Mexico
Alameda Central

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    • Día 252

      Mexiko-Stadt (Ciudad de México)

      14 de marzo de 2023, Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

      Wir stellten Püppi auf einem Campingplatz, außerhalb und nördlich von Mexiko-Stadt, ab. So mussten wir selbst nicht mit dem Auto in den Trubel hineinfahren und so parkte sie sicherer. (Wann man mit dem Auto nach Mexiko-Stadt fahren darf, regelt sich übrigens über das eigene Nummernschild. Wir haben die 0 als letzte Ziffer und dürfen, neben Samstag und Sonntag, auch am Freitag nicht dort fahren.)

      Nachdem wir herausfanden, dass man doch fast 2 Stunden mit den Öffis in das Stadt-Zentrum brauchen würden, entschieden wir uns mit Claudi & Salvi ein Uber zu teilen.
      Mexiko-Stadt ist riesig, aber die Sehenswürdigkeiten im Stadtkern kann man gut an einem Tag ablaufen. Wir wollten uns dann offen lassen ein zweites mal in diese Metropole zu fahren.

      Gegen 9 Uhr holte uns der Fahrer ab. Bevor wir die Stadt erreichten, fuhren wir durch den Speckgürtel der Großstadt, der ähnlich hügelig und bunt war wie Guanajuato. Schon beim Eintritt in die Stadt wurde der Verkehr heftig und wir standen einige Zeit im Stau.

      Das Stadtzentrum besitzt einige schöne, alte Gebäude und Kirchen. Besonders das Postamt mit den goldenen Verzierungen und Treppen war sehr beeindruckend.
      Neben dem Hauptplatz sahen wir einige, als Schamanen, verkleidete Männer und Frauen. Sie boten Passanten an böse Geister auszutreiben und Gutes zuzusprechen, während sie rauchende Utensilien herum wedelten.

      Nimmt man mal eine Seitengasse, landet man schnell in Einkaufsstraßen. Interessant ist, dass viele Läden "gebündelt" zu sein schienen: Es gab eine Gasse in der unzählige Stoffläden nebeneinander standen. Oder eine Gasse mit Läden, die nur Haarschmuck anboten. Oftmals priesen die Verkäufer daneben lautstark ihre Produkte an. Später spazierten wir noch durch Chinatown und in der angrenzenden Gasse konnte man bestimmt in gleich 10 Läden Lampen, Schalter und Kabel kaufen.
      Am Ende liefen wir westlich vom Zentrum durch ein Viertel, das uns wegen der Hochhäuser und Banken an eine typische Großstadt erinnerte.

      Der Rückweg war eine Tortur: Wir mussten uns lange gedulden bis uns endlich ein Uber Fahrer mitnehmen wollte. Der Verkehr war brutal! Die Autofahrer drängelten von allen Seiten, zwischen den Fahrbahnen fuhren die Motorräder und unser Fahrer konnte grade noch in letzter Sekunde einem Fußgänger ausweichen, der versehentlich rückwärts auf die Fahrbahn gekippt war. Puhh... 🫣

      Wir wissen nicht was wir von Mexiko-Stadt erwartet haben, aber auch am Ende des Tages hatten wir alle 4 das Gefühl mit dieser Stadt nicht so ganz warm zu werden. Uns fehlte irgendwie der Charakter, das gewisse Etwas... Vielleicht würden uns die südlichen Szeneviertel mehr zusagen, aber nochmal reinzufahren wurde erstmal einstimmig abgelehnt... 😅
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    • Día 89

      Mexico City - grüne Weltmetropole

      27 de marzo de 2023, Mexico ⋅ 🌩️ 27 °C

      Zum Abschluss unseres Abenteuers ging es nach México City. Da Teile der Hauptstadt nicht den besten Ruf haben was das Thema Sicherheit angeht und wir nach einer Woche Strand, Sonne und wenigen Leuten mal wieder in eine Großstadt kamen, wussten wir nicht so wirklich was uns erwartet.
      Nach unserer Ankunft wurde uns schnell klar, die Stadt ist unglaublich.
      Unser Hostel lag im beliebten Viertel Roma Norte (bekannt für viele Cafés und einer eher noblen Gegend) und wir haben uns direkt in das viele Grün verliebt.
      Neben insgesamt zwei Freewalking- Touren, ewigem Treibenlassen durch die Stadt und vielen tollen Ausflügen können wir sagen - Mexico City hat uns mehr als positiv überrascht und wir wollen wiederkommen. Es gibt so viel zu sehen u.a. 171 Museen (die meisten weltweit), die zudem auch sehr günstig zu besuchen sind.
      Neben dem Besuch des Anthropologie Museums, einer Foodtour mit tollen Leuten aus dem Hostel und vielen weiteren tollen Erlebnissen war eines unserer Highlights ganz klar die Ballonfahrt über die archäologische Stätte von Teotihuacán. Da Tommy große Höhenangst hat, wussten wir nicht wie wir es am Ende finden werden.
      Fazit: es war atemberaubend. Wir denken die Bilder Sprechen für sich. 🙂

      Ein weiteres Highlight war eine Fahrt auf den Xochimilco Kanälen. Hier fährt man auf bunten Boten durch die ehemaligen Bewässerungskanäle der Azteken. Da wir am Wochenende dort waren haben auch viele Mexikaner den Tag dort verbracht. Es herrscht demzufolge eine Stimmung wir auf einem Volksfest. Es gibt (jede Menge) Alkohol, essen und Musik. Wir haben uns den Gebräuchen angepasst und den Tag sehr genossen.
      Antonia hat hier auch mal wieder ihr neues Lieblingsgetränk bekommen - Michelada (Bier gemischt mit Zitronensaft, Chili, Tahin und Tomatensaft).

      Am letzten Abend haben wir dann gemeinsam auf dem Dach unseres Hostel gesessen und über die letzten Monate philosophiert. O-Ton: die Zeit vergeht so schnell, was war das für eine wilde Fahrt und wie kann es sein das wir jetzt wieder zurück „müssen“.

      Überraschenderweise haben wir wenige Antworten auf die Fragen gefunden, aber es war schön das erste Mal in Erinnerungen zu schwelgen. Darauf freuen wir uns jetzt unheimlich, dass mit euch allen gemeinsam zu tun und die ein oder andere Anekdote mit euch teilen zu dürfen.

      Danke für eure tollen Kommentare und Nachrichten. Wir waren/sind immer wieder überrascht davon wie viele das hier verfolgt haben. Wir haben uns über jede Nachricht gefreut und hoffen euch ein wenig mitgenommen zu haben auf unserem Abenteuer. ❤️

      Wir sitzen nun in New York am Flughafen und warten auf den Rückflug nach Berlin. Wenn wir wieder in Deutschland sind werden wir hier sicher nochmal einen Review Footprint erstellen. 🙂

      Nachtrag: der wohl schönste Tag für Tommy in CDMX war wohl der vorletzte an dem wir einfach durch die Stadt und am Nachmittag in den Parque Mexico gelaufen sind. Hier haben wir auf der Freewalking Tour erfahren, dass man Tiere (Hunde und Katzen) die im Tierheim leben (müssen) oder gerettet wurden ausführen, streicheln und wenn man möchte adoptieren kann.
      Wie man unschwer erkennen kann, war Tommy sehr glücklich endlich wieder unbegrenzt Zeit mit den Vierbeinern verbringen zu können. 😁
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    • Día 1

      CDMX Mexico City- Day one, 9/19/23

      20 de septiembre de 2023, Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 77 °F

      Day 1- Tuesday, 9/19/23
      Today we got up super early to get to the airport. Actually Matt got up SUPER early, in the 4’s to work out. We took off for CDMX without a hitch and the flight was super quick and easy. We landed at 11:45 and met our driver, Hector (+52 55 3645 1956, WhatsApp) who brought us to the beautiful Four Seasons. Since we booked the trip through a travel agent, we were upgraded to a suite. A bit outdated, but the room is huge. The hotel itself is gorgeous. There’s a beautiful courtyard with a bar and two restaurants and there’s an outdoor pool.

      Once we checked in and got settled, we headed out to find falafel. Matt had read about El Rey del Falafel, so that’s where we went. About a 20 min walk though some very lovely neighborhoods. I got an amazing cannelle along the way. There’s a bakery every ten feet. We finally made it to our destination. The falafel and slatim were delicious (and glatt Kosher!!). The schwarma was just ok, I thought. After this, we made our way to a natural wine shop for some provisions. Natural wine is huge in
      CDMX!! We walked back to the hotel and tried to go to the pool but only half the seats had shade and they were taken so we went back to the room to change clothes/freshen up/unpack, and drink some Mexican orange wine!

      We were about to leave for a taco tour and noticed that the sky looks gray… Sure enough, although the forecast prior to leaving said not one drop of rain, it now said thunderstorms all night. So we bundled up and headed out to meet our guide Sessi in the historic downtown area. We took an Uber and got a little taste of the legendary Mexico City traffic. Apparently it was extra bad, because there was a march going on, which happens all the time. We arrived and set out to her first destination. The first taco we tried was called a basket taco. They make the tacos and stack them in this huge bin and then pour hot oil and sauce over them to cook them. We try to mole verde and a chiccarones taco. I will admit, these were not my favorite. Pretty soft and not great flavor. The best part was the spicy pickled veggies on the side. Next we stopped at Las Escaleras, where they are just cooking at the bottom of a tiny staircase. This taco was not really a taco. It was a very traditional quesadilla, which are deep-fried here, filled with tons of zucchini flowers and Oaxaca cheese. It was in topped with shredded lettuce and Cotija cheese, as well as some salsa, and it was outrageously delicious. The third stop was at Taqueria el Torito for some thing that Matt and I were a bit skeptical about. Our guide recommended a taco that had a mix of tripe and brisket. Not being a tripe lover, I was put off of a bit, but that ended up being the best taco of the night. They put the tripe and the brisket mix on the flat top and make it super crispy with a good dose of salt before it goes on your taco, topped with cilantro and onions. A revelation, I’m a tripe lover! And so is Matt! Who knew! Next stop was Los Cocuyos, made famous by Anthony Bourdain. We tried Al pastor (not the best I’ve ever had!!), chorizo/brisket mix and cheek tacos. This was really not the best but good, bc tacos. Also, this was an inside sit-down situation, which was very welcome as we had been traipsing around in full downpour heretofore. On our way to our next stop, we had churros filled with cajeta and condensed milk (churros rellenos). Sooo crispy, amazing. We stopped at a historic “canteen” called Tio Pepe’s to have a traditional tequila break— one shot of lime juice, one shot of tequila and one short of sangrita, which is basically a house made bloody Mary mix. I did not partake in this, I had a Michelada, which here is just lime juice and beer, and it was great. Of note, in Mexico City specifically, a Michelada is just that and a Chilada is the one with the Clamato, etc. At our last taco stop, it was tacos guisados— stewed brisket with flat-top melted crispy cheese on top. The DIY condiments included beans (yum), pico and a variety of salsas. The spice level of all the salsas is high, which I am pretty surprised by!! Or maybe I’m just surprised by my spice intolerance.

      We were full but not rolling by the end of the tour, so considered going to (a second) dinner, but we were really too wet to sit anywhere so we went back to the hotel and literally passed out immediately. Guess we were tired!!
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    • Día 201

      Mexique - Mexico City

      29 de marzo, Mexico ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      3 jours à Mexico !
      Une ville très agréable, avec une ambiance géniale et une culture culinaire incroyable ! On se régale sans culpabilité avec les tacos :)

      En se promenant dans la ville, on découvre de nombreux monuments magnifiques ! C'est vraiment chouette. Les couchers de soleil sont absolument magnifiques, et c'est un plaisir de trouver des prix raisonnables 😁

      Prochaine étape -> Cancun
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    • Día 21

      Centro Historico de Mexico City

      4 de mayo, Mexico ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

      This morning, Sheryl and I arrived at our 10th floor apartment to discover that the building is under renovation/reconstruction for major earthquake damage. We are hoping that the earth stays still for our stay. We had a scheduled murals tour at noon so we unpacked and headed out.

      Oscar took us first to the Diego Rivera Museum which is really just one mural. It is one heck of a mural - it is a very detailed history lesson of Mexico. He took us through all the leaders, personalities and meanings of each of the subjects depicted. Of course, as it is Rivera, the subjects are about class struggles and political corruption. Mexico is thick with both. If you make it to Mexico City, please do hire yourself a guide who can tell you what you are looking at. It was fascinating.

      Next stop were the murals in the Museo de Bellas Artes. Here you see the three main artists that dominated the murals movement: Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros. Each had iconic and gorgeous murals here. They each used their canvasses to express themes of Mexican stories and history. Again, the explanations and stories told by our guide were invaluable in helping us really enjoy/love these immense works.

      Diego Rivera’s most prominent mural was originally designed as a commission from the Rockefellers in New York. It prominently displayed Lenin as a hero. Rockefeller paid Rivera for his time and then destroyed it completely. My question is, What were they thinking? It was going to be bunch of flowers and butterflies? In any case, he redid the mural here in Mexico City with an addition of Rockefeller on the “evils” side of the mural. Again, this mural is full of recognizable characters and highly political meaning.

      Don’t miss these murals if you do come here.

      Gail arrived this afternoon with some Mexican pesos from some trip she took back in the 1980s. They were 1,000 and 10,000 peso notes. Well, sometime in the 1990s these bills were devalued by removing the last 3 digits, so instead of 23,000 pesos, we were looking at 23 - or about a buck fifty USD. We were off to a good start with a big laugh.
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    • Día 29

      29. Mexiko City

      31 de marzo de 2023, Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

      Ja.. Wo söumä da afa. 😅
      Am Donnschti Abä heimer afang wöue iichecke füre Flug vom Friti Abä. Jedoch heimer üse Flug niene gfunde u si de chli stutzig worde. Mir si de däm chli nachägange u hei miter Hiuf vor Nati usegfunde dass dä Flug storniert isch worde. Nur leider het das üs niemer gseit!

      Mir hei auso praktisch die ganzi Nacht vo Donnschti uf Friti drmit verbracht usezfinde wies itz witer geit. Z Problem isch gsi das d Airline seit si chöi dr Flug nit umbueche dass muess dr Reiseverastalter mache. Dr Reiseverastalter seit aber si chöi nit umbueche sondern nur ä Guetschrift mache.

      Scho gli isch 5i am Morge und voruse wartet üses Taxi wo üs a Flughafe söt bringe füre Inlandflug uf Mexiko City. Mir probiere z Cancun am Flughafe no diräkt ä Flug id Schwiiz z bueche, hei aber ke Chance. Die meischte flüge über d USA oder Kanada u dert brüchte mir no äs Visum was so churzfrischtig natürlech nit müglech isch.

      Auso flüge mir mau nach Mexiko City. Nach ewigem hin u här zwüsche Airline und Reiseveraastalter entscheide mir üs eifach säuber ä nöie Flug z bueche ir Hoffnig dasmer de das Gäud vor Reiseversicherig zrügbechöme. Leider finde mir aber ersch ä Flug für am Samschti Abä, aber houptsach mit chöme irgendwie hei!

      Nach däm riiiise Theater gö mir afang mau öppis feins ga z'Mittag ässe😅 Mir bringe üsi Sache is Hotel u erkunde am Nami de no chli Mexiko City.
      Mir si sehr positiv überrascht gsi vo dere Stadt! Wunderschöni Gebäude u Strassä, so hätte mir üs das gar mit vorgstellt😁

      Zum z'Nacht gits ä feine Hamburger und Tortas u nähr gö mir aber de gli is Hotel. Nachdäm mir letscht Nacht quasi nüt hei gschlafe fröie mir üs scho mega ufs Bettli😴😴
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    • Día 18

      The Day That Wasn’t

      30 de diciembre de 2019, Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

      Today was just one of those days where everything goes awry. We spent the day sorting out messed up tour plans and phone plans. All I can say is, thank goodness for the comfort of food!

      We had booked a tour to see the pyramids at Teotihuacán, the most important and largest pre-Columbian city in Mexico.

      We arrived at the address given in our instructions ten minutes before the start of the tour but despite our best efforts and ten attempts to call the number provided, we were unable to locate the office. We finally, at 9:10, entered a luggage storage facility to ask for help, but the woman behind the desk spoke no English. She made a few calls and eventually a young man showed up to tell us we arrived too late to take the tour and there was no way to take it today.

      Dejected and a more than a little disappointed, we went back to our hotel and made last minute alternate plans.

      We had lunch at "Gold Taco", located in Mercado Roma which is not really a market but rather a gourmet food hall. Although the prices here are higher than at your typical taqueria, the quality of the food justifies the price.

      We ordered mushroom tamales, quesadillas, and a few tacos. Although everything was delicious, the tamales were the highlight. They were "elevated", and truly the best tamales we'd ever eaten.

      We then strolled around and made another visit to the Mercado Medellin where we picked up a few snacks and goodies lest we find ourselves feeling peckish (fat chance of that happening in this city).

      Then for dinner we went from gourmet to street food. We ate at "Gracias Madre" a popular neighborhood vegan taco stand. Roch ordered 3 different types of tacos, arrechero, chorizo rojo and salchichas a la mexicana, and I ordered the volcanoes (similar to a tostada) with a red chorizo topping. I found the red chorizo a tad salty but otherwise delicious. As we were paying the bill, we spotted a little chocolate tart in the display case. Once I learned it was gluten free, it got added to the bill and taken home with us.

      Roch asked the owner why they were called "Gracias Madre" and he was told that the name reflects the gratitude for the work they love to do, and Madre was in honour of mother Earth, who provides all the bounty for the food they serve.

      In the end, we re-booked our Teotihuacán tour for my birthday on January 2 and managed to cross a couple of eateries off of our to do list. Not a total loss.

      There's always a silver lining.
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    • Día 5

      Diego Riviera

      19 de enero de 2020, Mexico ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      One of Diego Rivieras most famous Mural is Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park.
      He was a gifted painter and Muralist as you can see from the painting.
      The mural 15.6 meter wide, 4 meter high, weighs 35 tons!) represents three principal eras of Mexican History: The Conquest, The Porfiriato Dictatorship, and The Revolution of 1910. In chronological order starting from left to right we meet numerous prominent figures from Mexican history.
      Now Diego Riviera was also a Don Giovanni and Machista. The picture with the yellow lady and the open legs represents Diego’s opinion about woman. He thought that in order to obtain a hus-band, make start a business or succeed in live she had to open her legs....... No comment.
      The lady in yellow is a famous and wealthy singer at her time. Nonetheless the men in front of her won’t let her pass because she is indigenous.
      At the very left you see Hernandez Cortes, the Spanish conqueror who landed in Veracruz, Mexico in the 1400. The blood on his hand symbolizes the pain and horror he brought the Mesoamerica. Little up and right the symbolization of the Inquisition Cortes also brought the continent (only to be seen in the movieclip.
      A side note; Riviera did not include his long term affair Frida Kalo in the Mural. She got offended and demanded that he would. He did!
      Posted movieclip on facebook.

      Covered 10.4 km
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    • Día 2

      CDMX Day two- 9/20/33

      20 de septiembre de 2023, Mexico ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

      This morning we woke up gloriously late— kind of. It was about 6:45 here, which is 8:45 at home, so felt like a big sleep in!! Matt worked out, while I showered and did my hair. He got back and we went downstairs for coffee and pastries, gotta use that breakfast credit! The pastries here, so far, have been unreal. We had a cardamom bun with sweetened goat cheese cream, and another kouign-aman style bun filled with dulce de lece, pear and more goat cheese. Coffee was also amaze.

      With our pre-breakfast snack tiding us over, we headed to our breakfast destination but realized we forgot the documuments we needed for our morning activity. We walked to a fedex which was closed, so we ubered back to the hotel to grab them and then ubered to breakfast at Superette (https://www.instagram.com/superette_mx/). We got a hotcakes with bacon and eggs for the table (basically a fancy McGriddle), and Matt had pesto eggs (over easy on brown bread with the most amazing tomatoes and pesto— I ate most of the toms) and I had Turkish eggs (poached eggs in garlicky yogurt with roasted cherry tomatoes, chili oil and crostini). Maybe I’m biased, but mine was the best. Would eat every day. I was SO tempted to have a glass of wine (vacation!) as they had a great selection of natties, but I resisted.

      We got picked up from there and headed to the Frida Khalo house/museum. Unfortunately, I lost my favorite sweater somewhere along the way. Luckily they still make it so I’ll get a new one. Do not despair. Anywhoo. We made it to the museum and took a wonderful guided tour where we learned so much about her life, her process and her relationship with Diego Rivera. From there, we walked over to the Coyoacan market. It was very cool, with tons of food and produce stalls. We picked a spot with a bunch of people and got some pozole to try. Even though basically no one speaks English anywhere, it’s been pretty easy to communicate. The women who were cooking told us the best way to eat the pozole— crema on the baked tortilla with pozole next and cheese on top. Took it to another level. Very good.

      We headed into the town square next and had lunch at Los Danzantes (https://www.losdanzantes.com) which was quite fancy and delicious. The service was on another level. Waiter had your plate and silverware out of the way as you were chewing the last bite of your course. We started with coconut shrimp (Matt can’t not order if it’s in a menu) and a Hoja Santa, which is a pepper leaf stuffed with Oaxaca cheese and smothered in a super citrusy tomatillo sauce. Delicioso!! We also tried their special version on chiles en Nogales, with an ancho pepper instead of a poblano (ancho is a dried poblano) and pink walnut sauce instead of white. It was really quite suite and very spicy so wasn’t a favorite, but the grilled vegetable “salad”, aka a bowl of grilled veggies with olive oil and lime, was grrrreat. Not sure who decided that tapioca belongs there too, but it worked!!

      Our guide, Jamie (street name Jimmy Islands— see pic for contact info) met us as the restaurant to drive us to the Xochimilco canals. Along the way, he gave us lots of insight into how Mexico City came to be (there used to be five huge lakes!), some more info about Frida Khalo and pointed out landmarks visible from the backseat of his CRV. He is very knowledgeable with perfect English, highly recommend as a travel guide. We got to the boat and had a private ride with beer/michelada to drink. On the canals, you can do anything from karaoke to private mariachi to hooking a few boats together and having a huge party. There are restaurants and women cooking in their boats, and greenhouses and other shops along the water. It’s very cool, and takes about 45-60 min there and back, and is about 45 min outside of Coyoacan. Jamie dropped us back off at the hotel and we said our goodbyes.

      After a quick costume change, we headed out to Local 1, a natural wine bar, for a little pre-dinner bev. (https://local1.mx) The space was very cool, and also functions as an art gallery. Great selection of Mexican natural wines. From there we walked to dinner at Rosetta, which has by far been the most hyped up meal of the trip. Because of this, I was very nervous but from the moment we stepped inside, I knew the hype was real. We had made an indoor reservation, because the weather was supposed to be bad, but when we arrived, we immediately knew we wanted to sit outside on the sidewalk patio. We asked if we could wait, and they said of course. They led us upstairs to the third-floor to the cutest bar with the Degournay, or Degournay-esque at least, wallpaper. I had already noticed the Ginori plates on the tables. This was definitely my kind of place! We had espresso martinis, mine was decaf, both on the rocks, and they were amazing. We sat on little stools, overlooking the street, and it was kind of magical. They quickly sat us outside and we started off with thick sourdough bread and a very appropriate (ie large) amount of sweet butter, and a shaved fennel salad with citrus and pomegranate seeds. Next was an incredibly flavorful and somehow vegan minestrone soup as well as a corn tortellini en brodo. Last course was mushroom risotto and pasta with lobster, bottarga and zucchini. Every. Single. Thing. Was. Perfect. I really can’t say much more!! We had absolutely no room or energy left for dessert, so we headed off to bed.
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    • Día 4

      CDMX Day 4- 9/22/23

      22 de septiembre de 2023, Mexico ⋅ ⛅ 66 °F

      Today started off quite lovely. I woke up with a bit of tummy troubles, but of course I powered through. Matt and I decided to have a light breakfast in order to save our appetites for lunch. We walked to Panaderia Rosetta— sister restaurant of the dinner from the other night— (https://www.instagram.com/panaderiarosetta/), which is supposed to have the best concha, a round pastry with a crackly sugar shell. It was good but honestly the least good thing we got bc everything else was SO fantastic. We ordered a corn muffin, which was baked in a corn husk so remained super moist and delicious, then I had a ciabatta with burrata, tomatoes and pesto, and Matt had a baguette with thick roasted pork (prob too rare for others buy it was delish), gremolata and pickles. We seriously are considering picking that up again for the plane ride home. Don’t be surprised if we do.

      We met our guide, Maricela (see pic for contact info) at the Museo Nacional de Anthropologia for a tour which dove into some of the main mesoamerican civilizations and how Mexico went from over 60 indigenous tribes to what remains today. It was truly fascinating. Maybe 2.5 hrs was a SMIDGE long but really, it’s nothing you know anything about. I guess that actually makes it kind of harder to stay engaged, but I did my damndest.

      I said the other day that Rosetta was our most hyped up meal, but I forgot about this one— CONTRAMAR!! (http://contramar.com.mx) As I mentioned, I was def having some issues in the gut health department, but I’d have to be on my deathbed to hold back from eating this meal. We started with the legendary tuna tostadas. They were, as advertised by our waiter, some of the best tostadas (well, he said THE best, but without trying them all, I’m not comfortable making that proclamation) in all of Mexico; a crispy corn tortilla with a layer of chipotle mayo (which i was surprised by) topped with thinly sliced super fresh tuna, crispy leeks and avocado 🤌🏻. Additionally we ordered albondigas de pescado (basically gefilte fish! Not my fave), an amazing soft shell crab taco with melt-in-your mouth flour tortillas, angle hair with clams, and the other most famous instagram dish of all time, a whole fish split and grilled, one side with adobo and one side with a parsley sauce (to me, 💚>❤️!!). It was a fabulous meal and that was thanks in no small part to our prime outdoor table, where we watched the who’s who of Mexico City see and be seen( as well as countless patrons with no reservation be turned away (which made me feel bad, but HELLO!?!?!). I didn’t want to leave, tbh, but I was really pretty unwell. We managed the short walk back to the hotel and headed straight up to the outdoor pool where we lazed away the afternoon. I kinda felt guilty but then not bc we are on vacation!!

      We were supposed to go to another well-known restaurant, Meroma, for dinner but decided we didn’t want such a production, especially since I wasn’t sure about how my stomach would handle things. I did get some
      Mexican lomotil on our way to the pool, which seemed to help, but we opted to a little Italian bistro, Osteria 8, just a few minutes walk from the hotel. Great decision, just what we wanted. Perfect margarita pizza, Cesar salad, spaghetti with cherry tomatoes and rigatoni amatriciana. What more does one need?!?! We are simple people with simple tastes.
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