Bless Us, Oh Lard

Damn fajitas and health-conscious eaters. They're killing traditional Tex-Mex.

The soft cheese taco I got with the "Special Mexican Dinner" at El Fenix on McKinney Avenue in downtown Dallas a couple of months ago mystified me. It was stuffed with cheddar and onions like a cheese enchilada, but the tortilla was steamed instead of fried and covered with chile con queso instead of chili gravy. It tasted sort of like a soggy Tex-Mex grilled cheese sandwich. It's long been a signature item at El Fenix—but why?

Susan Martinez, the former marketing manager of El Fenix, once explained to me over lunch that Dallasites like their salsa mild and their enchiladas bland. At a former El Fenix location in Houston, they had to put processed cheese inside the taco, she said. Houstonians like Velveeta better than cheddar.

But while the fare at El Fenix is lackluster, the Dallas chain has done a masterful job of promoting its long history. The iconic downtown El Fenix location is a Tex-Mex masterpiece. The décor is dominated by elaborate trompe-l'oeil murals that cover two entire walls. The swaying palms and blue seas of the painting transport you to a villa on the tropical coast of Mexico somewhere. Elsewhere, there are lots of old black-and-white photos of the Martinez family and their early restaurants.

Smartly dressed in a dark suit, Albert Martinez, the 84-year-old son of El Fenix's founder, wandered by my table asking if everything was all right. Albert and his siblings built the El Fenix chain and made it the place to see and be seen in the 1960s. Dandy Don Meredith and Cowboys football players loved the place. So did golfing great Lee Trevino.

Founded in 1918 by Mexican immigrant Miguel "Mike" Martinez, the El Fenix chain was family-run for five generations—until a couple of months ago. Turns out I visited the restaurant just in time. Recently El Fenix was sold to a corporation named the Firebird Restaurant Group formed by real estate executive Mike Karns, its chief executive. Firebird President Wyatt Hurt was formerly operations vice president at CiCi's Pizza.

Firebird promised not to change anything at El Fenix—and immediately announced that the new management group was planning to expand across the metroplex and eventually statewide.

The group's short-term success will depend on its ability to hang on to El Fenix's regulars. Longtime patrons of Tex-Mex restaurants don't like change. When the 30-year-old Los Tios chain in Houston was sold a few years ago, the new owner, Gary Adair, figured it was time to replace the powdered cheese in the chile con queso with real cheese. Loyal patrons were furious about the change in flavor. Adair was accosted by irate regulars—including his mother.

"She grabbed me by my lapels and said, 'Don't you change a single thing,'" Adair says. "It's amazing how emotional people get about Tex-Mex."

I started counting the old-time Tex-Mex institutions around the state that are still operating. Karam's Mexican Dining Room in San Antonio closed not long ago—the building is scheduled for demolition. Felix Mexican Restaurant in Houston just closed after 60 years in business.

The list is getting shorter every year. Is old-fashioned Tex-Mex in trouble? To find out, I went on a tour of some of the state's oldest temples of Tex-Mex. What I found was that some are holding steady, some are in decline and some are bringing back the honest old-fashioned Tex-Mex dishes that haven't been seen since the 1950s.

————

The oldest Tex-Mex chain in Houston is Molina's, which was founded in 1941. I had never been terribly impressed by the place—until I had lunch with Raul Molina Jr., the son of Molina's founder, several years ago. When the waiter came by, Raul Jr. ordered a bowl of chili.

"Chili?" I queried him, flipping the menu back and forth. "I don't see chili on this menu." No, it wasn't on the menu, Molina agreed. But Molina's made great chili con carne, he said. You could always get a bowl of chili at Molina's, whether it was on the menu or not.

In the beginning, the entire Molina family lived in the upper floor above their first restaurant on West Gray Street. Mom did the cooking, Dad was the waiter, and the kids bused tables and washed dishes. In those days, what they really did was short-order cooking with lots of chili con carne. There was chili and scrambled eggs, chili over spaghetti, chili and crackers, chili and tamales, and chili with enchiladas—chili was at the heart of everything.

Later I went back to the oldest remaining Molina's location on Westheimer Road in Houston and looked for cheese enchiladas with chili con carne. I couldn't find the dish until a waiter pointed it out on a separate part of the menu under the name, "enchiladas de Tejas." Three enchiladas were smothered with chili and topped with a pool of yellow cheddar. I poured a small dish of chopped raw onions over the top. It was the best meal I have ever eaten at Molina's.

Just like everybody else, I too often make the mistake of sitting down in an old-fashioned Tex-Mex joint and ordering the mole poblano or grilled meats while ignoring the vintage dishes that they do brilliantly. Never order a steak at the pancake house—or at a Tex-Mex restaurant.

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  • James Rockford 07/12/2010 12:25:00 AM

    This article is excellent, and I agree on the lard rec. but I must disagree on the "velveeta" or Easy-Melt cheese rec. for any enchiladas. That is simply WRONG. The best cheese for Tex-Mex chili con carne enchiladas is cheddar and no others some close. This is why the best cheese enchiladas in TX can be found in Ft. Worth (The Original (which I had TODAY for breakfast), Caro's and El Fenix) and San Antonio (Karams and Mexican Manhatten). Nearly all the Austin Tex-Mex places (including Matts and El Patio) use that easy-melt velveeta crap. And the only Tex-Mex place worth my time in Dallas is the original El Fenix downtown. BONE APPETITE!!

  • Biffula 07/25/2008 7:51:00 PM

    Just another reason why Big D sucks. Dont worry softies, you can still get plenty of real tex-mex at plenty of restaurants all over Fort Worth. So all you $30,000 millionaires drive your leased Lexus' over to Cowtown, we'll be happy to take your credit cards, pack some mexican food down your gullet, pat you on your hiney and send you back east.

  • extramsg 07/10/2008 8:47:00 PM

    No lard, huh? Real, so do you suppose all those alleged Mexicanos putting manteca in their shopping carts are Guatemalans? The next time I go to a mom-and-pop Mexican restaurant or taqueria, I'll make sure I tell them if they were really Mexican, they'd make their carnitas in olive oil to avoid the neo-colonial globalist-capitalist influences on their cuisine. 8-|

  • Real 07/10/2008 1:26:00 AM

    Sorry, you lost me on "lard". I am real "Tex-Mex", and lard is neither a staple or necessity. Such real food is not in any of the large chain restaurants, whether begun by a Mexican or not. The best are in mom and pop places. Don't be so racist by implying that Latino homecooking is always unhealthy. Our homecooking is healthy no less that Anglo food. Gringo American Capitalism has taken much away from the natural healthy cooking in which I grew up that forces people to resort to cheapened marketed crap from big monopolistic global American companies.

  • robb walsh 07/08/2008 9:05:00 PM

    Gosh Matt from NYC, 6 whole pages! Maybe the history of Texas cuisine means something to us? Check out: The Tex-Mex Cookbook 267 pages on cheap greasy tacos and enchiladas. Now in its eight printing. http://www.robbwalsh.com/01cookbooks/5texmex.shtml

  • robb walsh 07/08/2008 9:05:00 PM

    Gosh Matt from NYC, 6 whole pages! Maybe the history of Texas cuisine means something to us? Check out: The Tex-Mex Cookbook 267 pages on cheap greasy tacos and enchiladas. Now in its eight printing. http://www.robbwalsh.com/01cookbooks/5texmex.shtml

  • Matt 07/08/2008 4:31:00 PM

    Jeez, 6 pages (5 if you count the repeated paragraphs) on cheap and greasy tamales and enchiladas. Whatever happened to your editor?

  • Gavin_The Librarian 07/07/2008 2:41:00 PM

    Man, this article hit way to close to home. I worked for the Original Mexican Restaurant in Galveston back in the day and I never tried the cheese enchiladas covered in chile con carne. Your article inspired me to be more bold. This weekend, my wife and I went to Plaza de Familia (in Sachse) and I sampled this dish here. It was unlike any tex-mex I have had before. On my next trip I will try the tamales in chile con carne. The one benefit to eating this dish, you will be satisfied for a minimum of eight hours, no hunger pangs, no food cravings, nada.

  • extramsg 07/07/2008 7:39:00 AM

    Hey, Robb, I'm all for lard. I'm quite the tub of it, myself. ;-) But even you admit that Velveeta was pre-dated by a mornay. The problem is that Velveeta is made by Kraft and only Kraft. It's crap. With a mornay you can at least use whatever wonderful cheese you want, whether it be a queso oaxaca, aged white cheddar, or manchego. So quit letting your nostalgia get in the way of good taste. :P Love the article, though. I really wish there was more effort like yours to give a history of Mexican food in America. It's a wonderful cuisine, especially when people use those truly old-fashioned flavors of fresh-made tortillas, chili and salsas made from scratch, and lard, lard, lard.

  • isable 07/07/2008 3:58:00 AM

    This older man seems hot. My brother told me he saw his profile and photos at an age gap dating site called blackgaymingle.com Is he looking for younger women there? Maybe you should take a look...

  • cactusflinthead 07/04/2008 6:54:00 PM

    I am becoming torn between going to little bitty taquerias where I am the only gringo in the place and going to my favored Tex-Mex places. I don't know if it was the cuisine snobs who removed lard from the recipes or the doctors, but they can both take a hike for all I care.

  • cactusflinthead 07/04/2008 6:52:00 PM

    I am becoming torn between going to little bitty taquerias where I am the only gringo in the place and going to my favored Tex-Mex places. I don't know if it was the cuisine snobs who removed lard from the recipes or the doctors, but they can both take a hike for all I care.

  • Jim 07/03/2008 10:08:00 PM

    Maybe you should write about how nobody in the State of Texas outside Bexar county has any idea what the hell a puff taco is. Some of the things Ive seen called a puff taco here in Dallas might get you hung back in San Antonio. I strongly recommend a visit the the Jacala on West Ave in San Antonio to learn.

  • Matt 07/03/2008 7:49:00 PM

    El Fenix is STILL the shit.

  • Scott 07/03/2008 4:22:00 PM

    Excellent article.

  • Mike 07/03/2008 2:55:00 PM

    Not even an honorable mention of Joe T Garcia's in Fort Worth? It's been in business in the same location since 1935.

  • Robin 07/03/2008 12:20:00 PM

    It is said that everyone is bi to some extent. Not sure about this. But I also heard about the same from some professional sites. Maybe it depends on how to define it. If you can appreciate the beauty in both men and women, and find yourself attracted to the person regardless of their gender, then you are bi. Many hot and sexy bi singles & couples on ** BiLoves dotcom ** are looking to explore their bisexuality, coming out or enjoying their lives as bi here. If you don't know whether You Are Gay, Lesbian Or Bisexual,you may check http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDjtVS9iaDA. The psychotherapist Dominic Davies will tell you the answer.

  • jerry 07/03/2008 6:26:00 AM

    Casa Manana in Wichita Falls is worth the drive....get the red tacos

  • Laughing! 07/03/2008 2:23:00 AM

    Velveeta as mexican food cheese!?! What friggin ever. Forget Tex Mex, gringo. Make a Mexican friend and have him tell you where the REAL mexican food is... preferably in a place you have to order using your Velveeta-clouded Spanish.

 

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