Dining in Vejer de la Frontera--El Muro, a new discovery

A day trip to Conil de la Frontera
another lovely, pristine whitewashed town but unlike Vejer, relatively flat and boasting several lovely soft sandy beaches (including one that is sheltered from the fierce levante winds)…this the Costa de la Luz is what travel writers are calling “Cádizfornia”.

Without a car, one can reach Conil from Cádiz capital by bus in about an hour.

Conil’s population doubles in the summer but in winter remains quiet. Since this part of the Costa de la Luz has more blue flag beaches than anywhere in Andalucía, Conil is a Mecca for Spanish families during the summer vacation period.

It offers many casual bars for tapas, such as El Mirlo, Los Hermanos and La Tasca de Juan, a municipal market, a museum of tuna and a few large resort hotels on the beach (Fuerte Conil, Daia Slow Beach).

It’s one of the four almadraba blue fin tuna trapping centers of the Costa de la Luz and for a month, May through June, local restaurants participate in the “Route of the Blue Fin Tuna”, a gastronomic event, complete with a demonstration of the “ronqueo” or the filleting of an enormous blue fin tuna specimen with some 40 establishments presenting a special tuna dish.

Its vegetable gardens offer the region’s best tomatoes (the ones I so enjoyed at La Carboná in Jerez) and alcauciles, the local name for artichokes.





Conil offers several tuna-centered restaurants, such as Cooking Almadraba by Petaca Chico, the locally owned blue fin tuna company with its flagship store in town plus El Roqueo and La Fontanilla/Francisco Fontanilla, run by the Pérez brothers on very pretty Fontanilla beach, along with the seasonal beach restaurant/chiringuito, Feduchy Playa with sibling restaurant in town, popular for music and cocktails.

At Fontanilla beach in early March
We enjoyed our (very early) lunch of tomato salad (not as flavorful as La Carboná’s), tuna tartare and atún encebollado, tuna braised with onions, at Fontanillla but missed the house specialty, the urta (red banded sea bream)





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Medina Sidonia, the “pastry capital of Andalucía”

If anyone finding himself/herself exploring in this area and hankering for traditional convent sweets baked and sold directly from the nuns,
head to Medina Sidonia to the Monasterio de San Cristóbal y Santa Rita, which at Christmas time received a Repsol Guide solete. It was founded in 1626 by Augustine nuns.

(The most famous polvorones are baked in Estepa.)

The myriad of convent sweets that now can be purchased, and extremely popular at Christmas time.

The majority of nuns who reside now in Spanish convents are not Spanish but instead many are foreign and come from African nations and learn the recipes from the older Spanish nuns about to retire.

We recently bought bizcochos and galletas de chocolate from one of these convents and to our surprise, upon ringing the bell at the ancient torno, or “Lazy Susan” turntable, we waited to say the magic words “Ave Maria Purísima” and hear the nun reply, “Sin pecado concebida” which used to be the traditional greeting from the other side of the torno, to begin this transaction, but…

instead the friendly but somewhat shy nun, not cloistered, and I believe from the Caribbean, opened the door to the sweet shop and said “What would you like to buy”?.
So much for that tradition.


the traditonal torno behind which there is a cloistered nun who takes your order, places it on the lazy Susan, rotates it around, you pick up your order and place the money on the turntable and rotate it back to the nun.


One of the many convents all over Spain selling these delicacies


The young nun preparing our order, slicing our bizcocho


Some of the sweet treats for sale

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Medina certainly is a “sweet Mecca!” I visited the obrader (workshop) of Sobrino de las Trejas (in the industrial zone below the town of Medina) this morning and came away with a bag of goodies. The lovely Maria invited me to the back for a tour of the (vast) kitchen area and introduced me to several female family members who were hard at work preparing the various treats… I had a really lovely visit.

Maria cutting my wedge of “turrón blanda:”

The Sobrinas de las Trejas instagram. I follow them.

https://www.instagram.com/sobrinadelas_trejas/

Maribel, I think I wrote (on another thread?) that I spoke with Chef Connie, who oversees the kitchen at the 3-star B&B where I stay outside Vejer and whose resume includes a stint as chef at RESTAURANTE EL CALIFA in Vejer. There is, indeed, a large container of Manteca colorá (red lard) in the frig.

To demonstrate its use, Connie toasted two thick slices of the bread that she makes here daily. While the bread was still warm, she lathered the slices with Manteca colorá for me to dvrous while still warm, with the fat melting into the toasted bread.

That´s exactly what I do at home on toast, only I don´t have the pleasure of homemade bread!

We always have good bread here but it was not until this week, when I saw Connie in the kitchen, kneading the dough, that I realized that she was the one who made it daily. She truly is a talented chef; dinners here have been excellent, with my favorites being the gambas al ajillo we had last night, and the secreto of pork, which followed. Dinner is not served every night; on the night’s that it’s offered, the blackboard lists the three courses that will be offered that evening. From 2024::

Lomo en manteca for sale at VENTA PINTO–the only problem is how to bring a few packages home with me this year..

Don´t know how you will get it back???..we stashed ours in the fridges of our hotels then drove home, only a 2.5 drive from Trujillo.

@erica1
I just read this morning about the Holy Week (Easter) openings of some of the beachside bars/restaurants/clubs or chiringuitos in the Cádiz province.

What we’ve missed in our visits to the area in Feb/March are these spots for a very casual meal right at the water’s edge on a sunny weekend or just a sunset drink with music,
as their season often begins during Easter week.

So next year for those planning to visit during Easter here are a few–

Easter chiringuito openings:
In Sanlucar de Barrameda,
La Orilla

In Cádiz ciudad,
Beba los Vientos & Bar Club Caleta

In Conil,
El Mirador de El Roqueo

In El Palmar,
La Azotea (but erica already knows about that one) & Natura Playa

In Zahara de los Atunes,
El Pescador & El Galeón del Centollo

In windswept Tarifa,
Ríos, Arte Vida, Carbones 13 y Demente

On beautiful Barrrosa beach outside of Chiclana,
Ohana la Barrosa & Mojama Beach