Tag: dessert

  • Our Triumphant Return to Sweet Tomatoes

    Our Triumphant Return to Sweet Tomatoes

    Very little, if nothing, has changed

    “Oh my god. It smells exactly the same.”

    “It looks exactly the same.”

    “Oh my god.”

    Yep, there they are
    Oh, this is a new thingy

    Okay, the title suggests that it was a triumph to go back to Sweet Tomatoes, seeing as its been closed for almost 5 years. In fact, its been about 6 years for us last time we stepped foot in one.

    When the Sweet Tomatoes on Broadway here in Tucson reopened in April of 2024, even waiting a week or two, and like on a Tuesday around 2pm, the place had a line of people extending into the parking lot. So we waited. Waited some more. Then we kind of forgot about it. Dealing with crowds in that capacity, all ready to scoop lettuce on a plate, queuing to plop mac and cheese in a bowl or maneuvering around throngs of unattended children screaming that there aren’t any sprinkles left to squeeze out some ice cream doesn’t sound like a pleasant afternoon to us.

    Waiting became legend, legend became myth…

    Until one day, quite recently actually, the wife asked if I was up for Sweet Tomatoes. If there wasn’t a mass horde of all-you-can-eaters then, sure. Why not?

    Feels, and tastes, like old times
    Choose your yellow hued fighter

    Luckily the heat from the relaunch had cooled down as there was very little people in attendance. Which was great. For us. We’re not the “more the merrier” kind of couple. We enjoy empty theaters and restaurants at off hours. Call us crazy for liking leisure when we partake in leisurely activities.

    Now here is where the word “triumphant” comes into play. Turns out that this Sweet Tomatoes, the one here in Tucson, on Broadway, is the only Sweet Tomatoes in operation! Anywhere. None in Wisconsin, none in Alaska, none in Fiji and none in Siberia. Tucson baby. We gots the Sweets!

    Thing is, and this is just my opinion so I apologize to the ST faithful, Sweet Tomatoes is okay at best. The greens are always crisp but taste like they’ve been sitting in a bag for a while. The dressings are…fine. The toppings are expected. The pasta bar is decent but you have to season it up with pepper flakes and such to ease out some flavor. Same goes for the mini pizzas.

    It’s all just…fine.

    Like a good school lunch pizza should
    Film at 11!

    Here’s the thing with the wife and I, as I’m sure goes with a lot of Sweet Tomatoes attendees: It’s a memory poke at the lobe that reminds us of lazy afternoons sitting there, reading books, or playing games, surrounded by essential comfort food if and when we want it. We paid our ticket, so we gonna ride this out for a while.

    Unless its busy. Then we’ll eat and go. Sorry. No we’re leaving. You can totally sit here. Cheers.

    That memory jab came at an almost instant once we were through the doors. Other than some new signage and a bit of AI influenced advertising, it looked, smelled and felt exactly the same before closing their doors in the pandemic.

    The old routine returned as well. Get a tray, grab two plates (one for green salad the other to pile on whatever salads they may have on special) and make the stretch down option alley.

    Luckily on this trip they had the tuna tarragon salad which was always a curious favorite of mine. That recipe has not changed mercifully.

    The only disappointment that day, for the wife anyway, was the lack of brothy soup. Usually Sweet Tomatoes is equipped with a chicken noodle or something where she could just ladle in for the broth, her main reason for showing up in the first place. But, alas, no brothy soup. Just the creamy or chili variety. Oh well.

    As we sat there watching the lunch crowd grow in numbers, that feeling of odd nostalgia set in. It wasn’t that kind of decades gone familiarity then whooshed into verisimilitude like an old arcade, video rental stand or toy store. It was more of a “Yeah. Here it is. Here we are. Not much has changed. Okay. Ready to go?”

    A lot, if not most, of my chef-y friends absolutely despise buffets. “Anything employing a sneeze guard,” one chimed in, “and you know you’re in the middle of a filth storm.”

    The years that we have been going to Sweet Tomatoes, there has never been an issue. We used to attend the one that still stands empty and sun bleached dead by the Tucson Mall on Wetmore and all of the employees looked happy to be there. We even had our favorite server, a lady in her maybe 30s, Latina, who always boasted the biggest smile when she saw us. To this day we always wondered what happened to her. Mainly because my wife, who is the GM of a popular and long standing restaurant, wanted to hire her when the restaurant reopened in late 2020.

    It was always clean, well-stocked, and rarely overcrowded. It was maybe a once a month thing for us. Hey, its our day off, can’t decide on what we want for lunch, we’re hungry, hey!, how about Sweet Tomatoes? Sure!

    Going to the one (and only!) on Broadway is a bit out of the way for us so I’m not too sure if we’ve even been to that one. Maybe a while ago but with age that trigger has loosened and my aim is getting less true. Still, it was nice to be back, even though we left our books at home and had to rely on people watching and engage in conversation. Ugh!

    At least we didn’t leave hungry
    Our tradition before we head out

    Will we go back to Sweet Tomatoes? Probably. In fact, no, we definitely are. Anytime soon? Doubt it. But its good to know that it’s there and that Tucson has the sole key to the Sweet Tomatoes franchise. When we are on that side of town and getting the belly grumbles while failing to come to an agreeing cuisine conclusion, we can just pop in, grab a tray and get down with an old friend.

    Hopefully we’ll have our books with us that time.

    Cheers!

    Words and Pictures

    Mark Whittaker

    yeahwritemark@gmail.com

  • 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