, serve. Bread the chicken, sauté, cover in sauce,
serve. Dough, sauce, cheese, oven,
serve. Very little nuance if you’re
paying six bucks for spaghetti. BUT FOR
GOD’S SAKE COOK THE PASTA CORRECTLY!!!!
The Argentines have never, ever, ever, ever, ever (and I can’t stress
this enough) EVER heard of al dente. If
I had a 90-year old grandma with no teeth that didn’t know what spaghetti
should taste like, she would keel over in ecstasy at the pasta here. Seriously, is it so hard to take it out of
the pot before it turns to mush?
Now that I have the tirade out of the way, I figure I can
point out a few things that I do love about the food here. And let me stress, for as cathartic as I
think the rant above is, I love the food far more than I dislike it. I have found a pizza place I enjoy (Pizzeria
Guerrin). They do pizza exactly how I
love it. Think Chicago deep dish; crispy
and buttery outside crust, thick and doughy inside, enough sauce to flavor but
not overwhelm and a healthy (or unhealthy) dose of gooey melty mozzarella on
top. The kind of pizza you have to cut
and eat with a fork because it doesn’t fold.
Mmmmmm, lunch tomorrow I’m thinking.
But more than anything, the meat. Oh my god, the meat. Keep it simple stupid, right? The great American BBQ argument flummoxes
me. I have come to the conclusion that
we need the sauces, smokes, dry rubs and other things because our meat has no flavor. Mostly due to the feedlot style of raising
our hormone and antibiotic injected beef products. Fortunately, BBQ doesn’t exist down
here. What’s the process for
grilling? Kill the cow, cut it up and
throw it all over a wood fire. Simple. The
single greatest steak of my life was served to me here in 2009. I can still, despite the beer and wine,
remember most of that meal. And while
nothing I’ve had so far during this trip has come close to that good,
every piece of beef or chicken or sausage or organs I’ve had on this trip has
exceeded anything I’ve eaten in the States in terms of flavor and quality. I have a sneaking suspicion that it has
something to do with all of Argentina’s beef being free range, but mostly I
just think that it is so ingrained in the culture that they can’t not be good
at it. America is too much of a
hodgepodge. We, as a nation, are a jack
of all trades and master of none.
So how does one experience this, pardon the parlance, meat
market? Any one of Buenos Aires’s
parillas are a good start. Even the most
mediocre, run of the mill, neighborhood restaurant will serve you a steak as good
as any Texan can claim he’s grilled in his life. But the best way is to grab at least one
other friend and order the “parillada completo”. Think big wooden slab piled high with an
amazing array of grilled items; cuts of beef (ribs, skirt, sirloin, filet,
ribeye), chicken, sausage (spicy [and I use that term loosely: see above],
savory, herb, blood) vegetables (onion, squash, tomato, carrot, parsnips) and
organs (kidney, liver, intestines).
Order a bottle or two of wine or some beers and indulge
yourself in the greatest slow death by meat poisoning you’ve ever experienced. Unbelievable.
That’s all I’ve got for now, but tomorrow night I’m going
back to the restaurant that served me the “single greatest steak of my
life”. I’ll let you know how it
goes. I have high hopes, but one way or
another I won’t be disappointed if this one fails to top the last time.
I love the chimichurri to have with the meat there! I don't suppose you'll have room in your suitcase for some to bring back and grill out with upon your return? :P
ReplyDeletePs. when DO you return?
-Meghan
Chimichurri is good, salsa criolla is better. (Thats the one with peppers and onions and oil that's kinda spicy). I'll see what I can do to bring some back. Which kind do you want? The garlicky one that's really green, or the reddish one that tastes a bit more italian?
DeleteI'm back 2 weeks from today (8/24) in the AM. Gonna be at Muddy Waters that night. And we are DEFINITELY going to Hoban on the 25th, mark your calendar now. DO IT! :)
Mmm meat
ReplyDelete