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The Dudes of Food

Have you been searching for a little more food-inspired sass in your virtual life? Some cyber eye candy for the brain and gut? Well, the Dudes of Food, an ethnic dining blog that tackles identity and flavor on the cheap, has you covered. As Dudes of Food, proponents of the FSFW (full stomach full wallet), we explore the hard-to-find international restaurants and try to make sense of what’s on our plate.

2

The Countryman

El Paisa
598 Dexter Street
Central Falls, RI 02863-2604


"Goool" yelled the announcer. Eyes watched, but hearts were uninterested. Nothing could break the men’s concentration. Not the soccer match and definitely not the Patriots game on the adjacent TV. The minute hand met its counterpart on the old style clock. Anxiety rose. It was noon: time for the Sunday telenovela. Almost mechanically, their heads turned to find out if Maria would have the audacity to kiss Juan Carlos after making love to his twin brother. 

We had hit the jackpot. Bumping Latin music and speeding Spanish conversations set the ambiance for the perfect “authentic” Colombian meal. A whopping 4.5 miles away from Brown’s campus stood El Paisa. We were greeted with a kind “?Hola, como están?” The waitress showed us to our seats without a word of English even crossing her mind.  Finally, a place in which we were treated like the pueblo.

We started our meal with some milk-based drinks, flavors ranging from tamarind to pineapple to the classic horchata (rice milk). We know, you’re thinking that horchata is more common in places like Mexico and Ecuador than in Colombia. You aren’t? Well we are!

Next came the appetizers. Empanadas, tostadas, arepas. The holy trinity. Empanadas are fried dough fritters filled with meat or vegetables and potatoes. Tostadas are the deep fried brother of the tortilla, topped with anything and everything delicious. Arepas are somewhere in between corn bread and pancakes.

And so began a feast that might make us Dudes seem gluttonous. Plates at El Paisa easily feed two heads (and cost between 6 and 12 dollars, A good ol’ FSFW). The six of us started with four platters of steak. Some flank, some sirloin, but all thinner cuts. Next came a whole chicken atop mountains of rice, beans, lettuce, pickled onions and radishes, more rice, and more beans. The sixth platter boasted a large tongue.
We left the restaurant full to the brim and had plenty to take home. Yet, something felt off.   Though El Paisa was Colombianish, it reminded us too much of Venezuelan, Mexican, and Guatemalan restaurants in Atlanta and Providence.
Sir Merriam and Master Weber define “Latino” as: a person of Latin-American origin living in the United States.
We pondered this definition of “ Latino, “ a word unique to the North American English language. Latinos only exist outside of Latin America. The Latino identity was created because Latin American immigrants share cultural similarities. Among those are language and, of course, food. And indeed those similarities may unify Latin American immigrants and their descendants under the label Latino.

The Dudes of Food interpretation of “Latino”:
Parts of Latin America eat burritos with rice, beans, cheese and meat. Other parts eat it with only meat, cilantro, and onions. In the Land of the Free, something was created that both groups could call home: a burrito with all of those ingredients.
Simple, clear, concise, delicious. Call Webster, because we just defined cultural hegemony through a burrito.

Perhaps our Colombian hotspot is in fact Latino, and perhaps this categorization isn't negative.  We were served plates of salad, rice, and beans with a piece of grilled meat and an arepa on the side. The arepa is a traditional Colombian and Venezuelan side, but the brown refried beans more closely resembled those of northern Mexico. If we had not known better, we would have thought we were eating a Mexican or Venezuelan lunch plate.

Our meal illustrates that the Latino identity at times overpowers any single nationality. Did hegemonic United States culture push people into becoming Latinos, or did solidarity empower them?  Perhaps a bit of both.  

Latinos want a taste of home. A taste of the United States. A taste of something that is shared by many Latin American cultures. They want a plate of rice, beans, meat, and plantains. The emergence of the “proud Latino,” champion of an horchata and chili-cheese nachos with “guac,” is a phenomenon that we are experiencing first hand. Observe it. Take it in. Eat it.

Gasps surround us! Not because of our thought provoking hypotheses, but because Maria did in fact kiss Juan Carlos.

The Dudes of Food

2 comments:

  1. UnknownFebruary 8, 2012 at 6:20 AM

    Very Nice Blog !
    I Like This Very Much.
    Methods of Modern Farming
    Food of cow

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  2. LearningthroughFoodFebruary 13, 2012 at 8:06 PM

    I just read the article about your blog in the 'Daily Herald' and subsequently found it. As a fellow foodie and blogger, I just wanted to congratulate you on a great concept. The food and culture movement is certainly a growing one, and it's wonderful to know there are others out there who recognize it and can translate it into words! www.ndihluthi.blogspot.com

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Have you been searching for a little more food-inspired sass in your virtual life? Some cyber eye candy for the brain and gut? Well, the Dudes of Food, an ethnic dining blog that tackles identity and flavor on the cheap, has finally reached Madrid and Mexico City. As Dudes of Food, proponents of the FSFW (full stomach full wallet), we explore the hard-to-find international restaurants and try to make sense of what’s on our plate.

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FSFW (Full Stomach Full Wallet)- An inexpensive and filling meal

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