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11 minute read
Welcome to the multiple eatery experience
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MERCADO DISTRICT, The New Go-To
RGV I S I ON
FOO D F AVE
Welcome to the Multiple Eatery Experience
by Elsa Cavazos | photos provided
Prior to its opening, Mercado District appeared to be promising. As a new eatery option in the Rio Grande Valley, it sparked excitement, considering what it was offering: Multiple restaurants in one area for people to enjoy. Nothing like it had been seen in the RGV, and it brought work opportunities and a new dining option for patrons on weekends and weekdays.
Paulina Gonzalez, marketing director of Mercado District, said the idea behind it had been something envisioned for a long time. "It is not anything new,” she said. “It is something you see in the bigger cities, and we thought the Bargain Bazaar needed some life, some TLC.”
The northern half of the building continues business as usual, intact, but the renovated side is the new Mercado District.
Jesus Gonzalez, the owner, is originally from Monterrey and has been living in the Rio Grande Valley for 26 years. He bought the Bargain Bazaar in October 2019. It included the area where Mercado District now resides. Gonzalez rents different properties, and his wife owns Niu Furniture Living. Because he loves to travel, he had seen markets such as these, which inspired him to mimic the concept. "This is a hybrid of different markets I saw in various places in the world,” he said. “I have had this idea for about four years, and I wanted it to occur in downtown McAllen, but this area became available.”
Currently, there are 84 spaces in the building, but it had more spaces before Gonzalez renovated. There is a waiting list for people to lease a space. "People need to visit because it is hard to describe it in words," he said.
Gonzalez helped create the gastronomy area on Main Street. Several of the chefs he knew came to Mercado District to offer a different concept. "Some people think it's a little expensive, but the quality of the products are such as those of a sit-down restaurant," Gonzalez said. "You can't compare the plates we offer to something you get at a regular chain restaurant.”
Gonzalez said choosing a favorite dish is like choosing a favorite child. There is so much variety it is almost impossible to choose one, he said. "These people are so creative. All of these chefs have either owned a restaurant or have worked for a high-end restaurant," he said.
At the same time, shops are included inside Mercado District, offering items like hats, clothing, accessories, baked goods, chocolate, and more.
Gonzalez believes it is necessary to constantly evolve as a business and adapt to what people want and are seeking.
Mercado District also has a wine club people can join. There is a private room upstairs visitors can use even if they are not a member of the club. Overall, it is a space with a little bit of everything for everyone: nine containers, one coffee shop, and eight restaurants. The idea is to generate traffic for the shops and have plenty of options available.
Juan Rivera, a chef from Midtown Ceviche, said the concept comes from Peruvian gastronomy and is a new concept solely for Mercado District. Rivera said it was a worry to open after and work on the concept during the pandemic, but it was a risk worth taking. "The worry was if people were going to come out and experience life again," Rivera said.
Noe Soria is the chef of Pizzeria Di Soria, which is
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focused on fare from Italy mixed with that of Argentina. He is right next to Cocu Bistro, and his specialty pizza is the margherita. Alicia Gehring is the chef behind Cocu Bistro and has been a chef for 25 years but has been baking and cooking since she was 12. Gehring opened Cocu Bistro after being let go during the pandemic and working temporarily at a mortgage company. "My most sold dishes are crepes and paninis. We have savory crepes, salads with grilled chicken or grilled salmon, and pasta during dinner," Gehring said. "The whole family comes, and it doesn't matter who is craving what; they have options for everything.”
Gehring likes how patrons have the opportunity to choose from a variety of menus, even if it would seem others are competition.
Jesse Castellon, the man behind Ronin, used to own Spork and Motoramen. His new concept is an Asian-fusion collective, he said. Castellon offers bao buns, specialty fried rice, Asian noodles with a twist, and ramen, of course. "The mushroom bao buns are one of my favorites. I always tell people to try it out first; if you don't like it, I can take it out," Castellon said.
Samantha Minarro, originally from Monterrey, moved to San Antonio for a couple of years but moved back for two years. Now she is co-owner of Sticky Rice Sushi with her boyfriend, Eduardo. Minarro has always been in the food industry; she grew up around food. She knew she wanted to make pastries, and starting off, she became a pastry chef. For now, however, sushi is her concentration. "They offered me to do pastries here, but I didn't know if the concept fit here, and I told him if he was ready to go, we could open up a sushi place," she said, referring to her boyfriend, Eduardo.
People are supportive, according to Minarro, and she has seen returning customers already, which is a good sign. "The name is Sticky Rice Sushi because we have been tweaking the recipe, and even the texture is a little bit different, and you can taste the vinegar," she said. "We wanted that to stand out; the base of the sushi is different from what we are normally used to."
A special addition to every order has a manita. The manita is a mexican lollipop that signifies having your hand read, and it is their version of a fortune cookie.
Jim Komisar and Bob Kane visited Mercado District on a Friday afternoon. Komisar visited Ronin for the second time and said it was really good. "The pork carnitas are delicious. I came for
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Phone: 956.969.5855 Fax Line: 956.969.5844 services@skyitsolutions.com www.skyitsolutions.com
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705 S. Texas Blvd. Weslaco, TX 78596
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the soft opening, but today I came for lunch; this makes me feel like you are outside with the lights. It is a cool design," he said. "This is something you would see in Austin or Houston at a fancy mall.”
Kane said he liked the atmosphere and the food was very fresh. He could tell the seasoning was carefully selected. "I had the street fight; it had chicken and tofu with some garlic, green onion, and a spicy chili sauce — very good," he said. "We'll be back; I want to try the gyros. Everything has its own twist.”
Adam Cavazos, a chef at Sendero and Bodega, said he spoke to Gonzalez prior to the pandemic and knew about the idea since then. Cavazos said once he saw the space where Mercado District would be, he understood the vision and saw it as a stepping stone for a second location. "There are similarities between Bodega and Sendero in the way I like to cook, but I've had the desire for a while to showcase Texas food as it pertains to us in the RGV," he said. "We have something unique going on. We have the gulf, and we have a big-time outdoorsman culture with huntsmen and fishermen.”
For him, it was a challenge to create quality food in an 8-by-20-foot area. The kitchen is smaller, but the quality remains top tier. "We are different. We have oysters and crab, we have a nilgai burger which is a wild game, not beef, so sometimes we are a hard sell, but people have been very receptive for the most part," he said.
His favorite dish currently is his grandmother's bread pudding. Cavazos was not going to do a dessert, but he thought it would be a great addition to add a dish with sentimental value.
Overall, he believes the Mercado District experience has allowed him to see every food vendor as a family member. Cavazos said everyone works as a collective. "If somebody comes to our door and asks for a cup of milk, we say absolutely,” he said. “At the end of the day, we are each other's competition, but we help each other out. It doesn't feel like a competition. It feels like we are all here to better one another. It is my favorite part of opening this place.”
Mercado District is closed on Mondays and open Tuesday through Thursday from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. There is live music on Thursdays to close. The space is open Friday to Saturday from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
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The Value of Native Plants The Benefits Plants Provide People and Wildlife
by Quinta Mazatlán Urban Ecologist-John Brush | photos provided
We often appreciate plants for very specific reasons. We value them for the food they provide us, a personal favorite being avocados. We value others for the clothes they provide (cotton), or the homes they help build (timber trees), or for their aesthetic beauty — the roses and lilies of the world. Here in the Rio Grande Valley, we especially might value tall, woody plants (trees) for their shade. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, neighborhoods with mature trees can be 4-6 degrees cooler than new suburbs without trees. If that’s the difference between 100 degrees and 94 degrees, I’d quickly choose to live in the first neighborhood.
While these ecosystem services are vitally important to us, there are an array of other benefits that plants give us — and not all of them as obvious or direct. One such benefit is that of biodiversity. Now, yes, this does seem fairly obvious and straightforward on some level: If we have more vegetation in our yards and neighborhoods, the more species of birds and other wildlife we will see. But the value of that biodiversity lies in a few less easily characterized realms, supporting services and cultural services.
While the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem services is complicated, we do know it affects services through ecosystem functioning. A study into biodiversity and ecosystem functioning has revealed a couple of major trends: Biodiversity loss reduces functions of ecosystems (such as that of producing biomass and nutrient cycling), and increased biodiversity positively influences the resilience of those ecosystem functions.
Yet despite biodiversity providing and supporting basic needs of life (food, nutrient cycling, etc.), it also has important implications for human happiness and health. A study in the United Kingdom found that if people perceived there to be more biodiversity, the more psychological wellbeing they felt. A similar study in Chicago found that the valuations of benefits provided by birds positively related to the perception of the number of bird species.
Here we arrive at the heart of the matter: How do different plants affect biodiversity? In a two-year University of Texas Rio Grande Valley study, there was a significant positive relationship between bird diversity and the number of native trees planted in yards, but not one for the total number of trees planted. This implies that native trees are making a difference for overall bird diversity in our neighborhoods!
One reason for this could be that native plants support greater diversity and abundance of insects than non-native plants. In one study, Dr. Doug Tallamy, an entomologist from
left page photo: Texas Ebony (Ebenopsis ebano)
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Chapote Bean
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Guayacan Flower Crusita
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Hairy Wedelia
the University of Delaware, found that three generalist caterpillar species either starved or barely grew on nonnative plant foliage. In another, he and colleagues found that yards landscaped with native plants supported more caterpillars than those with non-native plants and that birds of conservation concern were eight times more abundant in native landscaped yards.
All this leads to the general conclusion that biodiversity matters, native plants support more biodiversity, and we can make a difference with space in our yards and neighborhoods. We can enhance our lives and the lives of wildlife around us in a simple way: Plant more native trees, shrubs, vines, and herbs.
If you are interested in learning more about using native plants for your next landscaping project, contact Quinta Mazatlán at (956) 681-3370 or email jbrush@mcallen.net.