Around the corner from my apartment is a little
bakery/restaurant. I discovered it maybe
a two weeks after I moved into my apartment and I return at least once a week,
sometimes twice. I think it is family
run, because some of the kids who wait on me look related. I couldn’t find anything on the internet
about this place, but I am sure some of my Santa Cruz people, who read this
blog, will tell me some more about it.
Teconté is on Avenida Iralá, just two blocks from my street,
Monsenior Santistevant. Iralá is the southern circuit of the First Ring. So this is a busy street. From about 6:00 in the morning till after
midnight, I can look out of my window and see the street packed with cars. So they chose a very good location.
I can’t get there in the mornings very often, but the few
times I have been able to, there are men and women in suits having coffee and a
breakfast bread. More often I get there
around lunch time when it is really busy.
I have been told they serve tea.
A Bolivian tea, or mirienda, is exceptional. I
hope I get to attend one to share it with you.
It is not tea and cookies, but a fantastic afternoon meal.
If they have it, I buy a sonso. It is a very basic recipe, grated yucca and
cheese baked in the oven. For something
so simple, it is amazingly delicious.
The aluminum dish contains sonso
They always have cuñapé, which is a baked cheese bread,
another simple delicious recipe. They
also have empanadas of at least a dozen types.
My two favorite are the rice empanadas, which is just a rice bread,
which I thought at first was corn. The
other is a cheese empanada, which has a light crust that puffs up, lightly
stuffed with cheese, and topped with powdered sugar.
Tonight's meal of a chicken breast and two rice empanadas
My usual habit is to buy something to accompany my lunch and
also bring something home for breakfast the next morning. I normally spend
between $2 and $5. If I spend more, I
might bring two lunches and two breakfasts.
So it is a cheap addition to my meals.
One thing about these guys that impressed me was the morning
I did my walk around the First Ring. I
started my walk there. As I was buying a
cheese empanada, the owner came out with a plate with a roll on it and a cup of
coffee. She handed it to a beggar that I
regularly see on Avenida Iralá. He is
filthy dirty and looks pitiful. I think he has mental problems. She didn’t
hand him paper, disposable cup and plate, but the china she uses for
customers.
Proverbs 22:9 says, “The generous will be blessed, for they
share their food with the poor.”
Because of this, even if there are places nearby that sell
the same thing, I will always be a customer of Teconté.
I forgot to tell you the name means "tea with you."
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