Ramiro “Greasefire” Gutierrez — head cook, The Chapped Ass Cantina, fictional Geronimo, Texas
The Chapped Ass Cantina • Geronimo, Texas • Head Cook • Possible Immortal
“Greasefire”
Gutierrez
Cook • Pyro • Philosopher • Possible Immortal
Nobody remembers exactly when Ramiro showed up.
Nobody has asked him to leave.
Origin — Leading Theories
Where He Came From
Nobody remembers exactly when Ramiro showed up. The leading accounts, presented without ranking:
Some say he wandered in during a thunderstorm and asked, “Got any oil?”
Others say he was traded to Big Lou in a backroom deal with a band of traveling luchadores, led by Nugget Núñez, and a haunted food truck.
What is known for certain: he doesn’t speak unless it’s about meat, motorcycles, or mortality. He’s burned off all his arm hair so many times the flames gave up. Once, he seared a steak on the tailpipe of a 1969 Shovelhead and called it medium rare.
He carries two cleavers, a flask of mezcal, and a pack of smokes he never lights. He just stares at them until they catch fire.
He once had an eyebrow. It left during a flare-up in ’09.
He wears a gold chain with a tiny cast-iron skillet on it. Kisses it like a crucifix at the start of each shift.
It is rumored that Ramiro taught Whiskers from WhiskerBiscuit how to hunt.
The Philosophy
What He Believes About Food
Ramiro believes cooking is combat with flavor. Rarely, he speaks. When he does:
“If you’re not sweating, it’s not spice. It’s seasoning.”
“A tortilla should slap you like a jealous ex.”
“Oil should scream when it meets the pan. Otherwise, it’s shy. I don’t cook with shy oil.”
“Every meal should teach you something about your ancestors. And their mistakes.”
Signature Moves
What He Does in There
In his burnt denim apron and sleeveless band T-shirts, arms tatted with chili peppers, Aztec gods, and a recipe for mole he will never share:
The Flaming Toss
Flips fajitas from grill to plate using only a cast-iron spatula and disdain.
The Grease Baptism
First-time servers are initiated with a drop of chorizo oil on the forehead. Non-negotiable. Considered an honor.
The Gutierrez Stare
If your order’s too mild, he folds his arms and glares at it until it toughens up. The order always does.
He once chased a drunk patron into the parking lot with a spatula for complaining about the heat level in Burning Shame. “It’s in the name!” he shouted. The patron has not returned. The spatula was cleaned and returned to service.
He doesn’t care what the servers wear, as long as they bring him clean tickets and stay out of the danger zone.
Kitchen Soundtrack
Depends on the Mood of the Meat
Los Tigres del Norte
Standard service. Medium heat.
Pantera
High volume night. Approach with caution.
Gregorian Chants
Something is being summoned. Staff exits quietly.
Cooking is combat
with flavor.
