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BY MIGUEL OTÁROLA, @MOTAROLA_EATS

The holistic approach to both gardening and cooking that some of the women behind Denver's "New Native American Cuisine" follow is one I think many city dwellers with their own backyards could benefit from. Cultivating the soil, following weather patterns for rain and sunlight, seeing how plants grow in a symbiotic relationship with what's around them. Makes sense, doesn't it? Perhaps, during an evening walk, you'll come across a garden that puts your own horticultural goals in perspective for you.

EDITOR'S PICKS

Andrea Condes smiles in front of her front yard garden

A new generation of Indigenous chefs is growing and cooking the foods of their ancestors

These are some of the Colorado chefs behind the “New Native American Cuisine’

READ

up close plate of food from cuba cuba

Enrique Socarras’s Jama Miami Cuban Food + Drink will specialize in sandwiches and other fare

READ

Owner poses with wheel of cheese inside cheese walk in fridge

‘Cheese cave,’ house-made sausage star at new European deli in Denver

Goudy’s Deli & Market boasts more than 100 cheeses in Washington Park

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TIP POOL

Best cool treat in Denver?


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EAT THIS

Broiled eggplant with miso and crispy balls on top

Kumoya

Nasu, or eggplant, is commonly found as a starter course or side dish in Japanese restaurants. Never had I seen it prepared the way they did at Kumoya, which took over the former LoHi location of Tony P's in 2023. The restaurant -- one of several owned by Juan Padro's Culinary Creative Group -- has three distinct dining rooms to enjoy its upscale variations on sashimi and expansive sake collection. The nasu misoyake looks quaint compared to the other delicacies. Don't let that fool you. The combination of broiled eggplant, miso glaze and bubu abare (crispy rice crackers) rivals everything else on the menu. Use a wooden spoon to scrape up all the gooey eggplant inside.