3 minute read
Destination: Central Falls
A world of gastronomic treasures awaits along Blackstone Valley
By Emily Olson
Twenty percent of the world’s countries are represented among the people of Blackstone Valley, and the area’s restaurants reflect that cornucopia of cultures, says James Toomey, director of marketing for Blackstone Valley Tourism. “Our restaurants tell the story of the people who are here, and that story has evolved over hundreds of years,” he says.
The area’s diversity is largely due to northern Rhode Island being the “birthplace of the Industrial Revolution,” and as the movement gathered speed, factories outgrew the local workforce and people seeking employment began to immigrate to the area, which includes Central Falls, Pawtucket, Woonsocket, East Providence, and other towns along the Blackstone River Watershed. “Those new to the country wanted some comfort,” says Toomey. “They looked for a way to maintain their heritage and be with their people.” And because nothing provides an opportunity to gather quite like a good meal, they opened restaurants.
“There are a lot of Mexican, Guatemalan, and Portuguese restaurants in Central Falls. Stanley’s was started by a Polish immigrant,” says Toomey of the popular hamburger joint founded in 1932. “Woonsocket restaurants are influenced by the French Canadian immigrants. There’s a huge Portuguese population in East Providence with restaurants so authentic that the Azorean president dined there.” These restaurants are small, comfortable, affordable, and generous. “I once ordered lunch at El Paisa,” Toomey continues. “They brought my meal and I thought, ‘Wow. That’s a lot of food.’ And then they brought over another plate!”
Toomey says that the area restaurants serve anything but watered-down, Americanized versions of traditional recipes. “It’s easy to lump cuisines together,” says Toomey. “You might think Mexican food is Mexican food, right? But the owners of Taqueria Lupita come from a different region of Mexico than the owners of Tuxpan Taqueria, and you can taste the regional difference.” Toomey challenges anyone who thinks they know guacamole to stop at La Casona and sample the Colombian version.
“Central Falls, in particular, is this cool, walkable area, and on Dexter Street you can find a different restaurant on every block,” says Toomey. “For the people who live and work here, it’s not just about owning a restaurant or making a lot of money – it’s about sharing their culture and feeding their community.”
Central Falls Food Tour
Starting at Central Falls’ southern border, the stretch of Dexter Street offers a culinary world tour of restaurants, listed here in order of location.
EL ANTOJO BAKERY AND RESTAURANT
STANLEY’S FAMOUS HAMBURGERS
SPARKY’S RESTAURANT
EL PAISA
VILLAGE PIZZA
GRATED MIX
GOODFELLAS TAVERN (temporarily closed for renovations)
LA MILONGA
LA HERRADURA TAQUERIA
LOS TRES AMIGO TAQUERIA
MIRIAN TIPICO RESTAURANT
TAQUERIA LUPITA
BUBBLE WAFFLE CAFÉ
LA FRUTA LOCA
GEORGIA’S FAMILY RESTAURANT
Learn To Swim
LESSONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR AGES 6 MONTHS TO 15 YEARS AT ANY EXPERIENCE LEVEL.
For Young Designers 8-19
TEENS AGESJuly 24-28
TWEENS AGESJuly 17-21
At Rocky Hill Country Day School E. Greenwich PROJECTFASHIONWORKS.COM
(Book with us only)
ELANA@PROJECTFASHIONWORKS.COM
Relatively new to the neighborhood is Bub ble Waffle Cafe on 874 Dexter Street. The husband-and-wife owners always stopped scrolling when images of bubble waffle cones – overflowing with ice cream and topped with piles of whipped cream and fruit – appeared on their social media feed. The look of the In stagram-worthy treat drew them in, and they wondered if it would have the same effect on their neighbors. They began experimenting with batter recipes and hunting for the per fect location to open their own cafe – pausing briefly to also welcome their new baby. “We’re happy that when we started, we didn’t know how much work it would all be,” says Stephanie Munoz, who now is delighted with the success of her family business. “People in the neigh borhood know us. We always see familiar faces, but every day there are new people.”
The cafe, which opened in September 2021, serves a variety of bubble waffle cones with pre-selected toppings, as well as build-yourown cones, crepes, milkshakes, and bubble tea. Munoz has seasonal favorites and says that although the crepes are a perfect cool-weath er treat, the bubble waffle cones are summer show stoppers.
Other restaurants have been deeply in grained in the fabric of Central Falls for de cades. In 1976, Cesar Zuleta’s father took his family and fled to Central Falls to escape the violent cartels in Colombia. He took a job, but realized quickly that his entrepreneurial spirit wouldn’t allow him to work for anyone, so he bought a restaurant with a friend. That friend left the business, but El Paisa, on 598 Dexter Street, continued to grow under fam ily ownership, eventually taking over an en tire building and claiming its place as the first Colombian restaurant in Central Falls. Zule ta now co-owns the restaurant with his sister, Diana Rivera, who learned to cook from her father, while Zuleta did every chore imagin able in the restaurant growing up. “I got so sick of it,” he says. “I wanted to be a pilot.” But the family business pulled him back and today he proudly serves platters of delicious Colombian cuisine.
Zuleta says their Bandeja Colombian is a musttry menu item. It comes with a choice of meat, ac companied by salad, beans, rice, yucca, potatoes, bacon, bread, and sweet fried bananas. “We’re big eaters in Colombia,” Zuleta says with a laugh.