Ecuador: Quito, Baños, & Riobamba

Up until last month, I had never ventured to South America. So when a cheap flight to Quito popped up on my favorite flight scanner, a few clicks left me in need of doing some Ecuadorian research. When I stepped off the plane a few months later and realized how little Spanish I actually spoke, the true research began. 

With the help of my predetermined topics, here are some of the highlights of my so called research. 

Old Town street, Quito

What I fancied…

With the abundance of street food I was able to try in Ecuador, my first category was a hard choice! I finally landed on mote con chicharron. This savory treat cost me $1.50 in the Square in front of Nuestra Senora del Santa Agua, Church of the Virgin of the Holy Water. Not knowing what exactly I was eating, a post meal google search help me to get to the bottom of this savory envelope of flavor.

Mote Con Chicharron

Roasted hominy was topped with corn nuts, fried pork skin, and a hefty sprinkle of salt, then garnished with a tomato and onion salad. After discovery, it was a struggle not to eat it every day- my cholesterol was not thanking me, but my soul was.

Nuestra Senora del Santa Agua

What I recreated (or attempted)

Starting my Ecuadorian escape in Quito,  I was on the lookout for Ecuador’s culinary claim to fame at which I would make an attempt. But when I boarded a bus for Banos two days later, my choice was immediately apparent. Empanadas. But let’s back up. Smiling to myself, I boarded a $2 air conditioned bus for the 4 hour trip. As we switchbacked our way through the Ecuadorian countryside, individuals would hop aboard intermittently (often as the bus was still rolling) to make an attempt at selling their goods. Many of these individuals were selling empanadas, a common street food in Ecuador. After they’d sold their tray, they would hop off just as easily as they’d come, an easy jaunt as they stepped off the rolling bus. 

After experiencing the hopeful empanada sellers, I thought I’d have my own go at the simple yet delicious staple. Deciding to keep it basic, I decided on cheese and onion empanadas with a sugar and salt sprinkle- the combination of these toppings may seem odd, but it is common in Ecuador and I was pleasantly surprised at how they complimented the cheese! To cut to the chase, I ate every one and my soul was again thanking me. I am thinking a goat cheese and fig filling next time…

Cheese and onion empanadas, sprinkled with salt and sugar

Where I ventured

Volcan Chimborazo rose straight to the top of the list for my third category. Due to altitude and proximity to Earth’s bulging equator, this volcano is said to be the farthest point on Earth from the center. Needless to say, the sunburn was real. 

Whymper Summit, Chimborazo

The environments of Chimborazo seem worlds apart- from the snow capped, glacial summit, to the high altitude desert rain shadow that was a perfect fit to my mental image of Mars, and finally the rolling hills and agricultural fields at the lower altitudes.

Contrasting environments, Chimborazo

Wanting to experience these in the open, I booked my favorite experience in Ecuador- a mountain biking tour that started at the Carrel Hut at an altitude of 4850 meters on the way to the Whymper summit. We road down the mountain, passing Vicuñas (a native animal similar to the domestic alpacas in Ecuador) and ichu grass homes as we went. A slurry of rain in the last leg of the ride combined with dirt roads left us mud coated, head to toe. It was awesome. 

Ecuadorian woman in the shadows of Chimborazo
View of Volcan Chimborazo from below

Who/what/where moved me

I had found myself in Ecuador for Easter. I could not have been luckier. A devout Catholic country, it was all too easy to follow the crowds to central squares for Good Friday and Easter Sunday processions. But what lingered with me was the afterward. On the Monday following Easter Sunday, I visited the fore mentioned Nuestra Senora del Santa Agua, Church of the Virgin of the Holy Water. I had been reluctant to fight the crowds the day before and was happy to enjoy the quiet serenity of the day after. The church still had a handful of worshipers kneeling on the pews before them, rosaries and gold statues floating above. I am not religious, but I cannot deny that in large churches like this I often experience the feeling of something in the atmosphere, an energy that both frightens and intrigues me.

Bye-altar, Nuestra Senora del Santa Agua

Stepping into a covered courtyard left of the main altar, I found a bye-altar filled with votive candles. On this day, what struck me was not the numerous candles alight on the altar. It was the candles on the other side. Workers were shoveling piles of the burnt wax away, I can only imagine to be melted down again and sold outside the church for the next worshipper. A wall masked the workers, and I could only catch a glimpse through the gap through which the used candles were pushed.

Votive candles, Monday after Easter Sunday

At first, I was not sure why this image struck me. Later on it came to me that it was the realization of a purely human background necessary to operate this transcendent place. It was so easy to feel an eerie presence in the cold church, a feeling of unearthly power. The feeling was nothing new to me, but the contrast with the workers shoveling remnants of Easter Sunday away behind the wall lingered. Was this human factor the base of the power, an embodiment of the Holy Spirit? Or was the feeling simply the combined energy of millions who had built, shaped, and prayed in this place? Or was the energy I had felt upon entering purely my imagination, a conceptualization of worth due to the value others around me had given this place? I suppose that is up to each to decide for their own.

Next stop, a little closer to home.

My Creative Project

In my professional life, projects are spoken of endlessly- construction projects, rehabilitation projects, community involvement projects, continuous improvement projects, even self-development plans (the project of yourself). A project can be anything that you spend a considerable amount of time on to get to some end goal. When you have a plan for a project, priorities stick to that plan while other details might fall to the wayside. Sometimes areas of your life might bleed together, and those ‘details’ can include personal life, relationships, or free time. One of those details that has fallen to the wayside for me is creative expression. And I am going to do something about it.

I am starting my own Creative Project. Yes, I capitalized it. My Creative Project. Like other projects, it will include a plan and measures of its own. This will not allow my creative expression to fall to the wayside as one of those ‘details’ that can be sacrificed for other priorities. 

Where to start? 

I’ve found myself at a point in my life where I have time to travel. Not just a weekend here or there, but real time. Two weeks at a time! Hello rotational role, I never thought I’d love you so much! But I won’t be here forever, and I want to make the absolute most of this opportunity. This is where my Creative Project is going to start. Now since I can name it whatever I please…

Every project needs a plan and measures.

I will write a post about a featured location (wherever my travels take me) once a month for one year. Tacos and Moscato will house that post. Each post will consist of four consistent, predetermined topics to explore my chosen highlights of that location. Those topics will be explored shortly.

Tacos and Moscato is not aimed toward monetary value, social advancement, or publicity. This is a purely amateur blog, designed to give structure while allowing freedom in my very own Creative Project. So whether or not I (and possibly my mother) am the sole reader, here it goes!

And so the location topics are defined…

I love food. It’s a necessity and we spend a substantial portion of our income on it (some more than others)- so we may as well enjoy it as much as possible! Which is why it’s not so surprising two of my four topics consist of what I ate. Here they are:

  • What I fancied: the delectable, maybe more unknown or outlandish, dish that I stumbled across. 
  • What I recreated (or attempted): that local cuisine that is on every corner and that everyone tries- when in Rome, as they say. Food is a fundamental column of a culture; what better way to immerse myself than to have a go at their culinary claim to fame?

My next gets me away from what I had for lunch… or does it? 

  • Where I ventured: This isn’t the city or the mountain range- that is the base for each feature article itself. THIS is the flower stand that proved there are at least 300 shades of blue. The waterfall that washed my thoughts away. The tiny deli on the corner that recreated my idea of what a sandwich could be (still talking about my lunch). Whatever spot it was that left me lingering on longer than expected.

I have two ‘what’s and a ‘where’. For my last topic, I considered having a ‘who’. Who was that fascinating person that both awed and inspired me on meeting? But I know that I would have trouble sticking to this choice. I didn’t want to give myself an agenda for meeting people- this isn’t a job after all, it‘s a Creative Project. And adding such an agenda had the potential to make me feel less genuine in taking interest in individuals, or even stretch to taking an interrogative approach to conversations. So I left myself room to flex instead…

  • Who/what/where moved me: that experience that makes you question your view or approach on life. Hang in there- this doesn’t mean something that created a mass epiphany.  This topic is aimed at allowing space for me to spend some time on the experience that will stay with me after my trip for years to come- whether that be a person, a process, an injustice, or a new idea. It is that space for me to dig a little deeper than what I had for lunch. 

With the topics introduced, let my Creative Project begin! First stop, Ecuador.