edible Queens magazine
spaceredible Communities
tagline
spacer
CURRENT ISSUE
 

Stay local! Get our e-newsletter:

Banner

 
Banner

Edible Queens Magazine

The fresh, seasonal voices of local food.
Tags >> ceviche

Mexican Ceviche at Elmhurst's Glober Market

Posted by: JoeDiStefano

Tagged in: seafood , Mexican , Elmhurst , ceviche

 

On weekends find Mexican-style ceviche at Glober Market.

The above sign promising “Cokteles de camaron y de pulpo estilo Mexicano” has hung outside Glober Market, an Asian greengrocer on the corner of Vietor Ave. and Broadway in Elmhurst, for months. Ceviche's one of my favorite dishes and I’ve been very curious about this Mexican version. As the sign indicates it’s only available on Saturdays and Sundays. 


Pedro the cevichero shucking oysters.

The stand is run by Pedro, a carpenter who hails from Mexico City. His mise en place—limes, hot sauce, and two blue coolers stocked with sliced octopus and cooked shrimp—is laid out in the shadow of a New York Lottery sign. I asked for a combination of shrimp and octopus. Why have just one kind of seafood when you can have both? When I saw the gigantic oysters I knew I was in for a treat.


This ketchup-like elixir is a key ingredient.

As I watched Pedro prepare my coktele it brought to mind watching a mixologist prepare a drink. First a few shrimp, then some sliced octopus, two oysters, and then a goodly pour of an ice-cold ketchuplike liquid, followed by a squeeze of lime, chopped onions, and a splash of olive oil. Finish with a garnish of fresh avocado, cilantro, and hot sauce.

The finished product, refreshing and restorative.

“In my country, I used to live on this,” Pedro said as he handed me the cup and a spoon. I could live on it too. Packed with shrimp, octopus, and two oysters floating in the cold sweet tomato broth, it was quite a feast. And not a bad deal at all for $8. Pedro’s stand is open on weekends from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

When it comes to Mexican cuisine I’m usually thinking tacos, not ceviche. So I was glad to think outside the tortilla. This experience underscores my conviction that despite what some people say there’s plenty of good Mexican food in this town if you know where to look. There's no better place to start looking than Queens.

Glober Market, 82-33 Broadway Elmhurst
More World's Fare



 
Broadway Bakery in Jackson Heights has a specialty
far more intriguing than coffee and Danishes.

I’ve never given much thought to Broadway Bakery, a minichain of coffee shops scattered throughout Queens. Then I took a closer look at the branch across from Elmhurst Hospital. An easel out front displays specialties seldom mentioned in the same breath as the muffins and Danishes touted on the awning. What stopped me in my tracks was the first item on the list, ceviche de pescado.

A closer look at Broadway Bakery’s bill of fare.

Ceviche is just one of six Peruvian dishes items listed on the hand-written menu out front. I doubt that Marlene the gal from Lima who’s been running the place for a year has ever heard of a pop-up, but that’s more or less what’ going on here. A pop-up, and a Peruvian one no less.

Ceviche de pescado with papa  huancaina.

I can think of no more refreshing meal on a sweltering day than ceviche. As luck would have it the day I stopped by the ceviche de pescado ($10), had just been made. “Would you like to have it with papa huancaina?” Marlene asked. “That’s how I like to eat it.”

A lettuce leaf filled with chunks of fish, hominy corn, onion, and crunchy toasted maiz cancha, and plenty of lemon juice sat like a boat capsized in a lake of cheese sauce and boiled potatoes. The chunks of fish were just barely cooked and contrasted nicely with the two types of corn and the onion. The papa a la huancaina was pleasant enough, but I would have preferred it in a separate dish. To drink I had an ice cold glass of chicha morada ($2), a refreshing purple corn cider.

It’s not the best ceviche in Queens, but it’s certainly the best I’ve ever had in a coffee shop. I find the fact there’s a Peruvian restaurant ensconced in otherwise humble coffee shop mind boggling.  

Broadway Bakery, 81-15 41st Ave., Jackson Heights, 718-457-6523

More World's Fare


Lima Limon Squeezes onto La Roosie

Posted by: JoeDiStefano

Tagged in: seafood , Peruvian , offal , Jackson Heights , ceviche

 Lima Limon is is proud of its Peruvian heritage and sour citrus fruit.

A gigantic citrus–half lemon and half lime–emblazons the storefront of Lima Limon. The decidedly lime green eatery is one of the newer Peruvian places in Jackson Heights. The name is a tribute to the fruit whose juice is used to cook fish via marination to prepare ceviche, arguably Peru's national dish. It's also a tip of the hat to the country's capital. As is custom at many Peruvian eateries a meal here begins with a small bowl of cancha. All too often the toasted corn kernels are crumbly and dry, turning to ashes in the mouth. Lima Limon’s crunch with each bite tasting of toasted maize with a hint of salt.  

Ceviche de pescado comes with a sidecar of lime juice.

Ceviche is practically a requirement whenever I eat Peruvian food. On my first visit I chose ceviche de pescado Lima Limon ($14.95) from a list of a half dozen. The restaurant’s signature ceviche is a heap of corvina showered with red onions. It comes with the standard accoutrements of sweet potato and a hunk of steroidal corn. Lima Limon sets its namesake ceviche apart by adding a small portion of fried seafood and a shot of the same citrus juice used to marinate the fish. The latter is a nice touch. Usually I find myself tilting the plate to lap up the mouth-puckering liquor.

Ordered bien picante, the chunks of fish were perfectly cooked and had a nice level of heat. The fried seafood prompted me to make a mental note to order the mountain of fried marine life known as jalea ($19.50 for a small, $26.95 for a large) sometime. Rachi ($6.95) listed on the menu as “grilled bible marinated in aji panca” turned out not be scripture, but rather a generous portion of book tripe, so named because it fans out like pages in a book. The stippled sheets of beef innards were marinated in fruity aji panca peppers and cooked to a pleasing consistency halfway between chewy and jiggly.

Parihuela teeming with all manner of seafood.

On a second visit I opted for a steaming bowl of parihuela ($13.50) to ward off the wintry chill. It’s chock full of seafood, most notably a half blue crab that rises periscope-like out of the ruddy depths. Chunks of fish, octopus, mussels, and shrimp round out the aquatic flotilla. The broth chiefly made from fish stock was invigorating, even more so with a few squeezes of lime. At first I thought its reddish hue came from tomatoes. The chef’s three word response, “No, aji panca," set me straight. Back at the office I delved into the derivation of the name parihuela. As best as I can tell it means “barrow.” That’s pretty apt given the basket of seafood that comprises the dish.

As I write this I can’t wait to return to Lima Limon's verdant dining room. I’m particularly keen on trying the many weekend specials like cau cau ($10), honeycomb tripe in turmeric sauce, and seco de cabrito ($10.75), goat stew. For these folks it is easy being green. And delicious, too.

Lima Limon, 94-20 Roosevelt Avenue, Jackson Heights, 718-651-5002

More World's Fare

Lima Limon on Urbanspoon


Gastronauts packed the house for a Peruvian feast at Urubamba.

For whatever reason I have been unable to attend the last five or six monthly Gastronaut dinners. This past Tuesday, however, I cleared my calendar for a Peruvian feast the club for adventurous eaters held at Urubamba in Jackson Heights. It was the cuy—roasted Andean guinea pig—that sold me on the evening’s festivities. I’d had the delicacy before and was eager to try it again.

“Is this your first time eating with The Gastronauts? Are you excited?,” a gent in a pork pie hat asked a gal at a table behind me. “Yes, very,” was her response. Even though it was my seventh time, I too was quite excited. Thanks to a recent New York Times article there was an even mix of newcomers, including Latin American cuisine expert Nicholas Gill of New World Review, and veterans, including Dan Kim who has written up several Gastronaut dinners for World’s Fare, both of whom shared my table.

Pulpo al olivo: thinly shaved octopus in Alfonso olive sauce.

The first course to be presented to the 80 diners was pulpo al olivo, ribbons of pleasantly chewy octopus tentacles slicked with a sauce made from Alfonso olives. Anyone who’s ever atsted aji verde at a Peruvian restaurant knows Peruvians pride themselves on their sauces. The maroon puree was no exception to this rule, tasting like a mellower, creamier version of the purple olive that graced the plate.

Rocoto relleno wore their tops like jaunty Peruvian berets.

Next up was a trio of rocoto relleno or stuffed hot peppers, each was roughly the size of an apple. I had no idea that hot peppers came that large. “The hat’s the hottest part,” Gill’s wife, Claudia, who’s from Lima, warned us before we dug in.

A look at the innards of the best stuffed pepper ever.

Inside each pepper was a delicious mixture of ground beef seasoned with culantro and raisins. It was truly one of the best stuffed peppers I have ever eaten and was a sure sign that the evening would be one to remember.

What Peruvian feast could be complete without ceviche?

Next up was ceviche de conchas negras, or black clam ceviche. The mollusks had been chopped up, marinated with onion, lime, and garlic and then poured back into their shells and placed on the plate with painstaking attention to detail. Cancha, crunchy toasted corn kernels, were great with the chewy, lime-spiked bits of conch.

Urubamba has a way with anticuchos, skewers of grilled beef heart.

The third course was a half dozen anticuchos, skewers of grilled beef heart marinated in panca chili. These were served with the starchy jumbo corn known as choclo and a small dish of green sauce. The green sauce didn’t do much for the meat, but the peppery orange aji on the table was just the thing. It brought out the smokiness while adding a bit of zip. Of the eight courses provided this was the only one that's on Urubamba’s regular menu.

Cuy fresh from the oven. Note the burnished skin.

Carlos E. Astorga, Urubamba’s chef, was kind enough to let me into the kitchen to watch the cuy being plated. Astorga has been chef since 1986 when he took over the kitchen from his mother back when it was still called Inti Raymi after the Peruvian sun god. The last time Astorga cooked such a feast was in February. He and his team seemed to be relishing the evening's task. The activity in the kitchen and dining room brought to mind a Peruvian version of the film Big Night. 

Tastes like a cross between pork and rabbit.

Each table received a whole cuy to divide up. The flesh was slightly fatty and tasted like a combination of pork and rabbit. I had a bit of the saddle and some of a haunch. Then it was time for cuy guancial, the two strips of meat inside the jaw. The rest of the head wento to a lucky tablemate who picked it clean and saved the skull for a souvenir.

Patita con mani, a rich gelatinous stew of cow feet with potatoes.

As the next course,  patita con mani was brought out the dining room was filled with a wonderful garlicky aroma. Who knew cow foot stew with peanut sauce could smell so good. Bobbing with potatoes, wobbly bits of chewy hoof, and peanuts this gelatinous stew spiked with garlic, chili, and herbs was quite hearty. It was good, but probably would have been more enjoyable on a winter night.

Pachamanca, a trifecta of slow-cooked meats—from left chicken, pork, and
lamb—liberally seasoned with huacatay or Peruvian black mint.

Traditionally pachamanca is cooked underground with hot stones. Rather than dig a hole in his kitchen Astorga used a pressure cooker. First he layered in the lamb, then a barrier of celery, then the pork, more celery, and lastly the chicken. Each of the meats was tender and juicy and singing with the flavor of Peruvian black mint, sort of a cross between basil and tarragon. Had I not been eating for the past two hours, I could have easily devoured the entire platter.

Picante de conejo, rabbit in chili sauce.

The last course was picante de conejo, or rabbit in a chili sauce served with boiled yucca. By this time I was practically passing out, but like all of the dishes this was outstanding. After three hours the epic Peruvian feast drew to a close. Many Gastronauts purchased alfajores, disks of short bread sandwiching a layer of dulce de leche before waddling out the door into the night.

The cost for the evening was $65, not such a bad deal for eight courses and a trip to Peru via Jackson Heights. Cuy is not on Urubamba's regular menu, but can be special ordered in advance for about $25, which is the going rate at other restaurants in the area.

Urubamba, 86-20 37th Avenue, Jackson Heights, 718-672-2224

More World's Fare


«StartPrev12NextEnd»
World's Fare Feed
Edible Queens World's Fare Blog
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner


 This site cultivated and grown by Edible Communities®, Inc.
© Edible Communities, Inc. All rights reserved