Author Archives: Taco Trail Jose

More at City of Ate, Dallas Observer’s Food Blog

I haven’t been posting here because I’ve been focusing on my thrice-weekly contributions to City of Ate, Dallas Observer‘s food blog. If you would like to read samples of my work, please click on the links below or go to City of Ate’s main page. My online portfolio can be found at Mediabistro. Take a gander at all of it, especially if you’re considering hiring me for freelance or full-time employment. That would rock.

100 Favorite Dishes: Coconut Soup at Mi Tierra

Food the FDA Should Recall

Los Altos de Jalisco No. 2: I Got My Goat

Goya Foods Recalls Frozen Mamey Packages Linked to Salmonella Typhi

Attack of The Killer Tacos or Urban Taco Expands

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Meet and Eat: Queso Tweetup (Surprising Food, Surprising People)

“Meet and Eat” is series about congregations and adventures with food writers, food bloggers and others orbiting the food world.

I want to be proved wrong when it comes to Texas. The relocation to Jessie’s native state, influenced by the birth of our son, being laid off and desiring a larger family support network, has had a few hiccups. I’ve been wrong before (i.e., tacos). Now I’m wrong about chile con queso, which I lambasted on Slashfood. I’m certainly not apologetic about my story. How can I regret it? The post led me to break bread with fantastic Austin food writers/bloggers who gently pointed out the obvious: I was wrong.

Addie Broyles, food writer for the Austin American-Statesman, commented on my queso post. She essentially dared me to not change my mind. I took that bet. On a drizzly Sunday afternoon we set upon the Tochy’s Tacos truck on S. 1st Street. In attendance were Addie, her son in tow, Baconator, Quani, John Knox, Kristi Willis, Carla Crownover, Jennie Chen, who invited me to sample the choice beer at Live Oak and (512) a few days later. (Did I miss anyone?)

Torchy’s chile con queso was substantial. It didn’t flop off the chip in an ectoplasmic splat. It contained chunks of avocado and chiles and a cilantro garnish. I hadn’t expected the zing zang zoom on my tongue, the lilliputian flavor circus on my palate. This was not the dreck I’ve uneasily swallowed across the state. This was food. This was…. Más, por favor!

What struck me more than the surprising queso were the surprising people. Here were folks open to others’ ideas. Folks who didn’t take personally everything this New Yorker said. Folks unlike most others I’ve met here. Austin gives me hope, makes the move to Texas non-regrettable. Austin and its people have helped me discount what I was once told by a Texan, “Be careful what you say, lest you insult someone. You might not like what happens next.” What a welcome! What a terrible thing to say about your own kind! I come from a place where disparaging your own kind, be it New York or ethnicity, is as beloved as baseball. In other words, temper your pride, kids. But I don’t want this to be a referendum on Texans because, as another Texas food writer once told me, “the food and the people are related.” With surprising food come surprising people.

Adelante, queso. Adelante, comida. Adelante, Austin.

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At Slashfood: Breakfast Tacos – Required Eating in Austin

Tacos are as synonymous with Austin, Texas, as the South by Southwest Festival. The breakfast taco, the energizing early rising big brother, is to Austin what the bagel is to New York. A breakfast taco is required eating in Austin, available at regional fast-food chains and mom-and-pop shops to mini-empires and trailers. They are Austinites’ go-to, on-the-fly morning meal.
Read the rest of the story at Slashfood.

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Meet and Eat: Tacodeli’s Roberto Espinosa

Taco Tour

“Meet and Eat” is series about congregations and adventures with food writers, food bloggers and others orbiting the food world. 

Recently, I had the pleasure to go on a taco tour with Roberto Espinosa, owner of Tacodeli, one of Austin’s stellar taco emporiums. The meet-and-eat was a product of one of my Slashfood posts, Where are America’s Best Tacos? – Brooklyn’s Sunset Park vs. Austin, Texas, and the subsequent conservation Roberto and I engaged in. For the piece I compared a selection of Austin taco joints with those of my former home, Sunset Park, Brooklyn. Among the establishments was Tacodeli and included quotes from the taco tsar. While I did enjoy what I ate at Tacodeli, I had reservations (what I called “gringo fancy” and recanted in a follow-up post.). Roberto was understanding and offered to take me on a tour of Austin’s taco offerings.

There was no hesistation. I took Roberto up on his offer. And away we went.

At Rosita’s Al Pastor, a truck in a strip-mall parking lot, we had lengua, al pastor, carnitas and chicharron. The hit and miss were the lengua and the chicharron. The former melted refreshingly, like an ice cube on the tongue during a steaming New York City summer day when the  air conditioner isn’t working. The chicharron, well, let’s just say, I’ve never had the pleaure of sampling a delectable chicharron taco.

Taco Tour

“Don’t eat that. Seriously, you don’t want to eat that,” said Roberto about the fried tripe taco we had ordered at Taquito’s. Of course I took a bite, a big one at that. And, of course, he was right. A regrettable decision that had the texture of hard plastic and left the taste of silly putty in my mouth.

Our last stop, Piedras Negras, was a truck I had been to before, and has a menu most closely resembling the taco joints I frequented in Brooklyn. As much as I wanted to eat my carnitas standby, I went with the al carbon taco. It was an against-type choice, with sauteed onions and raw onions, tomatoes as well as green bell peppers. Crunchy and juicy, I wanted to ingest it in its entirity, but after more than a dozen tacos, I apologized to it.

Taco Tour

Between destinations we talked about Mexican food and tacos, natch; Austin; cyclicing (we’re both enthusiaists); and, most importantly, why open a taco restaurant in Austin. A Mexico City native, Roberto told me that his decision to open Tacodeli was influenced by his desire to eat what he grew up eating. “There wasn’t anything like it in Austin; it was all steam-table stuff. I wanted to cook what I wanted to eat.” Now, after 10 years, he has two shops, with a third set to open next year. Then there is the Doña Maria salsa, a creamy, neon-green sauce concocted by one of Roberto’s original—and current—employees from Veracruz. “When I opened, I asked my staff to bring in some salsas. Doña Maria brought in something she learned to cook in Veracruz. I was blown away. It was like opening a treasure chest.” Everyone I’ve met who has tasted the salsa swears fealty to it. I’ve never been one for spicy foods, but I have to agree with the loyalists: Doña Maria makes some delish salsa. Roberto obviously reciprocates his customer’s feelings. “I have a responsibility to my customers.” Note, the homemade mole taco suggested by one patron. His passion for tacos and diners is as infectious as the Doña salsa. Whenever I go to Tacodeli the shop is filled elbow to elbow and the pay-off disintegrates any claustrophobia you might have.

I can’t wait to munch on some Tacodeli grub when I return to Austin for Thanksgiving. The Cowboy and Mole tacos are calling me. Who wants to join me?

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Slashfood Says, “Queso!”

My latest Slashfood piece, “Ques Es Queso and Why Are Texans So Enamored With It?” went live on Wednesday. In order to increase exposure—if anyone reads this blog—I’m posting here. Check it out, and leave a comment.

More of my Slashfood writing can be found here.

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Slashfood Says, "Queso!"

My latest Slashfood piece, “Ques Es Queso and Why Are Texans So Enamored With It?” went live on Wednesday. In order to increase exposure—if anyone reads this blog—I’m posting here. Check it out, and leave a comment.

More of my Slashfood writing can be found here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Texas