• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

The Mija Chronicles

Mexican food and culture, on both sides of the border

beach

Five days in Tulum

December 20, 2012 by Lesley Tellez

The beach at Coco Tulum.

Crayton and I went to Tulum three years ago, and we loved it so much we decided to spend five days there this year.

The beach is still spectacular, but the town didn’t feel like the same place. New pricey hotels and restaurants lie along the beach road. There’s a Tulum aesthetic now: hand-painted signs meant to look weathered by the sun, open-air restaurants with lights hanging from the trees, bars with chalkboard menus that sell artisan mezcal and fresh-juice cocktails. It’s charming until you realize that it all looks the same, and the prices, for middling to below-average food, are double, triple and quadruple of what you’d pay in Mexico City. (This is along the beach — you can still find cheap taquerías and street stands in town.)

I know I sound nostalgic, but I liked how solitary the Tulum beach felt on our last trip. I liked the mix of casual and cool and rustic, and I liked that it still felt like Mexico. Of course everyone else did, too, which is why there are now more people than ever.

Here’s quick run-down of our trip, in case you’re headed there anytime soon.

TULUM LODGING & TRANSPORTATION

We stayed at the Secret Garden hotel, the same place in town where we stayed last time. We paid about $63 USD per night for a room with air conditioning and a kitchenette, which I still think is a good value for your money. The hotel provides fruit and cookies for breakfast, and free tea and instant coffee. We made breakfast in our room a few times and ate in the garden, which was nice.

We rented a car for fairly cheap through Budget at the Cancún airport. Usually we decline extra car rental insurance, as our credit card provides basic collision coverage. But the rental agent insisted that according to Quintana Roo law, we had to pay for third-party liability insurance, meaning any costs if we injured someone else in an accident. This cost an extra $20 USD per day. We asked him to show us the law, and he pulled up a page on the Internet that appeared to reinforce what he said. Anyone else ever have to deal with this?

WHERE TO EAT

Usually Crayton and I skimp on lodging so we can spend more money on food and sight-seeing. My favorite upscale restaurant — worth every penny and then some — was Hechizo, a small place with only three nightly seatings located at the end of the beach road. Chef Stefan Schober, who owns the restaurant with his pastry-chef wife, sat down at our table and recited us the menu, which changes daily depending on availability of ingredients. We ordered shrimp curry and steak, and ate every last lick of sauce, and every grain of rice off the plates.

NaturALL, a cafe in Tulum, Mexico

Another favorite in town was NaturALL, a cheery spot for a cheap Mexican or American-style breakfast. I liked the banana pancakes (expats in Mexico know how hard good pancakes are to find), the eggs with chaya, and the chewy, crisp toast. Good coffee and orange juice too, and they’ve got WiFi.

For a heavier lunch or dinner, I loved the mole veracruzano at El Tábano, one of the older beach-road restaurants. (Tip: Bring bug spray when you’re going out to eat, or ask the restaurant to lend you some.)

Mole with a side of fried, cheese-stuffed plantains at El Tábano in Tulum

The patio at El Tábano, Tulum

We also liked Hartwood, an outdoor restaurant owned by two Americans (former New Yorkers). Crayton had a succulent grilled arrachera, and I had a spicy, peppery grilled fish served in a jícara with beans. The vibe is quirky and chill, like so much of Tulum now, and the cocktails were excellent.

BEACH TIME

Because our hotel wasn’t on the beach, Crayton and I had to choose a hotel or beach club to visit every day, or pick a section of public beach. Coco Hotel, one of my favorites, didn’t have beach-side drink or food service, but it did have hammocks and a covered area, which is good for people like us who aren’t sun-worshippers. The hotel restaurant, Juanita Diavola, also had decent pizza — thinnish crust, not too much cheese. Better than a lot of places in Mexico City.

Coco Beach, Tulum

Cabanas at hotel Zazil Kin, Tulum

My other favorite beach to laze away the afternoon was Zazil Kin, located just south of the Tulum ruins. You can rent beach chairs for 50 pesos per person, and a little cabana serves beer and potato chips. You could also snag a section of the public beach directly in front of them for free.

We sat under a palapa all day and then walked down the beach for a late lunch at Mezzanine.

The beach at Zazil Kin, Tulum

I’d like to go back to Tulum, but I realized on this trip that I really want my own kitchen, and I want to be further away from the trendy masses.

Have you found your own attitude about travel changing? How many trips does it take to really get to know a place?

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, Tulum

Rio de Janeiro – A photoset

December 5, 2011 by Lesley Tellez

The beach in Leblon, where we stayed

They sell bags of these on the beaches -- they're fluffy, donut-shaped snacks that come in salty and sweet flavors.

Sunset overlooking Leblon beach

One of the views from the Christ the Redeemer mountain

A samba band boarded the little tram that took us up the mountain.

Jack fruit dangled from the trees, outside the windows of the tram near Christ the Redeemer.

Rio has agaves too! These are outside one of the subway stations.

The Escadaria Selarón, a famous set of mosaic steps in Rio's Lapa neighborhood

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, brazil, photo essay

A long, lazy weekend in Huatulco, Oaxaca

December 1, 2010 by Lesley Tellez

Good friends from Seattle came to visit us last week. Since it’s cold where they live, we took off for a long weekend in Huatulco.

To say we all needed this trip is an understatement. The Seattleites only get sun three months a year; I’d been dealing with Eat Mexico up to my ears (business is great) while simultaneously nursing a flu-ridden husband with Gatorade and soup and medicine. Crayton needed it because he was the sick one.

None of us had ever been to Oaxaca before. I’d kind of longed to visit one of Oaxaca’s small, bohemian beach towns (Mazunte perhaps) and wondered whether Huatulco, a planned tourist development boosted by the Mexican government, would just be another copy of Ixtapa. But it wasn’t. Huatulco was small and hilly and quiet, with resorts and hotels sprinkled around the area’s nine bays. The one bay we saw, Tangolunda, still felt fairly private. There were vendors, but not too many. Only sound was the breeze rustling the palapa fronds.

We rented a beach house on Tangolunda Bay, probably the most developed portion of Huatulco. A Dreams resort lay just down the road from our place, plus a Barceló resort and a golf course. The rental had three bedrooms and came with the use of a VW bug, so we could drive to pick up groceries or to dinner. (This also fulfilled a fantasy I didn’t know I had, to zip around in a bug in a Mexican beach town.)

Huatulco seemed great. But with only three full days of vacation, we didn’t have a whole lot of reasons to leave the beach house. This was the view from our bedroom:

We also had a pool in the living room.

We did explore a little bit. One afternoon we traveled to the Camino Real Zaashila to have drinks under the palapas and take in the sea breeze. We drove into Las Crucecitas, Huatulco’s charming downtown area, and had crispy-thin tlayudas piled with Oaxacan cheese at Sabor de Oaxaca. We slurped on paletas for dessert and walked through the square. We ate American-style hamburgers and Tex-Mex at the Tipsy Blowfish in Tangolunda, which is owned by a Texan. The salsa tasted eerily Tex-Mex and I couldn’t put my finger on why. Then it hit me: canned tomatoes.

We also grilled outdoors one night, setting up dinner on a table that overlooked the water and the stars.

Strangely, now that we’re back, I’m exhausted. Time to hit the gym and recover some energy. And maybe make a dent in some of those mimosas and chocolate chip cookies I had for breakfast.

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, Huatulco, Oaxaca

A weekend in Ixtapa and Zihuatanejo

July 12, 2010 by Lesley Tellez

One of my best girlfriends from college came to visit last week.

I kept offering food to her and she kept eating, so over the course of a few days in Mexico City, she tried atole, tlacoyos, gusanos, mescal, pulque and tacos al pastor. After we had sufficiently ran around town and stuffed ourselves, we jetted off to the beach.

It fell to me as Mexico ambassador to come up with a good beach location. I didn’t have a lot of time to plan — been launching this thing called Eat Mexico — so after some quick thinking, I decided on Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo.
…

Read More

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, Guerrero

Lazing by the beach in Pie de la Cuesta

November 30, 2009 by Lesley Tellez

Joy and I had planned to stay at an upscale Acapulco hotel this past weekend, but at the last minute we ditched it in favor of staying in Pie de la Cuesta, a quiet, rustic stretch of beach about six miles northwest of Acapulco proper. The surf there is too strong to swim in, but you can sit under a palapa, drink a beer and gaze at the ocean. Plus the rooms pretty cheap. It’s pretty popular with Mexico City residents.

There is one road from Acapulco to Pie de la Cuesta, and it’s only two lanes wide. Consequently, the cab ride takes anywhere from 40 minutes to an hour. (To go six miles!) True to friends’ tales about Acapulco, the drive wasn’t exactly pretty, except for the occasional flashes of the sea in the distance. Buses and taxis crowded the roads and belched exhaust. Car mechanics and tire-repair shops lined the streets.

One thing I absolutely loved, though, were the tricked-out pesero buses. I was so obsessed I kept taking pictures of them. (The photos below represent maybe half of my tricked-out pesero-bus collection.)

We stayed at Villa Roxana, a clean, simple place with a pool, a small restaurant and air conditioning. We paid 600 pesos a night for two double beds, the equivalent of about $46 USD. I thought it was worth it: We had air conditioning, a ceiling fan. While the water wasn’t hot, it was warmish. The beach was about a two-minute walk away — we had to cut through the neighboring Villa Nirvana, a pretty place owned by two Americans.

We spent Thursday night watching the sun set into the water. Can’t ask for a better setting to ponder what you’ve been grateful for.

On Friday, we took a boat ride around the Laguna Coyuca, a large, lake-sized body of water nearby. It was absolutely beautiful — serene, quiet, full of wildlife. We saw pelicans and baby wildcats, and we stopped at a small wildlife preserve and saw iguanas, crocodiles, a javelina and a deer. Plus we trolled through a mangrove forest, which had eerie, thick roots that grew downward and sideways.

One of the boats docked at the Laguna Coyuca

Some of the odd-looking mangrove trees we saw on our nature walk

It really was a short visit, and I’d love to go back with a group of friends. Next time, though, I’d want to find out a little more about where to get fresh seafood, and fresh fruit. I was a little disappointed with the options near Pie de la Cuesta — canned-tasting ceviche at Tres Marias, overcooked fish at Coyuca 2000, and even canned mushrooms on our pizza at Vaymas, supposedly an upscale resort. Maybe my standards are too high. I was reading “My Life in France” the whole weekend, and salivating over Julia Child’s visits to the French countryside.

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, Guerrero

Off to Acapulco!

November 26, 2009 by Lesley Tellez

Joy and I are skipping off to Pie de la Cuesta for Thanksgiving, where we’ll be stuffing our faces with fresh ceviche and shrimp cocktails instead of turkey and pumpkin pie.

I can’t even begin to describe what I’ve been thankful for over the past year. This life, the food, the people I’ve met… every day is an adventure, and I’m so grateful to be able to share it all with my husband, my favorite person in the world.

I hope you enjoy your holiday and find some time to reflect, wherever you are!

Filed Under: Reflections Tagged With: beach, Guerrero

Back from Tulum, and plotting my return

November 17, 2009 by Lesley Tellez

I’m not generally the type of person who goes gaga over the beach. Crayton and I prefer exploring big cities — we went to Buenos Aires on our honeymoon, Madrid when we were first dating, San Francisco on our first anniversary.

That said, I went completely and utterly nuts over Tulum. Like, sitting on the beach and muttering, “I can’t believe it. I can’t believe it.”

The water was so bright and green and clear, it was otherworldly. (Had we been transported into another galaxy and I didn’t know it?) On a cloudless night, thousands of stars appeared, as if God had ushered in the evening by tossing a handful of beach sand over his shoulder.

On Friday, the first night we arrived, we stopped drinks at a trendy beach bar and I just kept staring dumbly at the sky. Most hotels cut their electricity off around 11 p.m. but this one didn’t. The result, while looking out over the water, ended up being this vast, inky nothingness topped by millions of twinkling points of light. Picture all of that, set to pulsing trance music. It felt like a party on the edge of the world, or what it might be like to live in a half-finished painting. For a crazy second I wondered if we really were living in a half-finished painting. (This trip exposed my suppressed Ray Bradbury side.) Crayton and I tried to pick out the Little Dipper, but we couldn’t remember exactly what it looked like, so we searched for it on Crayton’s Blackberry. Even out there we had data service.

Before we left for Tulum, I thought: We’ll go to the ruins! We’ll swim in cenotes! I’m a do-er, normally. But on this trip all we did was laze by the beach.

By Monday I’d memorized the waves’ slow, gentle crescendo, and the floury feel of the sand on my palms, and the sound of palapa fronds rustling in the breeze. I read one book and half of two more. We sipped beers under an umbrella and ate fresh ceviche. We had piña coladas on a terrace that overlooked the Caribbean. (Whereupon Crayton mused, “I think the beach is pretty much the only appropriate place for a man to order a piña colada.”)

I’d feared that Tulum would be too touristy, too trendy, and too full of vendors. But overall, it was exactly what we were looking for: a quiet, unbelievably beautiful place to relax. If you’re interested in the details (where we stayed and ate), I’ve left them below, plus a few pictures.
…

Read More

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, Tulum

Post Vallarta zen

June 22, 2009 by Lesley Tellez

Puerto Vallarta Conchas Chinas view

We spent the weekend in Puerto Vallarta and didn’t travel much beyond our hotel complex. We had the ocean right at our front door, and an Oxxo convenience store just a few blocks away, which sold salty snacks and elusive-in-Mexico-City Coors Light. Sitting in our balcony jacuzzi and sipping a Coors… life was just about perfect at that moment.

We stayed at the Playa Hotel Conchas Chinas, an older, charming spot on the south side of PV. All the 19 rooms there have ocean views, and they’ve got two restaurants and a small beach area. On Saturday after breakfast, we plopped ourselves under a palapa, ordered a bucket of beers (it was two-for-one!) and read and listened to the waves. The only vendors were quiet men walking around with skewers of fish and shrimp, and they only stopped if you flagged them down. Of course I did — had to try the shrimp doused in lime and hot sauce.

Even though Mexico City is less than two hours away by plane, the place felt much closer to California. We heard a lot of California accents, saw lots of tanned college guys in Hollister T-shirts and flip-flops, and Audrina Patridge-y girls in huge sunglasses and smocked coverups. Flour tortillas, not corn, came with food, which I was lukewarm about. On Sunday we ate real nachos — also hard to find in Mexico City — at a bar called Andale, whose logo was a Mexican in a sombero sitting next to a donkey. The waiter kept asking random people who walked by, “Ready for lunch, amigos?”

Overall, what really struck me about Puerto Vallarta was the amount of money there — or at least in Nuevo Vallarta, the area near the airport. In the taxi heading to our hotel, American-style strip malls lined the avenue, and high-rise hotels and condo towers were grouped along the shore. One billboard advertised “the new luxury beachfront address” next to a photo of a new condo development. We also sped by the most gigantic Liverpools department store ever, at the Galerias Vallarta mall. It was practically the size of Dallas City Hall.

Of course, at my insistence, we did take advantage of the upper-class scene — all that money means PV has some fabulous restaurants. We went to a place called Trio on Saturday night for fresh Mediterranean food. Everything was delicious: homemade bread and garlic butter, sauteed calamari in a spicy tomato broth, homemade ricotta ravioli, the seafood couscous with chunks of marlin, octopus and shrimp…

I didn’t want to leave, but it was kind of nice to come back to cool, rainy weather in Mexico City. Puerto Vallarta felt like a sauna.

A few more pictures from our trip:

Under a palapa on Playa Conchas Chinas

Under a palapa on Playa Conchas Chinas

Chilled Pacifico, anyone?

Chilled Pacifico, anyone?

Fresh caught lobsters for sale on the beach.

Fresh caught lobsters for sale on the beach.

Playa Conchas Chinas on an overcast day

Hotel Conchas Chinas

The view while eating breakfast on Sunday morning. We saw sea lions.

The view while eating breakfast on Sunday morning. We saw sea lions.

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, mariscos, Puerto Vallarta, vacation

What it’s like to swim in a cenote

April 3, 2009 by Lesley Tellez

Cuzama cenote

For some reason, I pictured cenotes to be kind of like sinkholes on the side of the road. I don’t know where I got this from, but I had this whole image of a highway worker picking up trash, seeing a cenote, stepping around it, and calling over his shoulder to the next guy, “Hey! Don’t step in that!”

Actually, cenotes — from what I’ve gathered anyway — are way too large for someone to accidentally dunk his foot. They’re natural, fresh-water pools, and some are in caves. The ones I visited on a hacienda outside Cuzama in the Yucatan were dark, serene, eerie, mystical things. Swimming in them was a brain trip. How does one swim in a cave? Aren’t caves for walking and peering at gnarly, witch-fingery rock formations?

We traveled to these cenotes by horse-drawn buggy, because there’s no other way to reach them unless you want to walk for 8 kilometers in the blistering sun. At the first cenote, we climbed down a set of rickety wooden stairs and found a calm, blue sheet of glass. It didn’t even look like water. I was kind of scared. Maybe Nessie at Loch Ness had a Yucatecan cousin?

Our guide was amused. “They’re completely safe,” he said.

So we started swimming, which is really the only way to see everything. Tree roots hung down from the ceiling like Rapunzel hair. It was amazingly quiet, as if the mouth of the cave had suddenly inhaled and was now waiting while we finished our frolicking. Before the loud American teenagers got there, the only sounds were of Joy and I pushing and pulling the water, and the occasional bat making a weird, high-pitched noise. (And then me saying, “Oh god, are there bats here?”)

The Yucatan has more than 5,000 cenotes, about 3,000 of which are “registered,” meaning the state knows generally where they are. Our guide laughed when I asked if they had healing powers.

I really can’t wait to swim in them again. It was among the weirdest, coolest experiences ever. Next time I’m bringing proper shoes and a towel though. My cute little Privo flats were pretty much ruined after this trip.

Filed Under: Travel Tagged With: beach, Yucatan

Primary Sidebar

Who is Mija?


Mija is Lesley Téllez, a writer, mom, and culinary entrepreneur in New York City. I lived in Mexico City for four years, which cemented my deep love for Mexican food and culture. I'm currently the owner/operator of the top-rated tourism company Eat Mexico. I also wrote the cookbook Eat Mexico: Recipes from Mexico City's Streets, Markets & Fondas.

Search this site

Buy My Book On Amazon

Eat Mexico by Lesley Tellez

Get The Mija Chronicles in your inbox

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Read my old posts

Copyright © 2025 · Foodie Pro & The Genesis Framework