Why Colorado and New Mexico Are Fighting a Hot War Over Green Chile
For years, these Rocky Mountain states have squared off on a spicy subject: Who grows the best chile peppers, an indispensable ingredient in southwestern cuisine? Our man hit the road to find out.
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There鈥檚 nothing like a fight in which different states and regions square off about who鈥檚 better at producing a popular food. One of the most energetic rivalries involves barbecue, pitting (where pork is the thing) against Texas (land of beef, and in particular). If you鈥檙e loyal to North Carolina or Kansas City, please know that I鈥檓 aware these places make good barbecue, too. No need to call and scream at me.
This sort of competition turns up all over the place. There鈥檚 an old episode of The West Wing in which windbag president Jed Bartlet, a former governor of New Hampshire, is appalled when he sees that Vermont maple syrup is on the menu at an upcoming official . (鈥淣ew Hampshire syrup is what we serve in this White House,鈥 he grumbles.) 国产吃瓜黑料 correspondent Tim Neville, who grew up in the heart of Maryland鈥檚 blue crab country, swears that Marylanders and Virginians argue about which state鈥檚 are better鈥攕omething surprising to outsiders, since they both swim and crawl in the same briny waters. (Doesn鈥檛 matter. Neville鈥檚 dad insists that Maryland crabs are 鈥渇atter.鈥) Then there鈥檚 the ongoing scrap over the very different burritos made in Southern and Northern California.
鈥淚n the North,鈥 magazine explained years ago, 鈥渁 burrito is a foil-wrapped behemoth: a tortilla the size of a manhole cover bursting with rice, black beans, and an unending list of ingredients.鈥 [I]t鈥檚 unrecognizable to partisans of the austere (and rice-free) parcels of refried beans and cheese found in the South. Allegiances run strong.鈥