Savoring Puebla
Mexico's "City of Angels" is home to gilded churches, artistic treasures and a delectable culinary culture
- Photographs by Landon Nordeman
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2009, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Several of these lines can be found every day at lunchtime a block or two west of the Biblioteca Palafoxiana, where Poblanos queue up for molotes, deep-fried turnovers made from corn tortillas stuffed with a choice of cheese, tinga (a mixture of shredded meat, chiles, tomatoes, onions and spices), sausage, and, in season, the delicious huitlacoches, or corn fungus. Throughout the city are small places specializing in cemitas, overstuffed sandwiches constructed on grilled, split sesame rolls, and tacos arabes, wheat tortillas filled with meat carved from a turning rotisserie column; both of these hearty snacks may have borrowed their names from the waves of Lebanese immigrants (cemitas may be related to the word for Semite) who arrived in Mexico beginning in the 1880s.
But by far my favorite destination for a Puebla night out is the Feria del Carmen, which takes place every July in the Jardin del Carmen, a few blocks from the zócalo along the Avenue 16 de Septiembre. The fair, which commemorates the feast day of Our Lady of Carmen, is an old-fashioned carnival of the sort you hardly see anymore north of the border, funkier and more earthy than anything you're likely to find at the most authentic, old-school county fair. If you're brave and trusting enough, you can ride a creaky Ferris wheel or let yourself be spun vertiginously in a scarily vintage whirligig, and, if you have a strong stomach, you can visit one of the forlorn sideshows.
But the major attraction of the feria—what draws Poblanos here—is the food. Under strings of bright-colored lights, women tend huge circular grills on which chalupas poblanas (mini-tortillas topped with red or green salsa) sizzle. A family sells plastic foam cups of esquites—corn kernels spiced with chile powder and other pungent Mexican herbs, then sprinkled with lime juice and cheese. When you tire of navigating the crowds and waiting in line to be served, you can sit at a table under a tent and have the proprietor bring you plates of huaraches (handmade tortillas stuffed with steak that resemble—in shape, and occasionally, in durability—the sandals after which they're named) or pambazos, fried bread filled with meat and topped with lettuce, cream and salsa.
Everything is so attractive and delicious, and it's all so much fun, it's hard to admit to yourself that you've reached the saturation point. Fortunately, you can walk off some of that sufficiency on the way back to the zócalo, where you can rest, watch people pass by, listen to the roving street musicians and enjoy all the sights and sounds of a balmy evening in Puebla.
Francine Prose's most recent book is Anne Frank: The Book, the Life, the Afterlife.
Landon Nordeman previously photographed Elvis impersonators for Smithsonian.
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Comments (4)
Great Article about Puebla... Puebla is a great city to visit and to live in. It offers everything from Culture to Sports. ¡Viva Puebla!... as we celebrate 5 de Mayo.
Posted by Antonio Prado on April 23,2012 | 10:02 AM
"Named for angels, which are omnipresent, Puebla de los Angeles boasts over a million residents." The human being is the only species on earth that continually "boasts" of producing ever-increasing populations, while continually trying to migrate away from their consequences.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on March 14,2012 | 01:08 AM
i started going in the mid 50s, and comparing then to now, no comparson.dirt and gravel road into the capitol from laredo.just out of this woeld senery, like steping into, fist full of dollers. comparing quito ecuador in the mid 60s to the late 2010.quito with large cobblestone streets, vinders old buildings in frint of the palice and main squire. progres, it suckes. leave the old, preserve it for later years.i spent about 15 yrs in and around latin america years ago.if people want to see real mexico rent a 4 whell car and go to the out of way towns, thats real mexico, just great. now its to dangerous, be carefull. its a world you wont forget. enjoy
Posted by larry presnell on May 5,2010 | 11:52 AM
I've just read A Visit to Don Otavio, by Sybille what-her-name, a great travel book of her travels in Mexico during the early fifties, I think. It may be of interest to those inspired to visit Puebla.
Posted by miskito on November 20,2009 | 02:03 PM