LUCAS DE GALVEZ MERCADO
HEARTBEAT OF MERIDA
One cannot visit Merida without
shopping at the Lucas de Galvas Mercado. We did purchase some food
items here, and though we bartered, we found the same items cheaper at
the local corner store right around the block from our hotel! Never
matter - it was only about a dollar difference in total, and the
experience of shopping in the market was well worth that extra buck!
I
had no idea radish grew in Mexico - but it turned out to be my missing
ingredient for my Yucatecan salsa recipe! The mercado is crammed full
of stands like this, plus live chickens, a fish market, hardware
section, toys, candy, eateries, shoes, you name it - you will probably
find it here.
And
everything is so colorful, it's a dream for people like me who love to
play photographer when I can (even though I'm not). We did ask several
times if it was okay to take pictures, and unlike other parts of Mexico
where people want money for photographs, everyone in the market said
"Si, Si," and waved their hands about as if to say "take pictures of
anything you like."
Shark meat anyone??
I
must admit to being brainwashed by western standards for food safety
and cleanliness of places where food is prepared. This part of the
mercado is pretty old, dusty, and there are cats hanging about. The
thought of all that dust and hair in the air came to mind when I saw
this batch of raw tortilla sitting in the main hallway, where any person
could have touched it! It later occured to me that the guide book says
that most restaurants get their produce and food supplies from the
market, which means this batch of raw tortilla may have been baked and
on our table by supper time. Oh well - we didn't get sick.
This
is the tortilla factory from the other side. It seemed like a pretty
busy little factory, but hard to imagine it would pass inspection at
home. That said, I am often critical of how regulated everything is in
Canada.
Fruit
and veggies galore! Everything is so beautiful stacked and arranged. I
have read that apparently the produce here is sprayed, and is far from
organic. This was a real disappointment, as fruit in Mexico has always
tasted much better to me than what gets imported into Canada, having
traveled in a truck for days. One would think the fruit here would be
ripened on the vine, considering food grows everywhere in Mexico...
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