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http://missionlocal.org/2010/01/la-comida-loca-gracias-madre-reviewed/

 

La Comida Loca: Gracias Madre Reviewed

 

By: Viola

|

January 2, 2010 – 12:15 am

| Filed Under: Food, Front Page, La Comida Loca | Tagged: cafe gratitude ,

gracias madre , mexican , mission district , reviews , vegan

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En Español

 

Every time I go to Gracias Madre’s sister restaurant Café Gratitude, I’m

put off by the staff’s concern about my well being and taken aback by the

final bill, but the vegan food is awfully good and from time to time, I return.

Given that experience, I wondered whether folks would pay more for vegan tacos.

Sure, expensive vegan Mexican might make it in Pacific Heights, but would it do

well in the heart of the Mission District at 2211 Mission St.? Would Gracias

Madre’s success become a litmus test for how much the Mission has changed?

 

Curiosity about Gracias Madre mounted as the opening kept getting postponed. It

was supposed to open in August and through the summer months and then the fall,

I walked by frequently to see oh-so-many workers inside sanding, building,

constructing. What were they doing in there? I imagined so much time spent on

fine tuning every spindled chair that the place would look like a restaurant on

the main tourist corridor of Tijuana.

 

It doesn’t. It looks great with a clean, almost Bar Tartine-like bar, an open

kitchen with light coming in from the many-paned windows in the back and

beautiful Juan Fuentes art along the walls. The hardwood floors are sanded (did

it really take that many months?) and wood wainscoting meets earth colored walls

that reach gloriously high.

The owners like their wood, said Anrica, one of the reporters joining me for

lunch. True, but it works.

 

I sat down and although three different staff members came up to me in the first

three minutes, no one asked me how I was doing or what I was grateful for.

Relief. I ordered guacamole con tostadas ($6) and Quesadillas de Calabaza ($7)

and waited for the others to arrive. When they did, we dug in.

 

The guacamole was flat. We asked for salt (They don’t like to use much here,

the waiter explained,) which helped. So did the very good, very dry, toasted

tortillas, but we weren’t fighting over the remains.

 

“It says it has chili, but you can’t taste it,†said Andrea, our visiting

scholar from Mexico.

 

The quesadillas, thanks to caramelized onions, cashew cheese and a pumpkin seed

salsa were very good—one of the best dishes we ate.

 

Inspecting the surroundings as we waited for our entres entradas, Anrica held up

her napkin. “Aren’t these like what you put over dead people? Shrouds? â€

 

She had a point. The rumpled muslin squares are surely vegan approved, but

definitely odd. Andrea found them difficult. “They keep leaving bits on my

lips,†she said.

 

 

Andrea with her napkin.

On to the food. We pretty much went through the menu. Armand opted for

Enchiladas con Mole Poblano ($12). What can I say? The open-faced enchiladas

didn’t look like any I’ve ever seen, but the mole was lovely and rich. There

could have been a lot more. Enchiladas want sauce. The beans, Armand pointed out

and everyone agreed, were great. They tasted like beans instead of lard or

anything else.

 

The chiles rellenos ($14), Andrea’s dish, was hot, and the pickled vegetables

a highlight, but the rellenos could have used more taste and less fire. The

three tacos for $10—again, dry. The squash was sweet, the poblano chile strips

bland and the mushrooms could have used more time in the sauté pan. The tamale

with squash and chile ($10) had more taste.

 

 

The Enchiladas with Mole.

“Everything is medium good, but you want it to be better,†said Andrea.

 

“The sangria’s really fruity,†Armand offered hopefully.

 

Maybe some of the problem was the presentation, or what Anrica called the

“brown plates, brown food†problem.

 

Still, we had to try dessert postre. The flan, we were told, only worked on

opening day, but now the cooks couldn’t get it to harden. So, we opted for the

toasted coconut ice cream. Up until this, the majority at the table had decided

that they would return only if someone else was paying, but as someone said,

“I wouldn’t come up with the idea myself.â€

 

But the coconut ice cream—a sort of crumbly concoction that in no way

resembles anyone’s ice cream—was excellent. Worth a return trip for at

least two of us. Later, Armand pointed out that it was really more of a winter

menu and that it will be interesting to see how it develops. Gracias Madre has

some kinks to work out. In the meantime, she’s not wanting for customers–a

day before New Year’s eve, Madre was doing a pretty fair lunch trade. We’ll

return. You gotta give your vegan Madre credit for trying.

 

 

Three out of Five for Gracias Madre

 

 

 

 

 

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