Showing posts with label baja med. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baja med. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Reverse Coyote Strikes Again: Chefs Michael Voltaggio and Jon Shook to Cook at Valle de Guadalupe's Corazon de Tierra This Wednesday, August 22




Things are busy at the safe house these days. I've got Mexican chefs heading north to cook in Los Angeles, writers and bloggers heading south to experience Baja, rum being delivered to Tijuana, and chiles from the Mercado Hidalgo to Beverly Bl. No sleep for the Reverse Coyote! Owuuuuuuuuuu!!!!

This Wednesday I'll be delivering Chef Michael Voltaggio (Ink, Ink Sack), and Jon Shook (Animal, Son of a Gun) to the Valle de Guadalupe as part of a series of dinners hosted by Chef Diego Hernandez of Corazon de Tierra to celebrate one year at the Villa del Valle bed and breakfast.

Other special dinners include the likes of Chefs Enrique Olvera(Pujol), Benito Molina(Manzanilla), Pablo Salas (Amaranta), and Arturo Fernandez.

This will be a night of the Californias, where there are no borders, just chefs, exquisite products, and free flowing wine. Felicidades, Corazon de Tierra!


Corazon de Tierra presents Diego Hernandez, Michael Voltaggio, and Jon Shook
Wednesday, August 22
At the Villa del Valle property
For reservations 646-156-8030
info@corazondetierra.com

Monday, February 7, 2011

Baja Festival of the Hunt, Food and Wine Paring, La Querencia, Tijuana:This Thursday February 10


Miguel Angel Guerrero Yagues will be celebrating the hunt this coming Thursday, February 10th at his Baja Med restaurant, La Querencia, located in Tijuana's gastronomic zone.

For $75, diners will get duck, goose, deer, pheasant, quail, rabbit, and more paired with Baja wines. Chef Miguel hunts, dives, and fishes for the food served in his restaurants, and he's just returned from a hunting expedition just for this event.

The dinner starts at 7PM. See you in Tijuana.

Call for Tickets, from the US 011-52-664-686-3383 Restaurante El Taller, or 011-52-664-972-9935 Restaurante La Querencia. If you don't speak spanish, say "hablan ingles?" They should be able to find someone that speaks english. You can also contact La Querencia through their website.And, here is the site in english.

To get there
Driving:Cross the San Ysidro border gate and follow signs to Paseo de Los Heroes, turn right at the Cuauhtemoc monument and make the first left on Sanchez Taboada, make a right at Escuadron 201, La Querencia will be on your left.

Walking: Park in the UETA Duty Free parking lot located at the Last USA Exit, walk through the turnstiles, grab a cab and ask for La Querencia. If the driver doesn't know the place, say "TGI Fridays, por favor," it's right next door to La Querencia.

Festival de Caza de la Baja
Date:Thursday, February 10
Time:7PM
Location:La Querencia
Av. Escuadron 201,No. 3110
between Bl. Sanchez Taboada and Bl. Salinas
Tijuana,B.C
Contact: from the US 011-52-664-972-9935/011-52-664-972-9940

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Baja Chefs at Test Kitchen Tonight: The Young Lions of Baja Cuisine Show Promise for the Future of Mexico's Culinary Hot Spot


Tonight, the young lions of the Baja kitchen are at Test Kitchen. Their appearance at LA’s pop-up of note was somewhat of a surprise. Quietly, they were dropped in as a last minute fill-in for La Casita Mexicana, whose schedule couldn’t accommodate this run at Test Kitchen to celebrate the Mexican Bicentennial, as curated by Bricia Lopez. Joshua Gil, the new chef for Bricia’s contemporary Oaxacan venture, Mitla, which will debut at Test Kitchen on Friday and Saturday, frequents Baja and called up his friends, Diego Hernandez, Guillermo Barreto, and Ismene Venegas to come and cook for a couple of days.

The three young chefs are part of the fascinating culinary movement going on in Baja California. The position of having the best seafood, the top Mexican wine region, a broad range of food products grown locally, and special foods that are only available in Baja has made this region ground zero for Mexico’s contemporary dining scene. Baja California is home to Baja Cuisine, Baja-Mediterranean Cuisine, Valle de Guadalupe cuisine, and a range of regional cooking styles that are the playground for some of the best chefs in Mexico. Miguel Angel Guerrero, Benito Molina, Javier Plascencia, Martin San Roman, and Jair Tellez have been at the forefront of Baja’s culinary dynamism.



Diego Hernandez(2nd from left), Guillermo Barreto(far right), and Ismene Venegas(4th from right) are part of the next generation of Baja chefs.They are working with their good friend Joshua Gil(3rd from right) of the new Mitla restaurant.

Diego has worked in some of the most famous kitchens in Mexico, Guillermo Gonzalez’s Pangea, Enrique Olvera’s Pujol, and Benito Molina’s Manzanilla before opening his first restaurant with a partner in 2008, Restaurante Uno. He is set to open his first restaurant by himself this coming January, Estado 29, and he’s barely 27 years old.Chef Diego Hernandez has been a student of the vanguard cuisine of Mexico, and Baja’s ingredients are what has kept him around.

Still only in his early 30’s, Guillermo Barreto, a Baja native, is already an accomplished restaurateur, with a successful Italian restaurant in Mexicali called La Piazza. When he first came to Ensenada to launch his newest venture, El Sarmiento, he still favored his Italian style of cooking but soon fell under the influence of Benito Molina, and Jair Tellez. Currently, Guillermo’s approach to cooking could be called Mex-Italian.

Ismene Venegas is a genuine Baja Californian, and deep roots in Baja’s wine industry. Ismene is the daughter of one of the famous women of the Tres Mujeres winery in the Valle de Guadalupe, Eva Cotero. Tres Mujeres Winery is a collaboration of three female Baja winemakers, Eva Cotero, Ivette Vaillard, and Laura McGregor. They produce one barrel a year, each woman takes turn making their wine, which are highly sought after by enthusiasts in Mexico City. Ismene grew up with Mexican food and Mexican wine, and the Baja aesthetic. She worked with Benito Molina, and then alongside Jair Tellez at Restaurante del Parque, before he went off to open MeroToro in Mexico City.

Last night I was in to sample the cooking of these three young lions of the Baja kitchen. I had been to La Contra where Ismene was cooking when Jair was still there, and I’m happy to say that she has changed the menu to incorporate more Mexican ingredients. I met and dined with Guillermo one night at Manzanilla, but hadn’t been to El Sarmiento, and Diego, I knew of his restaurant, but he closed before I was able to stop by Restaurante Uno. These are the first Baja restaurants that got to me before I got to them.

Bar Bites

The tostada of steak tartar with an Asian mignonette and guacamole sauce was nice, and displayed one of the biggest influences in the Baja kitchen, the flavors of Baja’s Asian immigrant population.


The wood fire grilled octopus had just enough of a citrus sauce, also Asian themed, to enhance the fine texture of the octopus. This is typical of the Valle de Guadalupe kitchen.



My favorite of the three bar bites, the pizzadilla with Oaxacan chile de agua, quesillo(Oaxacan string cheese), baby heirloom tomatoes, and onions was robust, savory, and a delicious Oaxacan sting at the end.

The Tasting

Local scallops were used for the first course. They were flash cooked in citrus, and covered with an onion and almond pesto. Pickled onions and pickled radishes lightly accented by chile habanero gave this dish a splendor and refinement. Baja style ceviches and crudos are creative, while always staying true to the Mexican practices of raw seafood preparation.


Baja is home to a variety of fresh vegetables, and many chefs keep their own gardens. The heirloom tomato salad with a slice of hamachi was a fine example of Baja’s Mediterranean and Asian leanings, with a drizzle of Baja Californian olive oil brought by the three chefs, and seaweed. This is a bright salad, bursting with lively fruit, an interesting salad that I would gladly order again.


One of my favorites of the night the manila clam soup is a dish I first tried at Benito Molina’s Manzanilla.


Ground chicharrones, agave worm salt, manila clams and basil were presented with a tableside pour of a saffron laced broth. The dish was clean, balanced and deeply delicious.




A rib-eye steak was topped with a salsa macha adorned with sesame seeds, and paired with a black bean esquite (street corn style), an emulsion of corn, guacamole, and salty cotija cheese. This is a deconstructed taco of carne asada, alta cocina style, the contribution of Diego Hernandez.


Chef Ismene brought some fresh walnuts grown at her mom’s winery that they harvest each year to make chiles en nogada, and 3 month aged cow’s milk cheese from Rancho Cortez, located in Ejido El Porvenir in the Valle de Guadalupe. This cheese is mild, and dreamy, the kind you want to want to remain in your mouth for as long as possible, ’til just the last impressions remain, and then wash it down with glass of wine.


he tasting ended with a simple lemon crepe paired with a coconut sorbet.

This was a great tasting, and a chance to see what the next wave of Baja chefs have in store. This is an exciting region, and an inspired trio of young chefs still developing their respective styles of Baja cuisine. Come catch them if you can grab a seat tonight at Test Kitchen. Walk ins are welcome, just call Test Kitchen at 310-277-0133 to see if there’s a spot.


Stay tuned for Joshua Gil and Mitla at Test Kitchen.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Great Chefs of Baja in 39 Courses: Benito Molina, Javier Plascencia, Miguel Angel Yaques, Martin San Roman


Baja California, only a few hours south of Los Angeles, is the second greatest destination in Mexico for contemporary dining. It is the top wine producing region in Mexico, and has a bounty of local seafood, produce,meat and poultry products.It's gastronomy is a unique mix of European, Asian, and Mexican traditions that are 100% Baja Californio.

After a brief visit back in October of 2009, chef John Rivera Sedlar was eager to get back for some real exploration of Baja's cuisine. In April of 2010, our calendars synched, John, along with my dear friends, Barbara Hansen, Tomoko Kurokawa, And Brian Saltsburg joined for my Great Chefs of Baja California gastronomic tour.

We did street food, tried one of the greatest cevicherias in Mexico, and visited four incredible chefs while savoring the pleasures of Baja through laughter, wine, mezcal, and fine conversation paired with 39 courses of unforgettable bites.


Benito Molina of Manzanilla, Ensenada,BC.

Part 1: El Maestro

Benito Molina truly reflects the freedom, spirit and tranquility of Ensenada. His approach is embraced by many of the local chefs, to just let the ingredients play, because they've got the best. Like his one of his favorite jazz artists, Miles Davis, Benito selects the finest ingredients available, and gives them the opportunity to shine. Just a touch of seasoning here, a dab of sauce there. I once had one the best ceviches ever at Benito's Muelle Tres, "It's a nice bonito fish, so I just put some sea salt and lime", he said in his mid-afternoon narcosis.


Benito comes from Mexico City and brings that energy along with the influences of world travels into his Baja kitchen. Manzanilla with its bordello by the sea vibe, is the meeting place for Baja's wine and food industry. It's here, where at around 2AM, the post dinner crowd comes in and Benito holds court. It's in the after hours when Benito, with his sinister waxed tipped moustache, really comes alive.

I remember the first time I met him, we drove through the wine country drinking from open containers in the car, clutching six packs of beer while tasting wine from barrels at Valle de Guadalupe's wine school.Completely loaded he almost swerved off the dusty road in El Porvenir, and just looked at me through dark shades and boozily shrugged,"ooops.......sooooorrrriii!"



On the night of our four hour dinner, Benito was excited about a sturgeon that was caught nearby, rare for these waters, but it gave Benito a chance to do one of his favorite things, to do head to tail cooking.


Course no. 1 A canape of flaked sturgeon with tomato, chile, garlic and herbs reflects the Italian influences in Baja.



Kumamoto oysters from an estuary in Guerrero Negro with a shallot vinaigrette, contrasted with a Pacific oyster with chopped pork feet. Bi-valves are a must at any of Benito's restaurants. He sources from the finest purveyors all over Baja.


The smaller manila clams and a white clam adorned with soy sauce, habanero chiles and lime.



Like a jazz musician taking elaborating on a theme Benito produces a smoked clam with gorgonzola, and an oyster with dripping suggestively with tarragon butter.



Tiradito done two ways, a type of ceviche style, the first with capers, raspberry and onions, the other with green chile,soy sauce, and vinegar. You can learn alot about a Baja chefs style by their tiraditos, about their palates.


Baja has fresh sardines, something I miss here many a night, are served cured in salt, vinegar, ginger and chile verde.Jocoque, cultured cream, made dreamy with cucumber and wild fennel from Benito's garden are about as perfect a bite as one can suppose.


A saliferous salad of grilled mackerel and sardine with mizuna salad, reflecting the Japanese influence in Baja.


A house favorite of Manzanilla, a chowder of manilla clams with smoked bacon, potato and mild saffron.


Just south of Ensenada in Erédira, abalone is harvested as it was by natives more than 10,000 years ago.This artful plating with tomato, onion, serrano pepper,and pasote sauce displays Benito's painter style of presentation. There is interesting art at Manzanilla and usually at least one of Benito's own works is on display.


One of Manzanilla's most fascinating creations is calamari with roasted beets, ginger, orange juice, lime juice, garlic and habanero. This is a dish for the world, opulent, sweet, and ethereal spice, it's Baja's avant garde.


Cabrilla, a local sea bass, lies on a bed of poblano peppers, that are charred and sliced with herbs, garlic and parsley.


A white seabass is garnished with a radish salsa,accompanied by Baja style risotto made with fresh huitlacoche,corn smut.



I believe we had many courses still to come, but our long and overly caloric adventures had left us in no condition to go much longer. So, we only had one non-seafood plate a soulful beef tongue, stomach and hoof stew with a dense and rich chile guajillo stew, topped with fresh pasta.


As our party began to doze off, I listened with forced intensity as the representative of Ramonetti cheese down in Ojos Negros explained in painstaking detail, how the cheese is made. I looked over my shoulder at John, Brian, and Barbara starting to pass out as I struggled to concentrate and keep my eyes open, when I found an opportunity for an out."Well, I can't wait to try some!" An assortment of cheeses from Ramonetti: fresco, basil, pepper, rosemary,and anejo served with a strawberry wine reduction sauce and fruit.

I want to do this tour someday soon, but we had burnt the entire day in food, drink and exploration, and it was time to sleep.


One last sweet memory, a warm chocolate molten cake, a glass of mango with light cream, and mango coulis on shortbread.

Long dinners at Manzanilla are one of my Ensenada traditions, and the after party is worth the stay. Benito Molina is one of the greatest chefs in Baja, and in Mexico. He brings the urban cutting edge of Mexico City,an artist's restraint,and the limitless plenitude of Baja flavors.


Javier Plascencia, of Villa Saverios, Tijuana,BC

Part 2: Smooth Operator

Javier Plascencia is tearing up Baja's culinary scene, a force to be reckoned with. He currently runs Villa Saverios, Cafe Saverios, Cebicheria Erizo,Caesar's restaurant(recently restored birthplace of the Caesar's salad) La Tia, Casa Plascencia,Guiseppe's, all in Tijuana, and Romesco on the other side of the border. And, he's set to open another restaurant soon, where he will be getting behind the stoves to do more of his own thing, free from the successful formats of his other places.

Javier has been a successful restaurateur all of his life, the pizzeria started by his Italian immigrant father, Guiseppe's, still does good business and makes a mean pie.So successful are his restaurants, that he's opened another one just so he can cook just the way he wants.Places like Villa Saverios and Casa Plascencia are so popular among Tijuana residents, that he has had trouble over the years trying to introduce new items to the menus. He sneaks a dish here and there, but has had tremendous pressure to maintain the classics.

So, he opened Cebicheria Erizo and created one of the best ceviche and seafood concept restaurants in Mexico. Now, ceviche has been conquered and he's ready to heat things up with a new place in Tijauna, oh, and he has a seasonal restaurant in the Valle de Guadalupe.

Javier is quiet,intense, focused, and constantly moving back and forth across the border in perpetual motion.His restaurants are all of the highest quality, and having dined at just about every restaurant in his portfolio, I'm always amazed on how great these places are.

All this and I can always count on him for a late night hang at one of Tijuana's night spots, partyin' until 4AM, and a cafe de la olla at 8AM before he dashes off to the next gig.


We had Villa Saverios to ourselves on the night of our tasting,10 staff members to us five fortunate souls.Javier likes to start things off with tostaditas, which displays his expertise with the local products.An octopus machaca, spider crab, and geoduck clam with cucumbers and jalapeno, each bite is unique and explosive.



In Tijuana, the chefs like to go big on flavors. A chile relleno stuffed with beef cheeks, arugula, heirloom beans, fig granules, ground cacao, and pickled onions seems certain to be over the top, but it just melts in your mouth, pleasurable moans all around the table.



The duck tacos with cucumber, cilantro, habanero salsa, avocado, and salsa de jamaica are cleverly wrapped in a tortilla of razor thin jicama. It's savory, ambrosial, and lightly stings the tongue.


Then two carts came out and we were the guinea pigs for the new Caesar's restaurant, which wasn't open yet. Javier was training two gentlemen to present their salads, the original Caesar, and the Victor. While the Caesar is a worldwide hit, the Victor was a classic from the same era at Victor's restaurant, the dressing is different, and the bread crumb is rather large. These guys now run a friendly competition at Caesar's restaurant."Which is your favorite...


the Caesar or the Victor?" Both are now served at Caesar's restaurant, located on Av. Revolucion, made table side, just as it was for Al Capone and Bing Crosby, back in the 30's.


A risotto of faro deepened by bits crispy suckling pig, microcilantro, nopales, heirloom beans, morel mushrooms. Risottos are popular in Baja cuisine, using local flavors and style.



From Villa Saverios' wood fired oven, a cazuela of baked lamb shank, with chochoyones (masa balls), onion, and thyme.This is a young lamb, called borrego primal, very popular in many restaurants in the area. The cazuela is for making yur own tacos. The tender lamb three month old lamb is so delectable, and has a great mouth feel with the masa.



Dessert number one,Javier's pizzetina of quince, Real de Castillo cheese, fig syrup,and pomegranate seeds. These could be a closer for any meal, quite delicious.


Homemade pistachio ice cream with a rosemary twist.



And,the fine cheeses of local producer Ramonetti,a cow's milk aged 12-14 months accompanied by mission figs, pine nuts, and basil. Ramonetti is a Baja California cheese that you must try.



Part 3:The Hunter

Miguel Angel Guerrero Yaques is Baja’s own Man vs. Wild. He hunts, scuba dives, and fishes for his restaurant’s menu items. All the Baja chefs are so fortunate to be able to create such menu items with all these amazing products, but Miguel takes it a step further. There’s something exciting about the process of dining on fresh kill, and a chef that stays with the animal from life to death to table.

Although he definitely has had some training, Miguel doesn’t like to indulge in such conversations, or talk shop. It’s about creating and being in touch with Baja. Thousands of years ago Kumiai people’s hunted, fished, and dove for their meals in the area, a tradition that continues here at La Querencia.

Miguel is another one of Baja’s restless souls, always moving, searching, and engaged. He patented the term Baja Med, to describe the Baja cuisine that blends flavors of Asia, Mexico, and the Mediterranean. Others have followed this trend, taking advantage of Baja’s Mediterranean climate and great wines to drive their recipes.

His style of food is rustic, ultra-layered, and primal. I often look at his dishes thinking, this isn’t going to work, there’s too much going on here. But, the busy plates fall into the simplest of dining sensations, that of deliciousness.



Baja wines Maat, and Diosa VIP. Baja's wine industry keeps on growing, adding new labels constantly.


Liz and Emma showed up from Cotuco, thanks guys, you can rest from now on, just send the girls!


Party in the Zona Rio!


The shot almeja is Sea of Cartez chocolata clam served with vodka, and Sriracha chile sauce. This is a Baja style seafood cocktail for the aficionado. A swank seafood cocktail for the leisure class, I can't go to La Querencia without having one of these.


There are several excellent carpaccio's at Miguel's restaurants, but the beet carpaccio is just clean and with a nice salty-sweet balance from the crumbled goat cheese.


A pair of kumamoto oysters, one raw in with wasabi, lime peel, and sashimi salsa of chives and dried fish, the closer a smoked oyster smoked with a chipotle sauce. The chipotle sauce all but shuts down your voluntary movement in a blissful pause. That's a first date oyster, baby.


The next course,deer salami, deer carpaccio and duck paté was highly anticipated. I love this sort of indulgence and finished off any neglected bits.I follow the three minute rule on this one, if someone hasn't gone in in the last three minutes, take it. These are all animals felled by Miguel's hands. If there's deer in the house, he just got back from hunting.This is also a native Baja tradition, hunting and feasting on deer.


A fresh marinated tuna was served as a tostada with avocados, leeks, shiitake mushrooms and garlic chips,drizzle of aromatic oil infused with toasted garlic and leeks.


La Querncia has great tacos,rabbit en mole negro,and duck meat taco with fresh crisp lettuce from Miguel's farm.


Baja style surf and turf,grilled mero, a type of local seabass, on a bed of risotto with a mound of crunchy fried lamb meat.


The last savory course,braised short ribs were marinated for 8 hours then cooked in a white wine broth until it fell helplessly off the bone.The beef was tossed with thyme, guajillo pepper and oyster mushrooms and served over linguine. This is Baja Med.


An assortment of house made desserts:gingerbread cake, layered crepe cake, nutty pound cake and a chocolate cake.


Part 4: El Primero


Martin San Roman, on the right, and his staff at RIncon San Roman.

Martin San Roman was perhaps the first Baja chef to make a splash and has been an accomplished chef for quite some time. He graduated at the Ecole Lenotre Paris in 1983, competed with team Mexico at the Bocuse D'Or in 1995,and is a member of the Academie Culinaire de France. He had job offers all over the world after he graduated from culinary school, but chose to come back to Tijuana, lured by Baja’s playground of fresh ingredients.

His style of cooking is labeled international due to his mastery of French technique, he had a critically successful French restaurant called Tour de France some years back, but now has Rincon San Roman at the Real del Mar golf resort just a short way down highway 1, past Playas de Tijuana.

Martin has cooked for former president Bill Clinton, and was hired to cook at Anthony Quinn's 80th birthday. He, as all the other chefs here cook the way they want, and although he doesn't usually incorporate many things like chiles and other recognizable Mexican ingredients, his cusine is also Baja Californian.

For this tasting, he opened his doors just for us, and even through in some more Mexican touches for this extravagant lunch.



Martin San Roman, Rincon San Roman, Tijuana,BC


Our dinner included a new red wine from the catalog of top Mexican wine maker, Hugo D'Acosta ,Jardin Secreto from Adobe Guadalupe winery, Valle de Guadalupe.


Martin started us off with a tuna tartar,sweetened by smoked apples, and Baja red wine jelly.


Baked New Zealand mussels, the only non-Baja product on this menu, with corn husk, lobster sauce and marjoram pico de gallo. Martin's flavors are refined, and balanced. I think he'd be a great tutor for non-Mexican chefs trying to play with Mexican ingredients, he can put himself in both worlds.


Fresh mixed lettuce plucked from a hydroponic garden with a divine hibiscus vinaigrette.


Filet of sole with wine leafs, and locally caught marlin with scallop sauce, a fantastic combination of flavors. The marlin takes the lead here, tempered by the scallop sauce givin it a more urbane flavor profile. This is not your typical marlin taste you get at the seafood shacks, that's for sure.


Beef medallions, always doen so well at Rincon San Roman, with a green pepper corn sauce, guava, and fragments of chicharron. Martin delivers simple elegance, with precision in cooking and flavor. It's amazing how many fine restaurants miss with this type of dish, but you can order beef medallions,or other similar types of beef plates here with confidence


For dessert, Martin served his contribution to the Baja repertory, his white chocolate mousse crepe cake, an original Baja creation by chef Martin San Roman. This cake is served in many Tijuana restaurants, it's a classic. I've always enjoyed this cake and was delighted to know that Martin created this little temptation.

The culinary scene in Baja is beyond compare, from iconic local street food to its fine dining establishments.For contempory Mexican seafood, it is the top location in Mexico. Mexico city's Contramar, regarded as the best seafood restaurant in the capital, has Baja catch shipped in, and follows Baja's lead in its dishes. A friend just told me of another Baja style restaurant that just opened up, and of course, Baja wines are the rage in DF's upscale restaurants and wine bars, with devotees clammoring for the lastest releases, and cult labels.

Deer, quail,duck,lamb,and other great products give Baja chefs an endless range of elemets in which to indulge.

Just two hours south of Los Angeles lies a foodie paradise, where quality and service are at you every whim. Whether it be Baja cuisine, Baja Med, or just Mexican cuisine, these restaurants, these chefs, are doing something new, something exciting, and are part of vital Mexican culinary movement. Join the rest of us who daydream about these meals, and can't wait to return.

This is Baja California.

All the great photos, courtesy of Tomoko Kurokawa, of Tomo Style Blog

Manzanilla
Teniente Azueta #39
Ensenada, BC
Mexico
Wed-Sat 12PM-12AM

Rincon San Roman
Km. 19.5 Tijuana – Rosarito toll road
Blvd. Real del Mar 1074 – 21 Real del Mar Golf Resort
Zip Code 22565

La Querencia
Av. Escuadron 201
Tijuana, BC
664-972-9935
Mon-Thurs. 1PM-11PM
Fri-Sat 1PM-12AM
closed Sun


Villa Saverios
Blvd. Sanchez Taboada Esq. Escuadron 201
Tijuana, México
(664) 686.6442