According to our favorite Spanish Dictionary, the Real Academia de EspaƱola, a "mirador" is a terrace or gallery often covered with blinds or shutters from which there is a noteworthy view. We appreciate the sentiment, but we're not seeing it in this picture.I don't complain anymore, though, ever since I found a few places in Staten Island that provide scorchingly spicy, fresh Mexican food for Mexicans, stomach-linings be damned. By far the closest and most convivial is Restaurante El Mirador, where the patient, sweet-faced waitress only pretends to speak English until you stop speaking Spanish. There you'll get everything you can't find at the places I mentioned above, like tacos de lengua (tongue tacos) with lime and diced raw onions (no crispy shells here, nobody in Mexico eats those), fresh tortas (sandwiches) just like the ones you get off the street in dusty Baja towns like Guerrero Negro, and most entrees come with a container of steaming dishtowels wrapped around hot corn tortillas -- a presentation which I guarantee is hard to find north of the border. The clean kitchen is open for all to see, a jukebox full of latin accordian pop songs occasionally comes to life on its own, and the lastest Univision telenovela is always blaring on the television mounted above the front door.
Freshly fried chips (don't call them tortillas, they're simply "los chips") and spicy pureed pico de gallo make their way to the table in never-ending supply, and a bottle of beer comes with a little dish containing about 15 pieces of lime. In addition to the aforementioned tacos and tortas, the menu has other typical favorites such as green or brown mole (last time I had the deliciously tart and piquant roast pork in green mole, my mouth burned for hours afterwards), enchiladas, and an inoccuous traditional chicken dish (pollo mexicano) made with, among other things, diced jalapeno peppers. A small array of Mexican and American breakfasts are on the menu as well, and we'd bet the cafe con leche is probably very good.
Not your mother's beef soup: My Caldo de res flanked by CvB's enchiladasDon't go expecting anything approximating a mainstream presentation, though, this restaurant is not for the faint of heart. Based on the criteria by which you can judge the authenticity of all ethnic restaurants -- the proportion of the clientele that belongs to the relevant ethnic group -- this place is 100% authentic (well, 90% when we're eating there). What's more, it's also friendly and convenient, and the food is delicious.
Editor's Update 5/11/06: As of their most recent NYC Dept. of Health inspection, El Mirador received a perfect score of no health code violations. Congratulations amigos! Lest you think that's an easy feat, check out violation listings for some NYC favorites:
The Metropolitan Musem of Art Cafe (35)
Pastis (20)
Nobu (25)
Union Square Cafe (13)
Yummy!
Unfortunately, the owner Victor Pavia, sold the Corson Ave. location this summer. However, you can still find his delicious squash blossom quesadillas, cucumber agua fresca and everything else at the larger "El Mirador" location--226 Port Richmond Ave. near the corner of Castleton Ave. Victor is somewhat of a rennaisance man--he sings in the restaurant on the weekends, and maybe most interestly he is also a farmer. He rents about 25 acres of land in Hazlet, NJ where he grows a lot of the chiles, tomatillos and other vegetables used in the restaurant. He also sells at Greenmarket farmers' markets in Brooklyn and Manhattan.
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