PIGMON wrote:
...while visiting my parents in Palm Springs, California, the past few days gave me a chance to try another variation of this dish. After trying several different soup versions of CESJ in Chicago, it never occurred to me that it could possibly come in another style other than soup form.
Popping into a random taqueria there (Cenaduria), I was surprised to discover that they offered carne en su jugo in 2 forms, either as a soup or a stew. Never seeing the stew form, I obviously opted for that.

Instead of being a soupy broth, this version was a rich stew with a wonderfully beefy sauce. Besides the usual chopped meat, pinto beans, and grilled onion, the carne en su jugo contained nopales and cubes of uncured fresh bacon, things that I've never seen in versions here in Chicago.
Our waitress, who was originally from Jalisco, said that carne en su jugo in stew form is very common there.
Surprising, coming from Chicago.
Rene G wrote:
Carne Apache at Los Gallos #2
Dmnkly wrote:
I can't say I'm especially taken with this version, but it's an interesting variant alluded to above, so I figured it was worth mentioning:
Carne en su Jugo @ Tortas Ahogadas Guadalajara - Chandler, AZAnother stew version! It's hard to tell from this angle, but that's a very shallow dish... the same they use to serve the tortas ahogadas. It's not even an inch deep. I wonder, Pig, if there's any significance to the fact that the other stew version you found was also in the Southwest, or if it's just chance.
Good question, Dom. I'm not really sure. What I do know for sure is that CESJ in soup form is obviously the dish of choice in Chicago and appears to be very much growing in popularity here over the last several years. The alternative stew form (described by Rene G) found at Taqueria Los Gallos which they call "carne apache" (although not truly a ceviche-d, raw beef dish, as traditional carne apache typically is), is similar to what you found in AZ and what I once found at a random Cathedral City, CA cenaduria. Both Western versions (no, I've never seen potato usage before) looked to be served in shallow bowls as is Los Gallos' "carne apache". These versions seem to be nothing more than deconstructed, drier expressions of the more popular soup version of carne en su jugo commonly found.
What I'd really like to know myself is how common is the stewed version in Guadalaraja?
Thanks, Dom.