Masterful Mexican
Published: Saturday, October 8, 2011 at 12:06 p.m.
Last Modified: Saturday, October 8, 2011 at 12:06 p.m.
You’ve heard the refrain: “Why doesn’t someone open a really good Mexican restaurant around here?” By really good, folks mean a place that goes beyond the usual tacos-burritos-enchiladas and captures some of the delectability that Mexican cuisine is capable of.
Facts
MATEO’S COCINA LATINA
Where: 214 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg
When: Open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Sundays, and from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays. Dinner starts at 5:30 p.m. every day, and the bar is open until 11 p.m. Sundays through Thursdays and until midnight Fridays and Saturdays, serving drinks and tamales.
Reservations: First come, first served, or call for take-out at 433-1520
Price range: Moderate, with dinner entrees from $16 to $19
Website: www.mateoscocinalatina.com
Cocktail and Tequila list:***½
Ambiance **
Service: ***
Food: ***½
Overall: ***
**** Extraordinary
*** Very good
** Good
* Not very good
0 Terrible
Well, now someone has. His name is Mateo Granados and he’s been a star among local foodies for years — but not at a restaurant. He’s catered events, served food at farmers markets, and been the force behind pop-up dinners that he calls Tendejon de la Calle (“taste of the street”) at one-night, word-of-mouth locations around the county.
Now he’s opened Mateo’s Cocina Latina in Healdsburg, and suddenly we have that really good Mexican restaurant people have been hankering for. It’s right across the street from the new-ish h2hotel, where mixologist extraordinaire Scott Beattie concocted the potions at the hotel’s popular Spoonbar.
Beattie has put together an impressive list of cocktails, tequilas and mescals for Mateo’s Cocina Latina. Choose among 58 tequilas from 20 producers, plus four reserve anejo tequilas and 12 mezcales. He’s also created nine superb cocktails. A knock-out example is the seamless Paloma Hermosa (“beautiful dove”), a refreshing mix of blanco tequila, St. Germain elderflower liqueur, fresh squeezed lime and grapefruit juices, and a dash of agave nectar. There are also beers and wines (corkage is $20) and non-alcoholic aguas frescas.
Chef Granados calls his cuisine Modern Yucatan, and it derives from the foods of the central Yucatan municipality of Oxkutzcab (Mayan for “place of breadnut, tobacco and honey”), where he is from. But he sources his ingredients locally, searching for the highest quality he can find. The result is not only culturally intriguing, but exquisitely delicious.
The menu starts off with four types of tacones — crispy, fried tortilla cones with assorted fillings. You might think the word tacones refers to a taco, but it translates to “heel,” which the four-inch tortilla cone resembles. The
He makes these fiery sauces from early-season, mid-season, late-season, and fall habañero chilies, the latter one from ripe roasted peppers. Be forewarned: one drop sets your mouth on fire.
The tortillas, by the way, are hand-made from organic masa. He stuffs them with black beans to make panuchos. Three kinds of summer squash are slow cooked to make a side dish called
The
Yucatecan tamales are a little different than other Mexican tamales. Instead of corn husks, the
Who doesn’t love a chicken taco, but for $7 each? Yes, and worth every penny. The
Although the two sanddabs on the
Finally, for
Jeff Cox writes a weekly restaurant review column for the Sonoma Living section. You can reach him at jeffcox@sonic.net.
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