Tag: Eating

  • The Lonesome Diaries vol. 2

    The Lonesome Diaries vol. 2

    Food Writer Blues

    A hole between two donuts

    I never intended to be a food writer. It just kind of happened.

    For 10 years I wrote about bands and reviewed shows and albums back in San Francisco. All of that came to a screeching halt when I moved to Tucson. Sure we get shows here but not enough to continue my tenure with some of the publications that I was contributing to.

    Although I did land a temporary gig with an alternative newspaper that folded maybe two articles of mine in. The big one being an interview and show review with Richard Marx. Yes, that Richard Marx. The 80s guy with the then legendary fluff mullet.

    He was great. We got along so famously that he wanted to take the wife and me with him on his tour. Kinda “Almost Famous” like. His tour manager was not having it.

    Not my finest moment

    So I just kind of languished with here and there jobs, scribbling in notebooks, typing the occasional story.

    Then, it hit me. The Sonoran Hot Dog.

    After consuming my fair share of that bean and mayo filled glizzy vestibule I knew that I wanted to write about it. So I did. Now what?

    Not too sure of the exact date but I started my blog, The Tucson Homeskillet, somewhere between the timelines of 2008-10. It was a simple little scrolly thing. I’d post now and then with no real intention of doing much with it.

    That is until 2014.

    That year was rough, chock full of family deaths. First my dad’s husband died, then my dad died less than a month later. Then my wife’s grandfather died. About a month after we had to put the dog down post having a stroke. About a week after him we found the cat half devoured by coyotes in the back brush.

    I was barely at work that year. My depression and anxiety really got on top of me. So I needed a distraction.

    How it all began

    In early 2015 I gave the Homeskillet a facelift. Cleaned it up, made it more legit and dedicated that I would contribute at least once a week, 1000 words, a dozen photos each. It worked and it kind of took off.

    One day I got an email. It was from the assistant editor from the Tucson Weekly. At the time their food writer was a mess and generally hated by most. She was a food writer living in Tucson that hated both food and Tucson. That editor liked my blog enough and asked if I wanted to meet with the managing editor to see if I’d be a good fit. I of course said yes.

    The managing editor and I hit it off a little too easily. I pitched her some ideas, she liked them and before you knew it I was now the food writer for the Weekly.

    That’s when things actually began to take off for me. Sort of.

    Oh how I miss doing stuff like this

    This was my first excursion into public scrutiny. The comments in my first year were brutal. “This new guys sucks”, “Bring back the old food writer”, “Who is this guy?”, etc. I even managed a regular hater. Going by the handle of HumanBean, this person would dismiss almost every feature I produced. It went on for quite some time until it got so bad that other commenters commented back to them (after I gained their trust and some followers) and eventually HumanBean just kind of disappeared.

    Things went okay and pretty smooth for the next couple of years. Because of the Weekly I was now invited to judge culinary and cocktail competitions, be present at the Tucson Iron Chef finales, free admission to all sorts of food and beer festivals – it was cool.

    Perks of the job

    That is until 2020 hit.

    My last article went up in January of that year which had been pushed back by at least a month. Unbeknownst to me the Weekly was beginning to transition into a different format as they and countless other weekly newspapers were getting devoured by a Los Angeles based publishing house. That article, about a soul food restaurant inside a liquor store by the university, closed over the holidays. I had no idea; I was too busy working on other features. That’s when my editor told me that I was on an undisclosed hiatus as they ‘figure things out’. Then Covid hit and I was then officially let go.

    With no print country to call home, along with my wife’s restaurant shutting down, I took an emergency job with Total Wine. During that time I refurbished the old Tucson Homeskillet and began writing about businesses that were doing curbside service, opening but with serious social distancing, stuff like that.

    That’s when I noticed a locally popular food site was being managed by literally one person. Seeing as I had little to do other than work at Total Wine and occasionally post on the Homeskillet, along with taking care of my wife and our cat, I asked if he needed any help.

    Months went by but one day I got an email from a guy saying he is the new owner of said food site and was curious if I wanted to contribute. After a meeting at our local pub, we all seemed to be on the same page and before long I was writing for them.

    Then things really took off.

    An extremely rare selfie

    Man I was so busy writing for them, going to events, meetings, tastings, private dinners, restaurant previews and, yes, judging competitions again that I thought I was their head writer and a big part of the team. Heck they even let me do a food truck event sponsored by them, which went over really well.

    Thing is, after about a year being with them, I felt as if things were a little…off.

    It first came when they announced that there was going to be a staff meeting over Asana. When I saw it I asked when and where. My phone rang about ten minutes later.

    It was the COO of the site and she had a message for me.

    “Mark the meeting is for core staff only.”

    On the invite list were other random “core staff” including two photographers they sometimes used and a new hire who did…something. And here I thought I was the head writer, turning in at least 2 articles a week, 1,500 words each. With photos. That I took!

    Okay. That hurt a bit, but, whatever.

    More perks of the job

    The other was my anxiety. It was going off the rails.

    Most days, if not every day, I was glued to my phone, trying to find the new cool food truck, trying to keep in contact with chefs, restaurant and bar owners, seeing what long standing eatery was celebrating an anniversary or which was shutting down. Heck I even had access to a map via the county that had all of the new trucks, bars, places, etc that recently passed their health inspection and were set to open soon. Any opportunity on days off, slow times at the day job or whenever, I was thumbing my way into screen time madness.

    Not to mention, but I always felt not really part of the team. I was older, weirder, looked like I actually ate and drank (most on the team were pretty thin) and definitely not a shmoozy hipster. When I arrived for any function I was welcomed, made them laugh, with this hovering feeling that they were all “Who’s this old guy?”

    In fact, my anxiety got so bad that my wife rented us an emergency Airbnb. We’d sit by the pool, not stare at our phones, get takeout, sleep late and try to relax.

    Day one at the Airbnb my phone rang. It was the COO. Again.

    This time she was saying that they were “moving in a new direction” (that old noodle), rethinking their brand while trying to get their finances in order. That last one did not surprise me at all.

    Several times with them they skipped a paycheck. Once while the wife and I were road tripping and I kind of needed that check for gas money. So getting rid of me meant more cash for them.

    And that was that. So now what?

    The answer is pretty obvious: it is time to move on!

    I now have this handy dandy website, a lot of ideas and so much fun stuff to write about. Of course I’ll be covering food, duh, but there is a lot more that needs your and my attention. So stay tuned.

    And thanks for reading my stuff.

    Cheers!

  • Los Compas: A love letter to my favorite neighborhood food truck

    Los Compas: A love letter to my favorite neighborhood food truck

    Muy bueno!

    If you know me and are familiar with my track record as a food writer then you are well aware of my near obsession with food trucks.

    So when a taco truck opened up just a few blocks from us a couple of years ago I was both stoked and curious. Mind you, most of the tacos from said trucks that I have had the pleasure of getting acquainted with in my time here in Tucson have been either on the scale of “Yeah, this is good” to “Oh my god, this is fxxking amazing!”

    That doesn’t mean that I’ve had a few dogs of tacos. Not going to mention names but there have been the unfortunate few where I just stare at the taco and wonder “How the heck could they screw this up so bad?” Thankfully that notion is a rarity.

    Calling themselves Los Compas, this lil pink and white rig set up around the corner of Ft. Lowell and Mountain to little or no fanfare. Literally a shout and holler away from our bungalow. Driving by it once or twice it was around the third turn where I knew it was my time to sample the goods.

    If you see it you must come

    If memory serves correct I got a selection of items in the vein of ‘if they mess this up then we got a problem’. Like one or two tacos, a burrito and probably something else. Then I brought it back home for us to try.

    What memory does do me honest is that I immediately fell in love with the food. It was all so good. The chicken and carne asada was cooked and seasoned perfectly, the beans and rice were the same, fresh cabbage and tomatoes, juicy limes, tasty salsas, fantastic pickled red onions – all of it.

    Thank you taco truck gods for sending Los Compas to our fair neighborhood! But screw you too because its not like I’m chubby enough. Jeeze.

    One Sunday coming back from the farmers market I decided to get a bowl of their menudo, which they only serve on the weekends. A lot of people that I know are not fans of menudo, most of the white folks that is, but I have been a defender of the tripe and hominy filled brothy stew since my early days of living in San Francisco. It was there that my screaming hangovers were remedied by the magic that lives in that spicy brew accompanied by thick tortillas and, yes, a beer.

    Los Compas’ menudo did not disappoint. It brought me back to those heady days in the bay area only this time I was not suffering from the alco-fuel regrets of open bars, backstage coolers and general youth filled debauchery. It was just a chilly winter Sunday and that stuff really warmed me up.

    Landscape of the divine

    Owners Karina Salinas and Kevin Andrade are the kind of food truck owners and operators every aspiring chef or entrepreneur should study. They are always there; their product is consistent (and consistently good) and the prices they offer for the product you receive is spot on. Thank you Karina and Kevin. And, yes, today I will have a birria torta please. Gracias.

    One day I had noticed that Los Compas wasn’t in its usual spot. It had moved right on the corner of Mountain and Ft. Lowell and now boasted a cozy seating area inside of a casita. Ca-seat-a? Yeah, sorry. That nook boasted lots of family photos, twinkling lights and even a TV. So now as you enjoy a caramelo the size of your first born you can catch up with your telenovela stories. Did Juan cheat on Soledad with that temptress of a maid Paulina…again? Scandalo!

    Los Compas was doing great apparently and we all celebrated their success.

    That is, until, one day it was gone.

    Not like moved up or down the street as it did before. It was just plain not there. The truck was missing and the casita was closed and locked. Hey! What gives? What happed to our treasured Los Compas? We want answers!

    *fake riot ensues, pitchforks, torches, the whole bit*

    Time became legend, legend became myth and after about a year I would guess we still didn’t have our Los Compas. That stretch of Ft. Lowell was like one big phantom limb: we can still feel it but nothing was there.

    One of each please (image taken from Los Compas Facebook page)

    Until one day it miraculously reappeared. Parked right in front of the old Greek church on, yes, Ft. Lowell. When I saw it I screeched on my brakes like some angsty driver in an old Loony Tunes cartoon, my feet nearly went through the floor.

    Approaching the truck and seeing Karina behind the sliding screen I had to ask where she and Los Compas went. Apparently that spot up the street with the casita didn’t work out and they just needed some time to fix the truck, focus on catering while trying to find a place to park again.

    That Greek church has been empty for quite a while due to a fire causing more damage than they could afford to repair and the plot in front of it was nearly rent free. Once again, thank you food truck gods! Only this time in front of an actual church. Hallelujah!

    All was right with the world again. Well, not really. But our little midtown world is right having Los Compas back and, hopefully, here to stay. A year without my beloved chicken burrito with everything was a dark year indeed. In these trying and confusing times it’s always nice to know you can roll up to a familiar spot, hear that radio play boisterous Tejano music, grab a Mexican Coke (the only Coke you should ever drink by the way) and nosh on delicious comfort food.

    Gracias Los Compas. ¡Sois los mejores!

    This thing right here is what keeps me from being “not slim”

    Tacos Los Compas

    1245 E. Ft. Lowell.

    Weds – Sun : 10am – 5pm

    https://www.facebook.com/LosCompasDeTucson/

  • Holy Focaccia

    Holy Focaccia

    From Brooklyn to Tucson Brick and Mortar, All Praise this Heavenly Bread

    Get there early because they sell out fast
    Breakfast sandwich about to go down

    The power couple behind Holy Focaccia and I go way back. Not like Lollapalooza ’95 way back (seeing as they were not even born yet or just were) as I was lucky enough to meet and write about them in the ascension of their delectable endeavor.

    But it all started in Brooklyn around 2019.

    The whiz kids in the spotlight here, Rachel Colasanto and Zakaria Boucetta, started encouraging their friends try out Rachel’s newfound love of baking focaccia bread. It, or they, were such a hit that the two knew they were on to something scrummy. And possibly lucrative. Every party they threw or attended with the baskets of squared flourishes of Italian descent.

    Then Zak got an offer his architect heart could not pass up: a job here in Tucson.

    Lets see, uh, one of each please
    Zak making the easy sale of yeah, you need this

    So the two moved in 2021 and soon after started baking that loverly focaccia once again.

    It was one of those word of mouth / under hushed tones twitterings in the local food throttle that Holy Focaccia reached my always hungry ears. No, wait, that sounds weird. But, yes, I am always on the lookout for…hold up. How can my ears be on the lookout? This is getting funky. Lets move on.

    Anyway, in 2022 I had the fortunate task of featuring, as mentioned earlier, them for a local food focused media site and all I can tell you dear reader is that it was bready love from the instant.

    Slow Body storage space about to become their new home
    Yes I ate the one from the upper left corner

    First off, Rachel was baking out of an old electric oven that could house maybe 8 to 10 loaves at a time. If that. The two would get up before the sun creaked over the mountains in order to bake before the call time of a 9am pickup.

    Nope, they didn’t have a store front. Those wizards straight worked and sold out of their old place downtown. Obtaining a cottage license made it all possible and before they knew it their lil side hustle that could started to manifest into a this totally is.

    Theirs isn’t just oil and salted focaccia we are talking about here (although that’s how it started out back in Bushwick). Holy Focaccia is the holy dreamscape of flavors, ingredients and ideas that oftentimes rustle up a “Wait, how can these components all come together and like totally work?” Dates, figs, pesto, garlic, black pepper, parmesan, sun dried tomatoes, wild herbs, seeds, scallions, old Star Wars figures, Atari cartridges, a Slayer jigsaw puzzle… Oh, sorry. That was me just looking around my desk. Oops.

    But you get it?

    The space is so cool, with an amazing patio too
    Pretty sure Rachel was putting up a “sold out” sign

    Then came the breakfast sandwiches. Yes, I would get up before the crack of noon to traverse downtown to pick up an ooey gooey eggy cheesy focaccia-y delight when they offered them up on Sunday. Sundays right? That was well over a year ago and me most mornings are “challenging” at best.

    Holy Focaccia started doing pop ups and then regular appearances at farmer’s markets and CSAs (community supported agriculture). Holy fxxk-accia, Holy Focaccia blowin’ up! In a rather short amount of calendar too.

    Disaster struck for me personally when Rachel and Zak moved from downtown to a bigger and more affordable place across town; a bit too far to travel for yours truly. Especially early Sunday morning. But we’ll always have the farmer’s markets and those memories of downtown!

    Quite recently the two began doing regular appearances at Slow Body Beer on E. 17th street. Then I found out, upon a visit, yes, on a Sunday morning to get a, yes, breakfast sandwich, they are there every Thursday at 5pm, Saturday at 2:30pm and, yes, Sunday at 9am.

    As I was stone cold munchin’ on my most excellent of breakfast sandwiches at the bar (no I wasn’t drinking, it was like barely 10am, jeeze) Rachel laid down some big news.

    “This is going to be our new brick and mortar.”

    You heard it here kids! Holy Focaccia, by autumn of this year, 2025, if all goes correct, will find permanence in the unused front section of Slow Body Beer just left of the main entrance. Gone are the golden hued crispy top days of baking out of their home, Rachel, along with actual employees!, are set up in a proper commissary and bake at a fever pace and volume to supply all of their bready nests, and our bellies.

    To think, less than 3 years ago, Rachel and Zak were serving up the good from their back patio and look at them now. They’re all grows up! So proud.

    Being a bit of an amateur baker myself, I asked if they needed any help. She actually said yes but they start at the unholy hour of 4am.

    Um, well…uh. 4am you say? Yeah that’s when I get up for a drink of water, give the cat a treat and then go back to bed. Love you, but, good luck.

    Oh, and don’t forget that Holy Focaccia offers up incredible cookies, cakes, tortes and tiramisu. Be sure to put all of that on your order next time because they are all so inventive and delicious. Not a bad crumb in the bunch. Ever. A remarkable achievement if you ask me.

    Go ahead. Ask.

    Where it all began
    If they build it, we will come

    Congrats Rachel and Zak! I’m glad to have been there from the (almost) beginning here in Tucson only to watch you and Holy Focaccia rise up.

    Yes that was a bread gag.

    Cheers!  

    Holy Focaccia

    https://holy-focaccia.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/holyfocaccia_/

    Words and Pictures

    Mark Whittaker

    yeahwritemark@gmail.com

  • Chefs For You

    Chefs For You

    Kade Mislinski is your go to personal chef and meal prep maestro

    Behold the workings of your new personal chef

    You know one of my favorite things to write about are my friends doing awesome things. Now that I have the total freedom to do that with this website, that’s what I’m going to do. Well, I mean, I’m going to do other stuff as well, but promoting pals and their cool endeavors will be a big part of it. Because its super fun. And because I can. So there.

    This salmon was slammin’

    Kade Mislinski and I go back well over a decade. If not longer. Not exactly sure the exact time and moment when we did become acquainted but I have a feeling it had something to do with food.

    It was probably his time as co-owner of Café Passe down on 4th Ave. It had to have been. If I was ever on the avenue I’d usually pop in for an iced coffee or some kind of delectable nibble. Although if my cloudy cognizance will allow, I’m pretty sure I was at Café Passe one night because they had advertised an evening of drum n bass.

    Drum n Bass and I got acquainted in the mid-90s back in San Francisco at some club called Liquid or Spackle or whatever. I had never heard anything like that before. Kinetic beats, sonic basslines, yet twinged with reggae chillness. Didn’t take long for me to get hooked on that sound. Ever since moving to Tucson in 2006, I had yet to find a space that played that line of frantic dance music.

    But there it was. Café Passe. And none other than Kade Mislinski was behind the decks. Very cool.

    Fresh from his kitchen to yours

    During my time with the Weekly, I got to write about Kade when he operated a steamed burger concept on Grant Ave. It was delicious and an ode to two hamburger stands located in Connecticut. One being Ted’s Restaurant, in Meriden, CT, which has been said to originate the steamed burger concept. The other is Louis’ Lunch, in New Haven, which holds court as the oldest hamburger stand in the US. So it goes.

    Now the line between oldest and steamed burg gets bleary in the greasy throes of American history. Some say Louis’ invented the steamed burger while others say “No! Louis just threw a meatball on the grill, smashed it up and served it to an impatient customer between bread.” Now as a mostly food writer, I don’t even know the case of the steamed burger. Its sort of like the original chimichanga. But that’s a dispute I need to put to rest because I do not want to get into some local trouble.

    For some reason Kade’s steamed burger place just didn’t make it. I totally thought it would.

    Then Covid hit and everything went ker-plunk.

    Kade and I sort of lost contact with one another, except for the occasional social media like or comment. Then quite recently, here in late-early 2025, Kade hits me up and says he is now a personal chef doing meal prep and home delivery.

    Kade is a one man culinary tour de force my friends!

    My man puttin’ in the work

    We hung out one afternoon while he was cooking and prepping for a client and all I could do was gaze in hungry eyed wonder. Every dish he prepared was cooked juuuuust to order as the customer has to heat it up. So easy. So very very good.

    Kade being a Tucson chef and restauranteur for many years now, knows exactly what he is doing. First thing is sourcing small and local. Our bountiful desert agronomy is basically like living in a farmers market, so the pickin’s are plentiful and the products near perfection. Kade will work with you to provide the meals you want with a knowledge of farms and facilities that earned Tucson the first city of gastronomy nod from UNESCO.

    Vegan? He’s got you. Love you some steaks and seafood? Dude, Kade is so on it. Allergies, restrictions or Kosher? C’mon man! Yeah. You’re good.

    Prices range depending on the level of difficulty or how exotic you want those meals to ascribe to. But know this! Its all about making you happy, easing up time on your end and providing healthy sumptuous repasts made with care by a well-seasoned Tucson chef.

    Best thing is, Kade will deliver your fares to you, right to your door, when you want them and when you need them. Forget those premade “dinners” you find at the store. Even the ones you see in mom and pop health food shops are loaded with sodium and still contain ingredients you didn’t know existed. No thank you.

    Farm to face is more like it

    As Kade was packing up a weekly meal plan for a client, he set out a sample of the goods for me to try…that were left over! Gosh. You think he’d rob some bits of a paying customer to feed a food blogging dork like me? Yeah, no.   

    Absolute perfection. Real chicken from a real farm tastes really different in comparison to those that sit in Styrofoam trays sitting just a few clicks down from greeting cards and automotive lubricant.

    The veggies were cooked and seasoned meticulously, as was the rice, the potatoes, the… Look. The man can cook. Let’s just put it that way and leave it there.

    Kade is also available for private parties, catering and personal chef services.

    You want to support local? You want to eat local? You want to eat food that is supported by local, like, everything? My man Kade Mislinski is your go to guy in the pressed chef’s coat. Have skillet will travel!

    Sure Kade is a friend of mine but if I thought his food and service was subpar I would not take a chunk out my day to chat him up on this here website.

    But he is a good man that serves up suburb food and provides an avail that goes above and beyond.

    And he still DJs!

    Thanks for reading, now lets eat

    To hit up Kade, you can contact him via email:

    kmislinski@gmail.com

    Call/Text:

    520-488-9339

    Or better yet, to see him in action, follow Kade’s social media:

    https://www.instagram.com/personalchef_kademislinski/

    https://www.threads.net/@personalchef_kademislinski

    Cheers!

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  • 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

  • The Savor culinary festival: good food, good drinks, good times

    The Savor culinary festival: good food, good drinks, good times

    Since 2017, I have been fortunate enough to attend the annual bacchanalia of eating and drinking. It is a festival filled with overall merriment. This is the Savor Festival.

    Savor is held every late January at the Tucson Botanical Gardens. It is a celebration of not just food and drink, but also of art and sense of community.

    Sponsored by SAACA (Southern Arizona Arts & Cultural Alliance), Savor is an all-day event that pleases, and even teases, almost all senses. Everyone should experience it at least once. Trust me here.

    Here are some highlights of this year’s Savor!

    …or at least what we got our hungry hands on.

    Plenty of good food at every corner
    Spicy lamb meatballs from Dante’s Fire
    Chef Maria Mazon of Boca Tacos, always a good sport

    This year was special for me because it was the first Savor I got to experience with my wife. We were gifted two VIP tickets and she got to experience a little bit of what I do as a freelance writer, food being the main objective here.

    She was a bit overwhelmed. There are so many food vendors from all over Southern Arizona that she got a bit spun from the array of plated goodness. These range from high-end, chef-driven white coat kitchens to your local mobile comfort grub units. And everything in-between.

    This was the first year I noticed a large influx of catering services. That was really nice to see. Post 2020 really wrangled those willing to serve the masses en mass and all of their offerings were extremely delightful.

    Cookinwitcort had the best mac n’ cheese I have had in quite a while
    The chefs at Cielos Kitchen dishing up the goodness
    Pazole and smoked meat madness

    Live music permeates throughout, including a mariachi outfit serenading us all in line waiting to get in. DJs keeping it lively boomed various alcoves, one of which was playing 70s AM gold (aka Yacht Rock) syncopated to lively dance beats. Very clever.

    Not to mention artists set up and painting, sculpting, cartooning right in front of our vary eyes all throughout the grounds.

    Vineyards and breweries had tables set up with samples of their heady wares. I, of course, if you know me, enjoy a drink now and then. Usually now. But that drink(s) is normally set around the proper happy hour hour. So, the wife and I meandered the festival in full clarity that afternoon. Having been to a few Savors before and sometimes not getting there til late afternoon, the wine and craft beer sipping crowd were dizzy in a fuzzy smiling wonder, which always makes for a welcome chuckling spectacle.

    Real artists making real art in the gardens
    I’m getting the meat sweats just thinking about this
    Let’s see, stout or red ale…uh, yes please

    Here are some tips for those that plan to attend Savor in the future:

    1. Go big and go VIP. If you are lucky enough to be gifted a VIP ticket, or as I have as a member of the press, that extra cash you spend goes a long way. You get in an hour early, there is always plenty of food, plenty of hooch, plenty of room and when they open the flood gates at noon for the cheap seats you’ll be glad you stretched your festival going budget by a few threads.
    2. DO NOT TRY TO PARK IN THE BOTANICAL GARDENS PARKING AREA! Every year I see the poor souls that have to tell people that this is a huge event and the tight parking that is normally available is filled with tents and trucks constantly loading in and loading out. The best and closest parking is right up a ways at Grant and Alvernon in the Vasa mega gym lot. Like I said, get that VIP and you get parking.
    3. Pace yourself. There is so much to eat, drink, sink in and do that if you storm the flowery gates of the gardens with stomach and liver a blazin’, you might burn out too quick. Stay a while. Have a bite now and then. Take a sip here and there. Dance some of it off. But remember to stay hydrated. Luckily there are large tubs of bottled water everywhere, provided free for your benefit. Thank you SAACA!
    I’m just going to call this cups of joy
    Smiles everyone, smiles
    Davia of Purple Tree Acai gives her approval

    Best thing is, outside of all things edible and quaffable, you’re at the Tucson Botanical Gardens! You can totally tour the butterfly pavilion. If the crowds are closing in on you, step aside and take a path walk to admire the beautiful local flora. Sit and watch the hummingbirds and bees do their thing. Heck there’s even a whole space set up with train tracks and miniature structural landmarks built to scale by students of architecture. So very cool.

    Do yourself a favor and check out Savor. Shake off the post holiday blues by stuffing yourself silly and running into a friend or two. If you play your social cards right, you might even make a few new ones.

    Cheers!

    A beautiful day for a beautiful event

    Words and Pictures

    Mark Whittaker, late January 2025

    yeahwritemark@gmail.com

    Please visit:

    https://www.saaca.org/

    https://tucsonbotanical.org/