Gustavo Arellano. |
Before that debate, Tancredo and Arellano had met across the street for dinner at El Noa Noa. And no matter how he feels about Mexicans, "Tancredo likes those tamales," Arellano told the crowd.
But then, who doesn't? For his third book -- the first was a compilation of his columns, the second a personal history of Orange County, where he grew up and is now the editor of the OC Weekly -- Arellano researched Mexican food across the country, chronicling how it spread throughout all fifty states. The result? Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America, which was released last month to rave reviews.
But Denver's biggest contribution may be its homegrown version of Mexican food, which Arellano dubbed "Den-Mex:" fiery green chile as orange as a Bronco jersey (remember those gabacho gabachos) that smothers everything, including chile rellenos and that creation unique to Colorado, the Mexican hamburger.
Taco USA lists the five greatest Mexican dishes in the United States -- and the very best, Arellano says, is the Mexican hamburger at the original Chubby's, which Stella Cordova took over in the late '60s, turning what had been a burger joint into what Arellano now deems the top Mexican restaurant in the country. (Accept no substitutes: References to Cordova's grandson, Leonard Cordova, who started Bubba Chino's, earned boos from the crowd, as did mentions of Rick Bayless and Casa Bonita.) The Mexican hamburger at Chubby's is "the dish that best personifies the Mexican-American experience, a monument to mestizaje," Arellano proclaims.
Cordova is gone, but Chubby's lives on. And the next time Arellano comes to town, he promises to hold a signing there at 1 a.m.
Even Tancredo is invited.
To learn more about the evolution of Den-Mex, read Gustavo Arellano's April 5 cover story, "Mexican Hamburger Helper."
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