Monthly Archives: February 2012

The Mexican Riviera—Ixtapa and Puerto Vallarta


On Monday we visited pre-drug war Acapulco aboard the Norwegian Star back in December of 2006.  Today we move on to Ixtapa and Puerto Vallarta.  These areas are much safer than our last destination, and I still feel perfectly safe strolling around even at night.

Zihuatanejo is a quaint little village situated right next door to the Ixtapa.  Together they are often referred to as Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo, but I prefer to separate the two as they represent entirely different cultures—the sleepy little fishing village versus the more recent mega-resort.  As you can see from the pictures below, I trend toward the traditional over the contemporary when it comes to Mexico.

The same applies for Puerto Vallarta.  A mega-resort area has sprung up (or sprawled out, depending on your point of view) to the north of the old city center.  Skip that area and head on into town.  Enjoy the statuary.  Chow down on fresh seafood from a second-floor restaurant overlooking the streets below.  Sip a cold one at one of the many colorful bars vying for your business.

Whatever you choose to do, don’t miss the Parish Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe.  It’s a photographic gem.  Indeed, this is a great subject upon which to try your hand at black and white photography.  But take your pictures in color and post-process for filtered black and white.  You’ll get much better results that way.

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The Mexican Riviera—Acapulco


Remember back when travel in Mexico was both fun and safe?  Yeah . . . neither do I.  Thanks a lot, War On Drugs.  Didn’t we try this “Prohibition” thing back in the 1920s?

On my January 25, 2012, blog I showed you what a cruise ship looks like without a 230-foot (70-meter) gash down the side with a big boulder protruding from it.  That blog was about NCL’s Norwegian Star, a really great ship.  The photographs in that blog were taken on a cruise Ursula and I took to the Mexican Riviera back in December of 2006.

All this week I’ll be showing photos taken during that excursion.  Today’s shots are of Acapulco.  Acapulco was the place to go for the Hollywood elite back in the 1950s and ’60s.  Elvis Presley even filmed a movie there back in 1963—Fun in Acapulco.  And, of course, that film had our hero joining the famous La Quebrada Cliff Divers.

Today, Acapulco is a bit more famous for gunfights, kidnappings, and headless bodies being dumped near shopping centers.

Gee, what a difference a little over five years make:

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A Super Dip for the Super Bowl


I first printed this recipe about one week too late for last year’s Super Bowl, but this year it’ll be right on time to absolutely WOW your guests.   In addition to the suggested uses below (besides as a chip dip), I’ve since taken to using it also as a pizza sauce and in macaroni and cheese.

So, reprinted from last year, here is my soon to be world famous Jalapeño Pesto Dip:

The great things about this recipe are:

  • It’s healthy as all get out.
  • It’s so tasty you’ll completely forget how healthy it is.
  • It’s not as spicy hot as it sounds (although it’s definitely not for the timid of tongue, either).
  • It goes great with anything from tortilla chips to corn chips to potato chips to even pretzels.
  • It’s so simple to make even a husband can do it.
  • The leftover jalapeño pesto is great on a whole variety of dishes ranging from omelets to burgers (use as a topping)  and even mixed with ground beef for tacos or chili.  By all means use your imagination with the leftover pesto, because you’ll probably think up dozens of uses for it.

Ingredients:

  • 2 pounds fresh whole  jalapeño peppers
  • 2 tsp. ground cumin
  • 1 tsp. granulated or fresh crushed garlic
  • 1 tsp. sea salt
  • ⅓ cup good extra virgin olive oil or other healthy monounsaturated oil

Step 1. Bring to boil just enough water to immerse the jalapeños.  Once the water is boiling, add the jalapeños and bring the water back to boiling.  Gently boil the jalapeños, stirring occasionally, for fifteen minutes.  Drain the jalapeños and set aside until they are cool enough to handle.

Step 2. Slice the jalapeños in half lengthwise and remove the stems.  Now, this next procedure is where you control the heat to some extent.  On most of the jalapeños, remove the seeds and the ribs to which those seeds are attached.  Keep the seeds and ribs on approximately one-third of the jalapeños, choosing in particular those jalapeños with very white, healthy-looking seeds and discarding those seeds that are dingy or brown in color.  Increasing the number of seeds and ribs retained will increase the heat; decreasing that number will help to tame it.

Step 3. Place the jalapeños, cumin, garlic, and salt into a food processor.  While pulsing, slowly drizzle in the olive oil.  Do no overdo the processing or you’ll destroy those beautiful white seeds and lose texture, but you do want a fairly smooth consistency.

Serve with either warm or cold with your favorite chips. Warm is particularly interesting, especially if you contrast that with a well-refrigerated California onion dip (one envelope of Lipton’s Onion Soup Mix combined with one pint of reduced-fat sour cream).  Serve these two dips side-by-side and watch eager fans alternate between the two of them.

And since this is listed under Wine & Food the next question would have to be, what kind of wine would you serve with this?  Well, first of all, this is definitely an accompaniment to beer, especially a good, fairly strong ale.  But if you would like wine with this, it’ll have to be one that helps tame the fire.  That suggests a semisweet white.  Think:  Johannisberg or German Rieslings, Chenin Blanc, or Gewürztraminer.  The cooler white wine serving temperatures supply immediate relief and the sweetness helps neutralize the capsaicin (the compound that gives peppers their “heat”) in the long term.

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