|
TM
Naked Chefs in Santa Fe
Or how I fulfilled my fantasies for less than $20 dollars
By Madelyn Miller
Some
people follow sports teams around the globe. Other people go nuts over rock
stars. Give me a chef anytime. Is there anything sexier than a chef whipping
something up? Warming buns in the oven?
I fantasize being able to lick the bowl. Being the muse
for a chef’s chocolate dessert.
So when I found out my fantasies would now be available
for unlimited gazing for less than two dollars a month, I was as excited as
a football fan finding out he could watch his team on cable TV.
If the chefs were all going to be wearing their
birthday suits to the launch party, I would cancel all my travel plans and
be there. Instead, I will have to stick to one fantasy a month, as I turn
the pages of the Naked Chefs of Santa Fe calendar.
THE CHEFS OF SANTA FE COOK IN THE RAW – AND POSE IN IT,
TOO – IN REVELATORY NEW CALENDAR FOR 2005
After
a smashing debut in Taos last year, the fabulously popular Cooking in the
Raw calendar featuring area chefs at their best -- and barest -- is back
this year and taking Santa Fe, New Mexico by storm. The Chefs of Santa Fe -
Cooking in the Raw is an artistic calendar with a style as vivacious,
provocative and alluring as the soul of the southwest itself.
Thirteen of Santa Fe most desirable culinary artisans
-- including Louis Moscow (Bistro 315), Martin Rios (The Old House), Mu Ju
Ling (Mud u Noodles) and Tom Kerpon (The Inn of Anasazi) -- bare their most
tempting recipes as well as their intimate selves in a stimulating full-size
calendar of stunning black & white photographs created by acclaimed Pulitzer
Prize-winning photographer Judy Walgren.
The Chefs of Santa Fe - Cooking in the Raw is produced
by the Taos School of Cooking. “The design of the Calendar is classy and
appealing, with exuberant photographs that are as tasteful and innovative as
the food itself,” says the School’s Director, Lisa Cancro. “You can
definitely spot the inspiration of each chef’s unique personality.”
The creation of this calendar is intended to promote
Santa Fe’s exceptional chefs and their restaurants. Two pages of the
calendar will be devoted to each chef, including a charismatic photograph,
chef’s choice recipe, restaurant logo and, of course, the month. I wonder
if I have to limit my gazes at my favorite chefs for only a month? I will no
longer be frustrated if they are busy in the kitchen, or off the night I am
dining—because I will have my own personal nude calendar. What, I wonder,
should I wear while I am turning the pages?
An excellent assortment of Santa Fe’s finest and most
hip restaurants are featured, including The Pink Adobe, Ristra, Bistro 315,
Fuego at La Posada, Eat Me Foods, La Posada, Mu du Noodles, and more.
A Calendar release for The Chefs of Santa Fe - Cooking
in the Raw will take place on Sunday September 19th @ The Pink Adobe in
Santa Fe from 2:00-5:00 pm. Featured chefs will be present and likely
clothed for a fantastically fun, not-to-be-missed signing party. Calendars
will be priced at a reasonable $19.95. All profits from the sale of the
calendar will be donated to The Yaxche Learning Center Scholarship Program
in Taos, New Mexico, the non-profit educational organization that benefits
needy children from diverse indigenous backgrounds.
Just for the record, I wrote this story with my clothes
on.
What to do in Santa Fe besides stare at Naked Chefs
WHERE TO STAY
LA FONDA ON THE PLAZA
100 E. San Francisco
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
800-523-5002
www.lafondasantafe.com
Inn of the Five Graces
Inn on the Alameda, 505- 984-2121, 800-289-2122
www.inn-alameda.com
Bishop’s Lodge Resort and Spa
800-732-2240
www.bishopslodge.com
La Posada de Santa Fe Resort and Spa
505-982-5474, 800-5276
www.rockresorts.com
Inn of the Anasazi
505-988-3030, 800-688-8100
Inn and Spa at Loretto 505-988-5531
http://www.hotelloretto.com
WHERE TO EAT
Inn of the Anasazi, 505-988-3236
Amaya at Santa Fe Hotel
Geronimo’s 505-988-5531
The Restaurant at the Inn and Spa at Loretto
505-988-5531
The Compound Restaurant, 505-982-4353
The Old House, Eldorado Hotel, 505-988-4455
Fuego Restaurant, La Posada Resort, 505-954-9670 be
sure to try the foie gras
SantaCafe, 231 Washington Ave. 800-252-8570 or
505-984-1788.
Café Pasquals, 505-983-9340 (if you are traveling alone
or in a hurry, ask to sit at the community table)
Bumble Bee’s Baja Grill 505-820-2862. Healthy fast
food, made fresh. Truly where the natives eat.
BAR WITH THE BEST VIEW
Belltower Bar in La Fonda
505-954-3599, 800-523-50002
BEST SUNDAY BRUNCH
ELDORADO HOTEL
www.eldoradohotel.com
505-988-4455
BEST GUACAMOLE
LA FONDA
BLACK BOOK FOR CHOCOLATE LOVERS (maybe I should say
dark semi-sweet brown book)
Café Paris Bakery, 31 Burro Alley, (505) 986-1688
Chocolate Maven, 821 San Mateo Road, (505) 984-1980
Cloud Cliff Bakery and Cafe鬠1805 Second Street,
www.cloudcliff.com
Delectables, 720 St. Michael's Drive, Suite 2M, 438-8152
Ohori's Coffee, Tea & Chocolate, 507 Old Santa Fe Trail, (505) 982-9692
Senor Murphy Candy Maker, 1904 Chamisa Street, 1-877-988-4311
Todos Santos Chocolates and Confections, 125 East Palace Avenue #31, (505)
982-3855
Gourmet Fudge and Wedding Favors
(505)856-8242
1-877-423-8343
1-877-42FUDGE
sandra_todieforfudge@msn.com
Bumble Bee’s Baja Grill 505-820-2862 Try anything baked
by Katalyna Weil. She does a mean cowboy crunch and Mexican espresso
brownies. I love the cowgirl kisses
Kakawa Chocolate House, Mark Sciscenti, Chocolate
connoisseur, Pasty chef and Certified Herbalist. 505-438-3402.
sunsilver@earthlink.net
Try his chocolate truffles and authentic historic
chocolate drinks. My favorite was the chocolate chilli drink.
FAVORITE FLAVORS OF SANTA FE
Pear Mascapone Soup at Fuego in La Posada.
Chocolate Terraine at Hotel Santa Fe
Guacamole at La Fonda
RANDOM THOUGHT
Why does it seem that everyone is Santa Fe is either a
chef or a massage therapist or has a family member who is? Maybe that is why
you get such great food and massages in Santa Fe.
WHAT TO DO
Browse Canyon Road. This gallery row features an
amazing assortment of fine art, crafts, antiques, jewelry, clothing and
restaurants.
Santa Fe School of Cooking
Take the taste of Santa Fe home by enjoying cooking classes featuring Santa
Fe’s top chefs whipping up everything from traditional Northern New Mexican
cuisine to contemporary Southwest. 505-983-4511
Santa Fe Opera. One of the most famous in the world.
www.santafeopera.org.
FLEA MARKET. If you are there on a weekend, check out
the flea market by the Opera. Tesuque Flea Market is the official name, but
no one calls it that. The land it is on is owned by the Indians. Only open
in warmer weather.
GET A MASSAGE
Shanah Spa and Wellness Center at the Bishop’s Lodge
Resort and Spa. Ask for Lanka. My favorite treatments are Native
Purification Polish and Native Stone Massage. 1-800-9shanah. You will want
to reserve ahead.
The Bishop’s Lodge Resort and Spa
P.O. Box 2367
Bishop’s Lodge Road
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
800.732.2240; 505.983.6377;
www.bishopslodge.com
ShaNah Spa Telephone: (505) 819-4000;
www.shanahspa@bishopslodge.com
Avanyu Spa
Get a Avanyu Body Bliss at with Nancy DeMill. Your body will be thankful
from the top of your scalp down to your toes.
La Posada de Santa Fe
330 E. Palace Avenue
Santa Fe, NM 87501
Office: 505.954.9631
Fax: 505.954.9761
www.rockresorts.com
10,000 Waves, 505-982-9304. Indulge in an outdoor
massage while nimble fingers soothe out any stress. Call ahead because this
is a very popular place. If you are adventurous, have an underwater Watsu
massage.
SHOP FOR ART AND COWBOY BOOTS
Stop by Back at the Ranch, where Wendy Lane has been
making fashion cowboy boots for the past 15 years. I believe she pretty much
"owns" this niche. She has lots of celebrity clients, including the Governor
of New Mexico.
www.backattheranch.com.
209 East Marcy Street
888-96 boots
505-989-8110
ART BROWSING
SITE Santa Fe is located at 1606 Paseo de Peralta,
Santa Fe, NM
WWW.SITESANTAFE.ORG
Minkay Andean Art
The unique and original pieces on display include brilliantly-crafted,
ceramics, evocative retablos with hand-made figurines using boiled potato
and plaster by famed artist Nicario Jimenez. The collection also includes
colorful and intricate Andrean textiles, Alpaca garments and objects used in
the traditional folk medicine in the Andes.
233 Canyon Road
www.minkay.com
505-820-2210
The Turquoise Trail leads to Hotel Santa Fe...
Just check out the fashion-conscious these days, and what you'll find is a
plethora of turquoise, the deep blue of a summer sky, the perfect contrast
for a summer tan, and the stone that for centuries has been the sacred stone
and favorite adornment of Native Americans. So where would you expect to
find the turquoise Mother Lode? Just follow the Turquoise Trail to the
Picuris Art and Gift Shop at Hotel Santa Fe, where Manager Joan Greer has
assembled a stellar collection of turquoise jewelry gleaned from neighboring
reservations and pueblos and at prices that permit loading on the treasures,
Native-American style. For example, there's a 5-strand necklace of turquoise
beads or a single-strand necklace of turquoise heishi - the flat turquoise
beads that are a specialty of Santo Domingo Pueblo -- mixed with nuggets.
Hand-hammered coin silver beads are interspersed with turquoise beads, while
oversize nuggets of turquoise make impressive earrings. The pièce de
resistance: an impressive silver-and-turquoise concho belt, guaranteed to
create a sensation back home.
GREAT TIMES TO VISIT
Don’t miss the ArtFeast benefit event in late February.
http://www.travellady.com/Issues/February04/OneofSantaFes.htm
Souper Bowl Project
contact
Director@thefooddepot.org to reach Sherry Hooper, the Director of the
Food Depot, which organizes this event; their phone number is 505-471-1633
Wine and Chile festival
info@santafewineandchile.org
Annual Santa Fe Market, a free public celebration of
the colorful arts, crafts, jewelry and cultures of Native Americans and the
American Southwest. Usually the first weekend in April
619) 296-3161 or visit
www.BazaarDelMundo.com
GREAT GUIDEBOOKS
Hidden Southwest
By Richard Harris
Ulysses Press
www.ulyssespress.com
LET’S GO ADVENTURE GUIDE SOUTHWEST USA 2003
ST MARTIN’S PRESS
www.stmartins.com
Ski America and Canada has the best and most detailed
overview of Santa Fe from a winter tourist/skier/snowboarder's perspective.
The new edition (15th) will be in bookstores about mid October.
Available from most bookstores, Amazon, bn.com and
www.worldleisure.com
MORE ABOUT NEW MEXICO
THE OLD WEST
TRAVEL HISTORIC AMERICA
Explore ghost towns, Pioneer trails, Spanish Missions and more.
Fodor’s
www.fodor’s.com
MOON HANDBOOKS NEW MEXICO
By Stephen Metzger
Avalon Travel
www.moon.com
FOR MORE INFORMATION
SANTA FE: 800-777-2489
http://www.santafe.org
http://www.skisantafe.com
BEST FREEBIE
The Official 2004 Santa Fe Visitors Guide - A Free
Guide to Santa Fe:
The 2004 Santa Fe Visitors Guide produced by the Santa Fe Convention &
Visitors Bureau has been updated for 2004 and is free for the asking. The 98
page guide has everything a visitor needs to plan a stay in Santa Fe
including articles or listings of attractions, lodging, shopping, day
trips, restaurants and cuisine, the city's prolific art scene, activities
for kids, the city's romantic side, edu-tourism, historic and cultural
background of Santa Fe, a 2004 calendar of events and more. The four-color
glossy magazine is filled with beautiful new images of Santa Fe and is THE
resource for getting the most out of a Santa Fe visit. For a free 2004
Santa Fe Visitors Guide call, 800-777-2489, 505-955-6200, or visit
www.santafe.org.
BEST WAY TO GET THERE
SOUTHWEST AIRLINES: 800-435-9792
http://www.southwest.com
Back to
TravelLady Magazine |