We lived in a one room apartment near Washington Park,
across the street from St. Xavier Catholic church.
The apartment was a dump (dirt floors) with the
bathroom aside shared with other tenants. We were a
very poor family, there were six of us counting my
grandmother.
El Paso at that time offered zero opportunities for
Mexican-Americans, so my dad moved all of us the Los
Angeles. There were many families from El Paso that
moved to Los Angeles back in the early '40s, including
one by the name of Antony Quinn who later won a couple
of Oscars-you see, we can make it if only given the
opportunity.
Alberto.
--- Margarita Vallazza <TeaCozyGran@...> wrote:
> Where did you live in El Paso at that time? I lived
> across from Sacred
> Heart Church and School for the first 8 years of my
> life. As a kid, I
> hated going across the border because it was so
> unfamiliar to be and
> because of all the noise, the exotic odors, the
> beggars, and the
> language. I was always afraid, although no one
> would have harmed me
> but that's how I was then. Now, I can appreciate
> everything about it,
> including the interesting architecture. Marge:)
>
> On Jun 27, 2005, at 4:03 PM, Alberto Duarte wrote:
>
> > Good and sad times:
> > We also went to the Marcado in Juarez back in the
> > early '50s. My mom would buy dry goods which
> were
> > really expensive for us to buy in the United
> States
> > (Los Angeles). Would you believe that we also
> > purchased young parrots and smuggled them across
> to El
> > Paso! Later on this turned out to be a sad
> > remembrance for me, when I found out that
> thousands,
> > maybe millions, of the these beautiful birds were
> > wiped out of the rain forests in Mexico, just
> because
> > of greed and ignorance.
> >
> > Alberto.
> >
> > --- Margarita Vallazza <TeaCozyGran@...>
> wrote:
> >
> > > When I was a kid, we would cross the border
> into
> > > Juarez with my aunts
> > > and mother to go shopping at the Mercado, and
> one of
> > > the merchants had
> > > a display of pinole. It was sold in paper
> > > cones--sometimes pi�±ata-type
> > > paper and sometimes newspaper. I liked
> it...didn't
> > > get it too often,
> > > though. Marge:)
> > > On Jun 27, 2005, at 11:03 AM, Irma GomezLucero
> > > wrote:
> > >
> > > > � Pinole is great with a little milk--sort
> of a
> > > mush.� Love it for
> > > > breakfast.� Has anyone heard the
> following
> > > expression:
> > > >
> > > > � � � � � El que tiene mas
> saliva, come mas
> > > pinole.
> > > >
> > > >Â Sorry didn't use accents even after the
> flood of
> > > emails on the
> > > > subject.� My
> > > >Â engineer and architect cousins from Mexico
> D.F.
> > > don't either in their
> > > >Â letters to me. When asked about this, they
> > > responded that they knew
> > > > how to
> > > >Â pronounce the words without the accents,
> etc.,
> > > >
> > > >Â -----Original Message-----
> > > >Â From: lrapido [mailto:1gnzlz@...]
> > > >Â Sent: Saturday, June 25, 2005 4:35 PM
> > > >Â To: ranchos@yahoogroups.com
> > > >Â Subject: [ranchos] Pinole
> > > >
> > > >Â Talking about food...
> > > >Â I wonder how many of our members have heard
> of
> > > "Pinole" ? Pinole is a
> > > > high
> > > >Â energy food made from dry roasted corn
> ground-up
> > > and mixed with brown
> > > > sugar
> > > >Â (Piloncillo, o panocha) and cinnamon and
> > > sometimes either lemon or
> > > > orange
> > > >Â peel for flavoring. The Tarahumara indians
> of
> > > Chihuahua use it as a
> > > > staple
> > > >Â food. Tarahumaras are basically
> vegetarians, with
> > > meat accounting for
> > > > about
> > > >Â less than 10% of their diet. They eat
> Pinole it
> > > or drink it ( can be
> > > > mixed
> > > >Â with water or ? ) before they run the ultra
> > > marathons.� Pinole is a
> > > > very
> > > >Â convinient high energy food because in its
> powder
> > > form can keep for
> > > > months.
> > > >Â It is carried in a pouch during long trips
> and is
> > > used to sometimes
> > > > replace
> > > >Â whole meals. The Tarahumaras are
> universally
> > > known as runners.
> > > > Tarahumaras
> > > >Â have run the 100 mile marathon from Nevada
> to
> > > California.� They think
> > > >Â nothing of running 50 miles or more to go
> visit
> > > friends or relatives
> > > > in a
> > > > distant village.� When was the last time
> you did
> > > that!
> > > >Â They hunt by running animals until the
> animal
> > > gets tired and gives
> > > > up. That
> > > >Â includes deer, rabbits and whatever animal
> they
> > > choose to chase.
> > > >Â Pinole is very sweet and very tasty. Try
> it, next
> > > time you go to
> > > > Mexico, or
> > > >Â better yet, make your own! In Mexico it is
> sold
> > > at just about any
> > > > grocery
> > > >Â store, kids love it, just make sure you
> plan a
> > > high energy activity
> > > > for
> > > >Â them. If you are runner or into high energy
> > > sports, you should give
> > > > it a
> > > >Â try.
> > > >
> > > >Â John Gonzalez
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >Â Yahoo! Groups Links
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
> > > >
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> > >
> >
> >
> >
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