Tag: chicken

  • Lost Articles: Herculean Chicken and Yum Yum Pocha

    Lost Articles: Herculean Chicken and Yum Yum Pocha

    Much like losing the Tucson Weekly as their food writer when Covid hit in 2020, I had a good backlog of articles ready to go but never saw the light of published day when I and other writers were all let go by a popular Tucson food based website in late 2023.

    Okay, by “good backlog” I meant two.

    Its always heartbreaking when I have to send that text/email/whatever to whomever I had in the can and report “Hey, yeah, I was just let go so they’re not going to run my story on you.”

    After spending a decent amount of time with each subject, usually a few hours before or after a busy service, chatting and taking photos, we create a bit of an immediate bond. Normally, when an article gets published and I see whoever I featured out in the wild again, there’s always that happy memory glint of how we came to know one another in the first place. That article I wrote.

    But then there’s the other, the one where we see each other again and I have to give a shrug and apology before putting my order in. Its only happened like a handful of times. No literally. Like five times.

    Here are the two that didn’t make it into that popular Tucson Food sItE.

    Here’s the thing, each one had an extensive interview on my old phone with a transcription of our conversation. Those interviews are long gone. So basically what I am going for here are just uploading photos from each one with a little blurb explaining who they are, what they serve, how they do it, etc, without any real actual context from our time together.

    Lets get into it.

    Alberta and Jake serving up some Thai chicken realness

    1) Hurculean Chicken

      When I hung out with chef and owner Alberta Chu, along with her husband Kyle manning the fryer, they were doing a pop up on the back patio of Hello Bicycle. It was a beautiful warm day and there was a good turn out for their Taiwanese inspired fried chicken.

      All I can say is that Alberta and Kyle set me up! They had me try their popcorn chicken, which got them started in the first place, serving folks in bars and certain events, fried chicken served over rice, a huge chicken cut let served in a paper bag, and this super dope chicken sandwich.

      Everything was delicious. Flavorful, spicy, cooked to perfection and above all crispy on the outside and tender on the in.

      Here’s a great article about them from This Is Tucson.

      Enjoy!

      Herculean’s fried chicken platter
      Huge, and amazing, fried chicken cutlet
      Gotta season that popcorn chicken proper
      Alberta Chu with a platter of yes please
      So much chicken, so little time

      2) Yum Yum Pocha

      As the former food truck guy for the aforementioned food site, my gig was to hunt down new mobile eateries or celebrate some classics. When I got word about a Korean food truck called Yum Yum Pocha that was serving ramyeon (Korean ramen) and rice bowls I had to get on that.

      I caught up with Yum Yum’s chef and owner Miyou Wallace in the parking lot of the Foothills Mall as she and her husband John were set up on the cusp of an artisan market.

      They had me try their three meat ramyeon, vegetable ramen, and something called mandoo, which is a fried or steamed dumpling filled with either kimchi, meat or veggies. Ramyeon is normally a bit spicier than the ramen you are usually used to. Which is what I prefer. So good. Miyou’s ramen was delicious as well; lots of soft noodles bathed in a deeply flavored broth with tons of fresh greens swimming on top.

      The mandoos were crazy tasty. Potstickers and eggrolls are one thing, and one of my favorite things, but after trying Yum Yum’s mandoos all I can say is ‘Yahoo!”

      Anyway, This Is Tucson did a piece on them so you can read that here.

      Cheers!

      Let the Yum Yum yumminess begin
      Veggie ramen, in repose
      Ramyeon doin’ it thing
      Have you caught mandoo mania yet?
      House made fish sauce…delish
      Hello Miyou, and thank you!
      Find it because you need it
      Three meats ramyeon had me three times doing a happy jig

      Words and Pictures

      Mark Whittaker

      yeahwritemark@gmail.com

    1. Copal Contemporary Mexican Cuisine

      Copal Contemporary Mexican Cuisine

      It sounds cliche but…expect the unexpected here

      When I heard that a new restaurant concept opened up in the old location where The Dutch resided in the Williams Courtyard Center at Broadway and Rosemont, and that the owners operate one of my favorite taquerias in South Tucson, my immediate giddiness could not be contained. Mainly because it was mere blocks from the house.

      At first glance of its name, anticipating that it would serve cuisine cumulating from areas south of our border, I read it as Comal. A comal, as you may or may not know, is a round cast iron pan used in kitchens across the entirety of South America and any and all cocinas here and abroad. But wait, that’s not an M, that’s a P. Copal?

      Using Google translate, I was quick to discover that copal translated into English was…copal. Huh.

      Camarones Al Ajillo

      When I entered the neon fused yet somehow comfortably lit restaurant and was met by co-owner and cocktail director Alex Bohon, I had to ask about the name of his new place.

      Copal is the incense used during Day of the Dead,” Bohon explained. “It’s a really pleasing scent and we always burn one before lunch and dinner service. Its helps ward off evil spirits and inspire good times.”

      At first glance of Copal, one is met with a sense of intimate invitation along with a cantina space due to the wellspring of agave bottles behind the bar. Along with the neon, which is delightfully subtle.

      Creative cocktails that don’t mess around

      Alex, along with his dad Ramon, opened up Copal in July of this year (2024) riding on the success of their previous endeavor, Taqueria La Esquina, which was mentioned earlier as being a personal go to for delicious Mexican street food and probably some of the best churros I have ever had the pleasure to get acquainted with. You will too.

      The first location the Bohon boys had their eye on was a spot of 4th Ave, a corner, yes, that is and was a revolving door of eateries and drinkeries that come and go all too frequently. So Alex and Ramon waited patiently until the right non-temporary residency opportunity arrived.

      Muy bueno!

      Not long after The Dutch shut its doors, the Bohon’s moved in and immediately knew that another taqueria concept in that area probably wouldn’t fly as well as it does on the corner of south 6th and Irvington.

      “Tucson is saturated with Sonoran and Mexican cuisine that’s been Americanized”, Alex states. “So we took inspiration from several regions and fused them together to make one harmonious family of Mexican flavors.”

      Alex Bohon (left) with chef Joshua Richards

      Copal’s original chef did not work out (like not at all, Alex notes) so it was time to get a seasoned and respected chef filled with bright ideas and knowledge of what Tucson likes to eat.

      Joshua Richards, formerly of the Jackrabbit Lounge, came aboard and worked with the Bohons on a menu that will delight, invite and at times even incite challenge to what we know about Mexican food and dining.

      First off, there are no chips and salsa served before your meal. That was something anyone can get anywhere Bohon and Richards determined. Secondly, no beans and rice on your plate. Once again, it’s been overdone and its another western influence they knew they had to move on from.

      Did…did we mention the amazing cocktails here?

      Copal is not set up for routine office parties or huge gatherings, as most cavernous Mexican restaurants are known for. Here, you sit with a loved one, or maybe two or three, quietly enjoying each other’s company and the savory food and sumptuous libations you are about to enjoy. Need a space for Brayden and Kayden’s birthday party? Yeah there’s a place a few blocks west of here that will take you.  

      The focus at Copal is a visceral ascension of dishes both familiar and completely unique.

      Take for example the Salmon Al Xocolate. If you read that as ‘chocolate’ and then went right to ‘mole’, you have then been misdirected. The wild caught salmon is marinated in soy and sesame then seared with ancho chiles and coco nibs. But, no, it is not mole.  Its something undeniably unto itself that needs to be experienced to be appreciated.

      Their Elote Ice Cream…unreal

      Its labeled an appetizer but the Camarones Chupate Los Dedos is a near formidable plate of butterflied shrimp, still in their shell, grilled then finished with a house special spicy sauce. Is it a little messy? A bit. Is it a little spicy. Oh sure. But is the full food adventure in the end worth it? Oh mucho si!

      There are of course plenty of vegetarian options. For a new taste tingle, go for the Roasted Wild Mushroom Medly, a bowl stacked with locally grown mushrooms which are roasted in a stone oven and served with a honey citrus yogurt. It can easily be vegan if you omit the yogurt but, honestly, you’re going to want that yogurt. It pairs and excels the dish so nicely. But the mushrooms on their own are still amazing.

      Copal is going to be the next formidable contender in the agave bar arena. Having tried their Tamarindo Paloma and Mexican Old Fashioned all I wanted to do was get up on that bar and perform some kind of heady cha cha. But Copal is a respectable environment so I just stuck to sipping while saying gracias.

      Wild mushroom medley

      Okay. Now here is where the day got even better, if not somehow complicated. Chef Joshua brought out their signature dessert: Elote Ice Cream. Shaped like an actual ear of corn, it’s a secret recipe vanilla flavored ice cream that is infused with cobs of freshly used corn. Yes. You heard correct. It may sound a bit odd but the second I took a bite I knew that I was invited to a party I was highly underdressed for. This was pure magic on a chilled plate. This is something that will not only bring everyone to the yard, but it will bring them to the endzone and then make a perfect kick for that extra point. Congratulations, you now have a new ice cream addiction.

      “We are proud to call ourselves a no waste kitchen,” Richards proudly boasts. “Even discarding corn cobs seemed like a bad option. So I threw them in our ice cream and, well, there you go!”

      With the experience of Taqueria La Esquina behind them, and the passion of Copal in front of them, Alex and Ramon Bohon are deliciously contributing to our fair city of gastronomy. So with a frosty agave cocktail in hand, and a belly full of innovative multi-regional fare in our bellies, all we can do is raise our glasses and proclaim salud!

      Copal

      5340 E. Broadway

      Monday – Thursday: 11am – 9pm

      Friday and Saturday: 11am – 10pm

      Sunday: 11am – 8pm

      http://www.copaltucson.com

      instagram.com/copaltucson

      Words and Photos by Mark Whittaker

      yeahwritemark@gmail.com

      520-861-4198