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El Bajío (restaurant)

El Bajío is a group of eighteen restaurants in Mexico City which are run by Carmen Ramírez Degollado, noted for their colorful decoration and traditional cuisine from central Mexico which has received awards and praise from notable food experts. The restaurant business began in 1972 when Carmen's husband Raúl Ramírez Degollado bought a restaurant selling carnitas in the northwestern borough of Azcapotzalco. Four years later, Raúl died and Carmen took over the business, expanding the menu and adding waiters. The restaurant was so successful that she was able to send her five children to private university. In 2006, El Bajío opened a second location in the center of the city and since then has grown to eighteen locations which serve about 120,000 diners a month. Carmen has become a notable chef in her own right, giving classes and demonstrations in Mexico and abroad as well as writing about 20 books.

El Bajío
Main dining room at Azcapotzalco
Restaurant information
Established1972; 52 years ago (1972)
Owner(s)Carmen Ramírez Degollado
Food typeTraditional Mexican
CityMexico City
CountryMexico
Other informationEighteen locations in Mexico City
Websitecarnitaselbajio.com.mx

Description edit

 
Ceviche verde, a specialty of the restaurant

El Bajío consists of eighteen restaurants in Mexico City which are dedicated to preserving traditional Mexican cooking, with no aims of reinventing the food or making it haute cuisine.[1][2] The dishes are from the center of the country, principally from the states of Veracruz, Puebla, Michoacán and Oaxaca. The signature dish is carnitas. Many of the cooks who prepare this dish are sons of those who worked at the first restaurant opened in 1972. Most of the other cooks and kitchen help have their specialties as well.[3] These include a morning menu of Veracruz specialties such as gorditas with brown sugar and anise seed, Ramírez Degollado and Veracruz style tamales and atole with fresh fruit along with various egg dishes.[1][3][4] Later in the day specialties include ceviche verde, various mole sauces especially mole de olla and Xico style, fish Veracruz style and well as daily specials.[1] The restaurant's food has been praised by Mexican cookbook author Diana Kennedy and Ferran Adrià, chef of the El Bulli in Spain who called it the best Mexican restaurant he has ever eaten at.[1][3] Much of the restaurant's publicity is word-of-mouth.[1][4]

The restaurant's locations are in Azcapotzalco, Parque Delta, Polanco, Reforma 222, Parque Lindavista, Avenida Insurgentes, Santa Fe, Acoxpa, Paseo Interlomas, Patio Universidad, Parque Toreo, Oasis Coyoacan, Miyana, Parque Via Vallejo, Mundo E, Portal San Angel, Artz Pedregal and Palmas, all in Mexico City.[5][6] The colorful décor of each restaurant is based on fine examples of Mexican handcrafts and folk art of which the owner and head chef, Carmen Hernandez Oropez, is an avid collector.[1][3] In addition, the restaurants are decorated for Mexico's main holidays such as the feast of the Virgin of Guadalupe, Christmas, Mexican Independence Day and Day of the Dead .[1] The eighteen locations serve at least 200,000 diners each month, employing about 1,500 workers.[7] As of 2007, sales totaled 1.5 million pesos per month.[8] In addition the Azcapotzalco location offers banquet service. However, the main struggle for the business is to find and train suitable cooks and other help.[4]

History edit

 
Bar area at the Azcapotzalco location

The origin of the restaurant was with Raúl Ramírez Degollado who bought a carnitas restaurant in Azcapotzalco after retiring from the pharmaceutical industry, to make carnitas as he knew in his hometown of Cotija, Michoacán .[1][8] His wife Carmen, was initially opposed to the industrial location far from their home in San Ángel .[8] However, Raul began with an initial investment of 200,000 pesos, partnering with friend Alfonso Hurtado Morellón.[1][8] Four years later, Raul died of cancer. Carmen took over the restaurant, with Alfonso selling his share to her.[3][9] She varied the menu, adding traditional dishes from her home state of Veracruz, as well as from Michoacán, Oaxaca and Puebla. She also hired waiters with an initial staff of about fifteen.[8][10]

The restaurant grew and its success allowed her to send her children to the best private universities in Mexico.[8] In 2006, a second restaurant under the same name was opened in Parque Delta in the Benito Juárez borough, followed by Polanco, Lindavista, Reforma 222 and Tezontle in 2006 and 2007. The Santa Fe location was opened in 2009, Acoxpa in 2010 and Insurgentes in 2011.[1][9] The main restaurant is still the first one in Azcapotzalco on Cuitlahuac 2709.[10]

The restaurant business celebrated its fortieth anniversary in 2012.[10] The restaurant has been visited by some of the best chefs in the world and has received various awards.[8] Awards include The American Academy of Hospitality Services Five Star Diamond Award in 1998, La Llave Empresarial 2006 award, the CANIRAC restaurant business award in 2009[1] and Chilango magazine named it one of five "legendary" restaurants of Mexico City.[11] It is also a regular participant at the Festival Annual del Centro Histórico de la Ciudad de México (Annual Festival of the Historic Center of Mexico City) .[1]

Carmen Ramírez Degollado edit

 
Various small dishes from Doña Carmen's home area in Veracruz

The head of El Bajío and the one who made it successful is Carmen "Titita" Ramírez Degollado, the widow of founder Raúl Ramirez Degollado.[8] Carmen was born in Xalapa, Veracruz in 1940 and raised traditionally to be a homemaker and learned to cook.[3][8][12] Carmen did not have aspirations to be a restaurateur. However, she states that one of her husband's friends from France, who stated that he wanted nothing more than to be invited to the house to taste the "sopa de fideo" (noodle soup) that Carmen made. This made Carman appreciate that she could share this aspect of Mexican culture with the world.[1][13] She was widowed young.[6] After her husband died, she took over the restaurant and the raising of the couple's five children, often balancing the restaurant's hours with the needs of her children.[1] Several of her children continue to work with her in the business. Her son Raul works in administration and Luz Maria runs the original restaurant.[6] Others have gone their own way such as Maria Teresa, who is a professional chef in Spain at the Hotel Majestic.[13]

Today, Carmen is recognized as an important chef, being head of El Bajío for over thirty years. She has traveled throughout Mexico and parts of the world to talk about and share traditional Mexican cooking.[1] She has participated in gastronomic conferences such as the San Sebastián Gastronómica.[10] She has demonstrated Mexican cooking on locations such as the James Beard Foundation in New York, the Ritz Hotel in Lisbon, the Mana Lani Bay Hotel in Honolulu, the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone in the Napa Valley, the Rio Hotel in Las Vegas the J.W. Marriott Hotel in Kuala Lumpur, The Ladies Scofier in Atlanta and the Hyatt Hotel in Seattle and has worked as a consultant to various restaurants in the United States and Europe. She has also taught classes in Mexican cooking at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley.[1] She has authored over twenty books on Mexican cooking in both Spanish and English.[3] In 2002, she published "Alquimias y Atmósferas del Sabor," a book with anecdotes from her life as well as recipes. This book won a Gourmand World Cookbook Award .[1][8] It also prompted the Cuauhtemoc Moctezuma company and the Asociacion Mexicana de Restaurantes to acknowledged her contributions to Mexican cuisine in 2003.[14] The New York Times named her of the "matriarchs" of Mexican cooking along with Patricia Quintana of the Izote restaurant in Polanco.[3] She is a member of the International Association of Chefs in the United States.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r [History] (in Spanish). Mexico City: El Bajío restaurant. Archived from the original on May 30, 2012. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  2. ^ Rodolfo Gerschman (June 11, 1999). "Vinos/ Albarino en El Bajio" [Wines/Albarino in El Bajío]. Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 6.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Bittman, Mark (May 2, 2007). "The Matriarchs of Mexican Flavor". The New York Times. New York. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c Sergio Gonzalez Rodriguez (February 18, 2005). "Bajos Fondos / El Bajio del norte" [Low funds/El Bajío del norte]. Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 47.
  5. ^ "Surcursales" [History] (in Spanish). Mexico City: El Bajío restaurant. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  6. ^ a b c "El Bajío, prepara su 40 aniversario" [Titia culinary secrets of the nanny]. El Universal (in Spanish). Mexico City. July 26, 2012. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  7. ^ [Titia culinary secrets of the nanny]. La Razón (in Spanish). Mexico City. June 9, 2012. Archived from the original on June 19, 2012. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nancy Garcia (July 3, 2007). [Income with home cooked taste] (in Spanish). Mexico City: Soy Entrepreneur magazine. Archived from the original on June 20, 2012. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  9. ^ a b Angel Rivas (September 28, 2012). "Guarida de tradiciones" [Guardian of traditions]. Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 2.
  10. ^ a b c d Camacho, Mariana (October 29, 2012). "40 años de El Bajío Una historia sabrosa" [40 years of El Bajío A tasty history] (in Spanish). Mexico City: Chilango magazine. Retrieved January 24, 2012.
  11. ^ Miguel Rivera (July 17, 2012). "Cinco clásicos de la gastronomía capitalina Restaurantes de leyenda" [Five classics of the gastronomy of the capital- Restaurants of legend] (in Spanish). Mexico City: Chilango magazine. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  12. ^ . Mexico City: El Bajío. Archived from the original on July 2, 2013. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  13. ^ a b Yessica Gass; Marichuy Garduno (May 10, 1999). "Carmen Ramirez Degollado: Maternales inspiraciones" [Carmen Ramirez Degollado: Maternal inspirations]. Palabra (in Spanish). Saltillo. p. 8.
  14. ^ Marichuy Garduno (July 11, 2003). "Premian su aporte a la gastronomia" [Reward her contribution to gastronomy]. Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 4.

19°27′45.86″N 99°10′40.24″W / 19.4627389°N 99.1778444°W / 19.4627389; -99.1778444

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El Bajio is a group of eighteen restaurants in Mexico City which are run by Carmen Ramirez Degollado noted for their colorful decoration and traditional cuisine from central Mexico which has received awards and praise from notable food experts The restaurant business began in 1972 when Carmen s husband Raul Ramirez Degollado bought a restaurant selling carnitas in the northwestern borough of Azcapotzalco Four years later Raul died and Carmen took over the business expanding the menu and adding waiters The restaurant was so successful that she was able to send her five children to private university In 2006 El Bajio opened a second location in the center of the city and since then has grown to eighteen locations which serve about 120 000 diners a month Carmen has become a notable chef in her own right giving classes and demonstrations in Mexico and abroad as well as writing about 20 books El BajioMain dining room at AzcapotzalcoRestaurant informationEstablished1972 52 years ago 1972 Owner s Carmen Ramirez DegolladoFood typeTraditional MexicanCityMexico CityCountryMexicoOther informationEighteen locations in Mexico CityWebsitecarnitaselbajio com mx Contents 1 Description 2 History 3 Carmen Ramirez Degollado 4 ReferencesDescription edit nbsp Ceviche verde a specialty of the restaurant El Bajio consists of eighteen restaurants in Mexico City which are dedicated to preserving traditional Mexican cooking with no aims of reinventing the food or making it haute cuisine 1 2 The dishes are from the center of the country principally from the states of Veracruz Puebla Michoacan and Oaxaca The signature dish is carnitas Many of the cooks who prepare this dish are sons of those who worked at the first restaurant opened in 1972 Most of the other cooks and kitchen help have their specialties as well 3 These include a morning menu of Veracruz specialties such as gorditas with brown sugar and anise seed Ramirez Degollado and Veracruz style tamales and atole with fresh fruit along with various egg dishes 1 3 4 Later in the day specialties include ceviche verde various mole sauces especially mole de olla and Xico style fish Veracruz style and well as daily specials 1 The restaurant s food has been praised by Mexican cookbook author Diana Kennedy and Ferran Adria chef of the El Bulli in Spain who called it the best Mexican restaurant he has ever eaten at 1 3 Much of the restaurant s publicity is word of mouth 1 4 The restaurant s locations are in Azcapotzalco Parque Delta Polanco Reforma 222 Parque Lindavista Avenida Insurgentes Santa Fe Acoxpa Paseo Interlomas Patio Universidad Parque Toreo Oasis Coyoacan Miyana Parque Via Vallejo Mundo E Portal San Angel Artz Pedregal and Palmas all in Mexico City 5 6 The colorful decor of each restaurant is based on fine examples of Mexican handcrafts and folk art of which the owner and head chef Carmen Hernandez Oropez is an avid collector 1 3 In addition the restaurants are decorated for Mexico s main holidays such as the feast of the Virgin of Guadalupe Christmas Mexican Independence Day and Day of the Dead 1 The eighteen locations serve at least 200 000 diners each month employing about 1 500 workers 7 As of 2007 sales totaled 1 5 million pesos per month 8 In addition the Azcapotzalco location offers banquet service However the main struggle for the business is to find and train suitable cooks and other help 4 History edit nbsp Bar area at the Azcapotzalco location The origin of the restaurant was with Raul Ramirez Degollado who bought a carnitas restaurant in Azcapotzalco after retiring from the pharmaceutical industry to make carnitas as he knew in his hometown of Cotija Michoacan 1 8 His wife Carmen was initially opposed to the industrial location far from their home in San Angel 8 However Raul began with an initial investment of 200 000 pesos partnering with friend Alfonso Hurtado Morellon 1 8 Four years later Raul died of cancer Carmen took over the restaurant with Alfonso selling his share to her 3 9 She varied the menu adding traditional dishes from her home state of Veracruz as well as from Michoacan Oaxaca and Puebla She also hired waiters with an initial staff of about fifteen 8 10 The restaurant grew and its success allowed her to send her children to the best private universities in Mexico 8 In 2006 a second restaurant under the same name was opened in Parque Delta in the Benito Juarez borough followed by Polanco Lindavista Reforma 222 and Tezontle in 2006 and 2007 The Santa Fe location was opened in 2009 Acoxpa in 2010 and Insurgentes in 2011 1 9 The main restaurant is still the first one in Azcapotzalco on Cuitlahuac 2709 10 The restaurant business celebrated its fortieth anniversary in 2012 10 The restaurant has been visited by some of the best chefs in the world and has received various awards 8 Awards include The American Academy of Hospitality Services Five Star Diamond Award in 1998 La Llave Empresarial 2006 award the CANIRAC restaurant business award in 2009 1 and Chilango magazine named it one of five legendary restaurants of Mexico City 11 It is also a regular participant at the Festival Annual del Centro Historico de la Ciudad de Mexico Annual Festival of the Historic Center of Mexico City 1 Carmen Ramirez Degollado edit nbsp Various small dishes from Dona Carmen s home area in Veracruz The head of El Bajio and the one who made it successful is Carmen Titita Ramirez Degollado the widow of founder Raul Ramirez Degollado 8 Carmen was born in Xalapa Veracruz in 1940 and raised traditionally to be a homemaker and learned to cook 3 8 12 Carmen did not have aspirations to be a restaurateur However she states that one of her husband s friends from France who stated that he wanted nothing more than to be invited to the house to taste the sopa de fideo noodle soup that Carmen made This made Carman appreciate that she could share this aspect of Mexican culture with the world 1 13 She was widowed young 6 After her husband died she took over the restaurant and the raising of the couple s five children often balancing the restaurant s hours with the needs of her children 1 Several of her children continue to work with her in the business Her son Raul works in administration and Luz Maria runs the original restaurant 6 Others have gone their own way such as Maria Teresa who is a professional chef in Spain at the Hotel Majestic 13 Today Carmen is recognized as an important chef being head of El Bajio for over thirty years She has traveled throughout Mexico and parts of the world to talk about and share traditional Mexican cooking 1 She has participated in gastronomic conferences such as the San Sebastian Gastronomica 10 She has demonstrated Mexican cooking on locations such as the James Beard Foundation in New York the Ritz Hotel in Lisbon the Mana Lani Bay Hotel in Honolulu the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone in the Napa Valley the Rio Hotel in Las Vegas the J W Marriott Hotel in Kuala Lumpur The Ladies Scofier in Atlanta and the Hyatt Hotel in Seattle and has worked as a consultant to various restaurants in the United States and Europe She has also taught classes in Mexican cooking at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley 1 She has authored over twenty books on Mexican cooking in both Spanish and English 3 In 2002 she published Alquimias y Atmosferas del Sabor a book with anecdotes from her life as well as recipes This book won a Gourmand World Cookbook Award 1 8 It also prompted the Cuauhtemoc Moctezuma company and the Asociacion Mexicana de Restaurantes to acknowledged her contributions to Mexican cuisine in 2003 14 The New York Times named her of the matriarchs of Mexican cooking along with Patricia Quintana of the Izote restaurant in Polanco 3 She is a member of the International Association of Chefs in the United States 1 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Historia History in Spanish Mexico City El Bajio restaurant Archived from the original on May 30 2012 Retrieved January 24 2013 Rodolfo Gerschman June 11 1999 Vinos Albarino en El Bajio Wines Albarino in El Bajio Reforma in Spanish Mexico City p 6 a b c d e f g h Bittman Mark May 2 2007 The Matriarchs of Mexican Flavor The New York Times New York Retrieved January 24 2013 a b c Sergio Gonzalez Rodriguez February 18 2005 Bajos Fondos El Bajio del norte Low funds El Bajio del norte Reforma in Spanish Mexico City p 47 Surcursales History in Spanish Mexico City El Bajio restaurant Retrieved January 24 2013 a b c El Bajio prepara su 40 aniversario Titia culinary secrets of the nanny El Universal in Spanish Mexico City July 26 2012 Retrieved January 24 2013 Titita secretos culinarios de la nana Titia culinary secrets of the nanny La Razon in Spanish Mexico City June 9 2012 Archived from the original on June 19 2012 Retrieved January 24 2013 a b c d e f g h i j Nancy Garcia July 3 2007 Ingresos con sabor a hogar Income with home cooked taste in Spanish Mexico City Soy Entrepreneur magazine Archived from the original on June 20 2012 Retrieved January 24 2013 a b Angel Rivas September 28 2012 Guarida de tradiciones Guardian of traditions Reforma in Spanish Mexico City p 2 a b c d Camacho Mariana October 29 2012 40 anos de El Bajio Una historia sabrosa 40 years of El Bajio A tasty history in Spanish Mexico City Chilango magazine Retrieved January 24 2012 Miguel Rivera July 17 2012 Cinco clasicos de la gastronomia capitalina Restaurantes de leyenda Five classics of the gastronomy of the capital Restaurants of legend in Spanish Mexico City Chilango magazine Retrieved January 24 2013 CARMEN TITITA Mexico City El Bajio Archived from the original on July 2 2013 Retrieved January 24 2013 a b Yessica Gass Marichuy Garduno May 10 1999 Carmen Ramirez Degollado Maternales inspiraciones Carmen Ramirez Degollado Maternal inspirations Palabra in Spanish Saltillo p 8 Marichuy Garduno July 11 2003 Premian su aporte a la gastronomia Reward her contribution to gastronomy Reforma in Spanish Mexico City p 4 19 27 45 86 N 99 10 40 24 W 19 4627389 N 99 1778444 W 19 4627389 99 1778444 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title El Bajio restaurant amp oldid 1029120734, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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