San Jose-Guerrero Park (SJG)
Good news, La Lenguans — the San Jose-Guerrero Park is next on the list of the city’s “Pavement to Parks” plaza. Basic sketch of the space from Gillian at Greening Guerrero (tree size may vary…)
Note this should actually *increase* the number of parking spots.
Expect to see something like the new space at 17th & Castro:
This new plaza saw heavy use this weekend, according to SF.Streetsblog.
And what do I want next? Well how about Valencia Street Park? The 26 Valencia is going away, but I figure we keep one lane open for the 67 Bernal and the businesses on the east side of the street, and to provide ambulance access to St. Luke’s. I broke out my 90s era cropping and internet skillz to build the finely rendered before/after park below from Google Earth. This is hovering over the Mission/Valencia intersection looking north towards Cesar Chavez. (Note – this is my idea, nothing official yet…)
(Guess which park I spliced in there?)
Note lots of room for street food carts in both parks!
Planes, Contrails, Birds
Bernal Framed
Money for Nothing, Chips for Free
Brittney at CBS5’s Eye on Blogs asks, “Should tortillas chips always come free with a taqueria burrito?” (And apparently someone in Oakland had answered via graffiti.)
While chips make up for important structural integrity issues towards the burrito’s final moments (and are especially helpful with jamming tomatilla sauce into a too-dry specimen), a problem I see is too many of the chips you get (free or not) are not that great. I’ve noticed a downward trend over the past several years in free tortilla chip quality. (As for bags of chips, I haven’t done an exhaustive survey, but some of the best are the ones La Tapatia in SSF.)
But I must reveal a Deep Burrito Justice Secret — some of my favorite tortilla chips are the organic ones from Costco. They ROCK.
Of course, we should all bow our heads to remember the woman who discovered/invented/popularized the tortilla chip in Los Angeles in the 1940s, Rebecca Webb Carranza. The El Zarape Tortilla Factory had recently installed tortilla robots:
Corn and flour disks poured off the conveyor belt more than 12 times faster than they could be made by hand. At first many came out “bent” or misshapen, as company President Rebecca Webb Carranza recalled decades later, and were thrown away.
For a family party in the late 1940s, Carranza cut some of the discarded tortillas into triangles and fried them. A hit with the relatives, the chips soon sold for a dime a bag at her Mexican delicatessen and factory at the corner of Jefferson Boulevard and Arlington Avenue in southwest Los Angeles…
Some great history is behind nuestra madre de tortilla chip:
As a young girl, Rebecca and her five brothers lived through periodic raids by Mexican bandit and revolutionary Pancho Villa and other thieves in northern Mexico.
“Pancho Villa did not like her father, because he was American,” said Mario R. Carranza, the first of her two sons. “She had pictures of her father on his horse dashing away from danger.“
Sadly, she was forced out of business in 1967 as big companies moved in. But she was later recognized by the industry she helped found:
In 1994 and 1995 — the only years the award was given — Carranza was among the recipients of the Golden Tortilla, created to honor about 20 industry innovators, said Mario Orozco, an employee of Irving, Texas-based Azteca Milling, who thought up the celebration.
Rebecca Webb Carranza, inventor of our favorite chip, recipient of the Golden Tortilla… we salute you.
No Onion, No Cry
Dulay Lines
When she was in university, Allan’s down mom made a cool art book of three parallel lines that quickly become less so. Allan made a video of the book last year.
I liked the design and took screenshots from that video, glomming them together and tracing it in vector form in OmniGraffle, my favorite program ever. The output is nearly 5000 pixels long, so I took the liberty of rotating it below. (Click for a horizontal version of the book and the color lines.)
Look closely, and the secret of the Dulay Lines are revealed! (No, it is not a plan for future BART tunnels, I wish…)
On the way to lunch at Pal’s, I noticed there’s a huge paper stencil replete with about two dozen skulls on the Hampshire wall of Tony’s Market.
UPDATE: Mission Local reported on this way back in September — it’s like that it’s by ‘Swoon’, a Brooklyn artist, to commemorate a woman from Mexico who was killed.
Kassa, the owner of a convenience store on the southwest corner of Hampshire and 24th streets, said it was at least five months ago–but certainly after Christmas–that a young woman and man appeared at his door and asked to use his store’s eastern brick wall. “She told me she was a visiting artist from New York and she wanted to put up a piece to memorialize a girl from Mexico who was killed”….The artist showed an almost identical piece last spring at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.
Behold the árbol de cráneo.
UPDATE: Here’s a shot of the woman before it was defaced:

As far as I can tell it’s cut from about six sheets of paper. No two skulls are alike.
“Dude!” “Dude.”
Clockwise close-ups.
But art has a price. While I was taking these, Pal’s ran out of the lamb AND chicken. The asparagus/egg was pretty damn tasty though, and the asparagus season is just about over so it probably worked out for the best.
I rode over to Potrero del Sol and watched the Mission’s finest at work while eating my finely crafted sandwich.
Then Anthony’s Cookies on the way home. All in all, a pretty damn good lunch.
ODC Goes Global
ODC, our Mission-based dance company, is going global.
Representing the Mission since 1978, they’ve been selected by the Department of State to represent DanceMotion USA and tour Thailand, Burma and Indonesia in 2010.
If you’re not familiar with ODC, go check them out. They have a kick-ass facility at Shotwell & 18th. I’m your typical beer-drinking, burrito-eating, sports-watching, indy-listening white dude, yet I really enjoy their performances. (Note – I have fallen asleep at the opera and ballet.)
The yearly ODC Toe-to-Toe benefit — ODC dancers vs Cal-Berkeley student athletes face off, both on the court and the dance floor — was also quite entertaining (plus good food!), so mark your calendar for April next year.
Shoe Woe
Meet Armand. He is wearing out the souls of his shoes in order to bring you award-winning Mission news.
Tonight at 7PM, the quite low price of a silent auction, won’t you help young Armand buy a new pair of shoes? Armand takes some mean photos.
Que Seurat Seurat
Just ran across a new blog (to me at least), We Built This City, written by an East Bay escapee who has recently sought refuge in Glen Park and seems to spend much time in the Mission.
Reasons I like WBTC:
1) Nice, Iconic Ironic Blog Name
2) Likes Chad VanGaalen
3) Appreciates Low Rez Photography
4) Frequently Mentions Food and Sandwiches
5) Has Good Pictures of the Mission (hadn’t really noticed the Seurat Dolores before, 19th/Guerrero)
WBTC Receives the BJSoA (Burrito Justice Seal of Approval).

































