Valle de Juarez is a small town (population 4,000) located south of Guadalajara, and Lake Chapala, and about 5 miles east of Mazamitla, a Mexican “Pueblo Magico”. Chema owns the campground site on which sits a lovely restaurant, only five years old, a flat mowed field with hookups, and a tiny shelter for the exquisite little horse that resides here.
It is an interesting little town like no other we’ve known in Mexico. There are many very nice homes of Mexican style — built between two high-slab (often) common walls. It seems that many of the men commute to Chicago for the summer to work. They all have “green cards” which can take two to five years after application to obtain. I'm told it is much the same in other small towns; one they all go to Utah, another Washington state, etc.
They work in the trades there (I’m sure many take their families with them) and return home in the winter. They then spend much of the winter working on their homes. It seems that taking a loan out for your business or for building is unheard of in Mexico. This is why one sees many unfinished buildings everywhere — the owners are waiting until their next available money.
Love this front of this house. |
Contreras original family home |
Chema stirring a kettle of carnitas in front of his restaurant. |
Another restaurant, La Cosinita has an interesting array of main dish entrees on their blackboard for breakfast and lunch. Most seem to be meat-laden soups and stews, always served with hot fresh hand-made tortillas.
However, one may order a more normal breakfast plate, consisting of eggs, bacon, refried beans, and chiliquiles, accompanied by a chunk of queso fresca, the fresh hand-made tortillas, and of course, a piquante salsa. In addition you can get fresh squeezed orange juice and a cup of “cafe olla” — a strong hot coffee sweetened with poloncilla (a cone of brown sugar) and cinnamon sticks. All for a price of $8 US.
The bakery here is like the one in Villa Corona — a large horno, round-top oven with a fire off to one side. A very long handled “peel” (8 feet) is used to slide well-floured rolls over the bottom of the oven. A sort of shaking motion is used to get the rolls off, and back and again on to the peel when baked. When the last rolls are put in, the first are ready to come out! Chemitas, a local favorite — an ever-so-slightly-sweet roll are a speciality of this area.
Making fresh tortillas at La Cosinita |
Dough on the end of the "peel" to be slid into the horno |
The 8-ft "peel" used in putting in and removing buns from the oven |
This is a large dairy area; hundreds of holstein cows dot the pastures which are all surrounded by stacked rock (no mortar) walls. Corn fields abound, and now in the winter, they are covered with hundreds of corn shocks (teepees of cut, dried cornstalks). A man with a tractor and portable grinder, moves from field to field with a crew that hand feeds the corn and stalks into the grinder. This is bagged and either used either to feed
ones own dairy cows, or sold to
ones own dairy cows, or sold to
the granary in town.
One of the most charming activities is the morning milking of one man at a near-by roadside. He brings out one to two cows at a time. Ties them, gives them their ground feed, ties their back legs to keep them from “kicking
the bucket”, (pun intended) and
proceeds to milk them.
the bucket”, (pun intended) and
proceeds to milk them.
Then people begin arriving to get their fresh milk to take home. In addition, on his tailgate, he has plastic cups, instant coffee, cocoa powder and get this: grain alcohol! Any or all can be stirred into your cup of milk, straight from the cow.
We stopped to take pictures and had a delightful conversation with one extremely handsome young man who spoke shy English. He said on the weekend, as many as 30 to 50 may stop by to get milk. Of course, during the week, the extra milk is sold to the local milk plant.
Mike reaching for his first-ever cup of fresh milk! |
Look! I can still milk a cow! |
Pat, you write a wonderful blog. I am glad you got to see so many nice things about our town.
ReplyDeleteHope you are well on your way to Cancun, best of luck. Barb and Sal