Carlos Salgado wowed the world of Mexican meals the second he opened Taco María in 2013.
His marriage of high-end with homestyle — sturgeon tacos, Flamin’ Sizzling chicharrones, handmade blue corn tortillas from kernels he imported from Mexico and milled himself — appeared higher suited to Los Angeles or Mexico Metropolis than a hipster meals corridor in Costa Mesa.
The accolades got here rapidly: L.A Instances restaurant of the yr in 2018. 4 straight Michelin stars. One in every of Esquire’s most vital U.S. eating places of the 2010s. Salgado was a Greatest Chef in California finalist for the James Beard Awards — the Oscars of the restaurant trade — in June 2023.
A month later, Salgado shocked his followers by closing Taco María.
As his good buddy, I’ve the unique on what’s subsequent. It’s … Wisconsin?
A number of months after the restaurant closed, Salgada relocated to Door County — the childhood residence of his spouse, Emilie Coulson Salgado — in a transfer that left Southern California’s meals scene befuddled, if folks knew in any respect.
If anybody deserved to go all “Walden,” it was the considerate Salgado. He had labored nonstop for a decade, weathering the pandemic and an Orange County viewers that often acquired mad when he defined why his house didn’t serve chips and salsa or had “Black Lives Matter” stenciled on the patio window. Taco María’s lease was up, the situation was by no means the very best match and Carlos and Emilie needed to spend extra time with their two younger youngsters and her dad and mom whereas they recharged and determined what was subsequent.
Now, after a while off, they’re within the restaurant enterprise once more, opening La Sirena this month in Ephraim, inhabitants 345, about an hour and a half away from the closest huge metropolis, Inexperienced Bay.
Count on all the things that made Taco María so unbelievable — a prix fixe menu, a give attention to native produce and meat, these fabulous blue corn tortillas that style like a time portal to Tenochtitlan — besides on the shores of Lake Michigan as a substitute of off the 405 freeway.
About 8% of Wisconsin’s inhabitants is Latino, and Door County is 96% white. The Mexican meals scene exterior Milwaukee and perhaps Racine remains to be principally combo plates washed down with huge margaritas, or cartoonishly huge burritos within the Chipotle mannequin. Wisconsin is … Wisconsin, land of cheese curds and brats and brandy Outdated Fashioneds.
“I would push back that [Mexican food] is out of place anywhere in the United States,” Salgado instructed me by telephone final week. “We are the foundation of the restaurant and hospitality industry, farming and construction — I don’t need to say all the ways we’re embedded.”
He certain shut me up there! In addition to, I’m proud that his and Emilie’s subsequent step is in an remoted spot in a state that went for Donald Trump in two of the previous three elections. California wants all of the ambassadors we will get, particularly in locations that don’t seem like us — and we will’t get higher ambassadors than them.
Carlos Salgado, former chef and co-owner of Taco Maria, on an out of doors journey in Door County, Wisconsin, together with his two youngsters in an undated photograph. Salgado and his spouse, Emilie Coulson Salgado, are opening La Sirena, a high-end Mexican restaurant, in Ephraim, Wisconsin.
(Courtesy of the Salgado household)
“In parts of the Midwest, you mention you’re from California, there’s inevitably haters who want to believe that we left California because it’s a failed state, and they try to commiserate with us about how California is uninhabitable,” the 45-year-old Salgado stated. “Of course, I don’t believe that. I have pangs of longing for my home state every day, especially fruits!”
“I actually thought we’d live in California forever, and I still consider us California people,” Coulson Salgado, 41, stated in a separate interview. “But this experiment to be here [Wisconsin] turned out to be really good for us and our children.”
The 2 met in San Francisco in 2008, when Coulson Salgado was working for a literacy nonprofit and Salgado was a pastry chef at a high-end restaurant. He moved again to his native Orange County in 2011 aiming to assist together with his immigrant household’s Cal-Mex restaurant in Orange.
As a substitute, he capitalized on the period’s meals truck craze and opened Taco María. Coulson moved down in 2013 to assist transition the luxe lonchera to a brick-and-mortar, ultimately changing into the restaurant’s common supervisor and beverage director, roles she will even assume at La Sirena.
Taco María was a each day miracle, particularly given its Orange County location. Salgado acquired nationwide media protection and compelled Angelenos to do the unimaginable: journey to O.C. for Mexican meals. His exhortations for folks to worth Mexican delicacies and the individuals who make it was important in an period the place too many People love the previous and detest the latter.
However the grind of working a restaurant — which I do know too effectively, by way of my spouse — wore on the couple. They didn’t wish to be rushed into opening a brand new Taco María, so that they determined a sojourn to Door County could be enjoyable and likewise proper.
“Emilie put in 15 years with me in California,” Salgado stated, and shifting to Wisconsin “was something we felt we deserved as a family.”
He unwound from the restaurant rush by mountain climbing by way of Door County’s forests and fishing in its waterways whereas persevering with Taco María’s profitable salsa macha mail-order enterprise; Emilie moonlighted as a grant author. The plan was to return to California someday in 2024 and hop again on the restaurant hamster wheel.
However the extra they skilled Door County’s slower tempo of life, the extra they realized it might be almost unimaginable to copy that in Southern California.
“We started Taco María without kids,” Salgado stated. “This trial gave us the opportunity to imagine the kind of balance that we wanted, and we realized that we stood a very good chance of creating it here.”
I requested if he meant the price of residing or the sclerotic visitors or the dearth of inexpensive housing or any of the opposite causes California quitters give after they go away and whine about their transfer.
“We’re certainly not California quitters,” Salgado deadpanned. “People talk all the time about making career changes to spend more time with their families, and this is really it for now.”
Coulson Salgado stated it’s been “wonderful” to return to the place she grew up “with the eyes of an adult.” Door County has seen newcomers from California lately, principally younger households drawn by its immaculate landscapes. She does miss the multiculturalism of Southern California — “My son will say, ‘Let’s get pho!’ and I have to remind him we’re not in Orange County anymore,” she stated with fun.
Chef Carlos Salgado scoops cooked natural blue maze corn right into a moist mill to grind for tortillas at Taco Maria in Costa Mesa on Tuesday, February 16, 2016.
(Christina Home / Los Angeles Instances)
She doesn’t body the opening of La Sirena within the rural Midwest within the age of Trump as a political act. However she introduced up the “terrible” deportation deluge that has hit Southern California this summer time (Wisconsin has thus far been spared, “but we’re on high alert for it”) as a cause why their presence issues.
“It’s not like we’re in some alternate universe out here,” she stated, “but you could be if you weren’t paying attention, and that’s what’s scary … But that’s why it’s more important than ever to create more pockets of joy.”
Her husband vowed that California “hasn’t seen the last of us yet,” whereas giving no timeline for a return.
In an excellent world, he and Emilie would run each La Sirena and a restaurant again in O.C.
“I’m proudly Mexican American,” Salgado stated. “And I’m not going to shy away from taking up space and perform brown excellence in anywhere that I am.”