In
Sleepy Hatch, a Red-Hot
Time
Not much happens in this New
Mexico burg. But for two peppery
days each September, it's
hopping.
HATCH,
NEW MEXICO (By Scott Martelle,
Times)
August 20, 2005
The rush begins at midday,
heralded by an unseen rooster
crowing the noon hour.
Of the dozen or so tables in El
Mexicano Cafι, only four have
customers. Two mainly are filled
by men in jeans, plain cotton
shirts and sweat-ringed hats. A
couple of young mothers with
infants in strollers talk
animatedly at a third table. I'm
alone at the fourth, the only
non-Latino and an obvious
out-of-towner.
So much for the lunch crush.
This is the measured pulse of
life about 80 miles north of
where the Rio Grande slices
eastward to form the
Texas-Mexico border. But come
Labor Day weekend, the pace will
quicken as about 30,000 people
descend on Hatch (population
1,660) to celebrate the town's
best-known commodity red and
green chile peppers.
What began 35 years ago as a
one-day local harvest
celebration has blossomed into
the two-day Hatch Chile
Festival, drawing chile lovers
from as far away as East Texas
and Southern California.
Equal parts country fair and
kitsch, the fiesta includes what
Mayor Judd Nordyke describes as
"dumb things" like chile-tossing
and eating contests as well as
country and Latin music, the
crowning of a chile queen and,
of course, vendors selling
chile-themed doodads. The red
chile ristra is the local
answer to the Hawaiian lei, and
purists can buy freshly dried
chiles by the bag or pick up a
gas-fired barrel roaster for the
patio.
The party has become too big for
Hatch itself, so it's held
beyond a low hill just north of
town that hides the local
landing strip. (The airport is
still open; pilots are warned to
watch out for parked cars.)
There's now a cooking contest
and an array of booths, but the
festival initially served up a
single plate from the school
cafeteria chiles rellenos, red
and green enchiladas, rice,
beans and tortillas.
"For years, there was no other
food there," Nordyke said. "It's
kind of lost the flavor of the
old country fair."
Maybe, but the trade-off put
Hatch on the map. The festival
has been featured on the Food
Network, national TV news shows
and magazines targeting food
aficionados, many of whom
believe the local soil content,
climate and summer heat give
Hatch chiles a distinctive
balance of heat and flavor.
If there is a bad plate with
chile sauce to be had here, it
missed me. The green sauce over
carnitas enchiladas at El
Mexicano had enough heat to
raise a sweat but enough
richness to make you not care.
During the next four days, I ate
chile sauce up and down this
stretch of the Rio Grande, and
each was as good as the last.
Truth be told, there isn't much
to Hatch beyond the Chile
Festival, reflecting the town's
role as a service center for the
farms that make the Rio Grande
an improbably verdant ribbon of
life meandering through the
northern Chihuahuan Desert. But
there are rewards for the
patient and curious.
Las Cruces, my base, is about 45
minutes south of Hatch along
Interstate 25 or about an hour
following New Mexico 185, the
preferred route. Where the
freeway keeps an aloof distance
east of the river, 185 follows
the Rio Grande in an intimate
tango, dancing cheek to cheek
for a few miles before twirling
apart, only to come back
together for a kiss. The land
shifts from green farmland in
the flatlands to narrow passes
through hills eroded down to the
rock, as though the Earth's
bones were showing.
Midway between Hatch and Las
Cruces lies Ft. Selden, a former
home to the famous Buffalo
Soldiers. The fort has crumbled
to ruins, but a state-run
information center has displays
on life at the fort and its role
in protecting settlers from
Apache raiding parties as the
U.S. government wrestled the
West into submission in the
decades after the Civil War.
The mountains and La Mesilla
IN Las Cruces, West Picacho
Avenue holds a strip of antiques
shops, including the Glen, a
vintage clothing and costume
store, a far-removed slice of
Manhattan's campy East Village.
But most of Las Cruces has been
colonized by chain restaurants
and local services that define
so much of American
architecture. The "anywhere"
feel of the city contrasts
sharply with two nearby gems:
the Organ Mountains rising to
the east and the old Mexican
trading post of La Mesilla.
First, the mountains. There are
two ways to get there. The
western access is by way of an
eponymous road that leads to the
Dripping Springs Natural Area
(named for intermittent
waterfalls). A $3 fee buys
access to six miles of trails
that in this hypersensitive
environment climb through three
ecological zones in several
hundred feet.
The walking is relatively easy
and the discoveries a delight,
especially for kids. In an hour
of poking around, I saw a set of
high-flying hawks, Anna's
hummingbirds, painted
grasshoppers (they look like
flying jewelry), bright blue
tarantula hawk wasps and dozens
of lizards.
The eastern access lies off U.S.
70 after it cuts through the San
Agustνn Pass. The ambitious can
take an arduous hike up and
through the wall of mountains. I
settled for the view of a
startlingly surreal meadow of
flowering yuccas at the desert's
edge.
La Mesilla, although only a
short drive away, is a world
removed. The original town
square is surrounded by
refurbished adobe buildings,
including the courthouse where
gunslinger Billy the Kid was
convicted of murder in 1881 and
sentenced to hang. (Moved to
another city to await his fate,
he escaped and was later gunned
down by Sheriff Pat Garrett in
Fort Sumner, N.M.) Most of the
buildings, including the
courthouse, are now shops and
restaurants.
La Posta is a classic Mexican
family cafe, well worth the
20-minute wait for a plate of
chicken enchiladas (with green
sauce, naturally). Nearby is El
Patio Cantina, an unpretentious
neighborhood watering hole with
live bands on weekends. For
Latin dancing try El Palacio, a
sprawling club with dueling
mariachi bands in the front and
a Latin music band in the back.
I stayed at Meson de Mesilla, a
pleasantly understated boutique
hotel. For the last night, I
headed south to El Paso, again
bypassing the freeway for local
country roads, letting the Rio
Grande be my guide. After poking
around the downtown bazaar near
the pedestrian bridge to Ciudad
Juαrez, Mexico, I took in a
seasonal treat minor league
baseball.
El Paso Diablos, an independent
team several rungs below the
majors, play in the open Cohen
Stadium overlooking the Texas
countryside. A $7 ticket got me
a front-row seat behind the
plate. The lure of minor league
baseball in an unfamiliar town,
with unfamiliar players, is that
you watch the game for what it
is, a drama with its own
traditions that unfolds at its
own pace.
A muggy monsoonal flow had
triggered a thunderstorm less
than an hour before game time,
and as I took my seat the sky
turned purplish, the sun
filtered by rain sheets off to
the west. A local opera singer
sang the national anthem. Then,
two teams of young men played
out their dreams and, for a
couple of hours, slowed the pace
of life on a sultry summer
night.
The fest and all the rest
GETTING THERE:
El Paso, Texas, is the
closest airport to Hatch. From
LAX, Southwest flies nonstop;
America West, Delta, United,
Continental and Frontier have
connecting service (change of
plane). Restricted round-trip
fares begin at $224.
WHERE TO STAY:
Hotels: The one motel in
Hatch is usually booked during
the Hatch Chile Festival. The
best bet is to stay in Las
Cruces, 45 miles south, which
has an array of chain motels and
local options. The Hilton, 705
S. Telshor Blvd., (505)
522-4300,
http://www.hilton.com , is
convenient to restaurants and
Interstate 25. Doubles $70-$129.
The Meson de Mesilla, 1803
Avenida de Mesilla, Las Cruces,
(505) 525-9212,
http://www.mesondemesilla.com
, is a relaxing 15-room boutique
hotel near the old adobe town.
Doubles $65-$140.
WHERE TO EAT:
The restaurant at Meson
de Mesilla (above) focuses on
gourmet tastes and budgets.
Entrees start at $20. In Hatch,
the chile is the reason to go.
The portions, prices ($5-$10)
and flavors were just right at
El Mexicano Cafι, 360 Hall St.
In Las Cruces; Dick's Cafι, 2305
S. Valley Drive, (505) 524-1360;
and Chilitos Restaurant, 3850
Foothills Road, (505) 532-0141.
TO LEARN MORE:
The Hatch Chile Festival
is set for Sept. 3 and 4.
Information: (505) 267-5050,
http://www.hatchchilefest.com.
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Grupo Jon Garrido
Global Economic
Development Services
Phoenix, Arizona,
USA
Jon@JonGarrido.com
602.244.1000 |
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