Category Archives: Texas

Taqueria Jalisco

Today, Marshall Scott Owens (@WestTX_BBQ on Twitter) drops a guest post on the Taco Trail. The Lubbock resident is a financial adviser at a Fortune 500 company. More importantly, he likes “BBQ, tacos, burgers, and brew,” and, he says, “If college football was a food I would eat as much as I could.” You can read Owens’ guest post on Full Custom Gospel BBQ here. Before you do that, though, read his review of Taqueria Jalisco in Lubbock. It might come in handy during the Texas Tech games against Oklahoma University and University of Texas this fall.

I went to Jalisco under the guise of a “romantic” date with my girlfriend, but I was really there to review what I think are the best tacos in Lubbock.

Taqueria Jalisco isn’t your run-of-the-mill Tex-Mex restaurant. The menu tends to offer more than the typical “food smothered in cheese then ran through a pizza oven.” People commonly refer to Jalisco as Tex-Mex, but those people tend to think all Mexican food in Texas is Tex-Mex. Although I have never been to Guadalajara, I would like to think Jalisco lives up to the name, and it is anything but just Tex-Mex. Continue reading

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Filed under Guest post, Reviews, Texas

Cafe Maya Jazzes It Up

Add a swinging Saturday to Margarita Monday, Taco Tuesday, Humpday Happy Hour—not to mention the monthly first Tuesday $1 margarita night—at Café Maya Mexican Kitchen and Cantina. Tomorrow, Saturday, Aug. 25, owner Sergio Pinto will welcome the Magia Negra Latin Jazz Trio.

The first ivories will be tickled by Magia Negra’s pianist/vocalist Miriam Hernandez at 9 p.m. The last chord will be played at 1 a.m., with bandmates Young Heo on bass and Lamont Taylor on drums.

While you’re in the house, fire it up with a cochnita pibil doused with the off-menu habanero salsa, then cool down with a mango mojito.

Café Maya Mexican Kitchen & Cantina
1001 W. Jefferson Blvd.
214-948-9900

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Filed under Dallas, DFW, Oak Cliff, Sponsored, Texas

The Great Taco Run Goes the Tortilla Course

A different sort of taco trail is taking to Dallas on Sunday, Sept. 30. The Great Taco Run will give the city another race with another hook, yes, but can you think of anything more rewarding after giving it your all along the streets of the Big D than tacos? I can’t.

Presented by area sports store Luke’s Locker and benefiting the Trinity Strand and Katy Trail, the race will be separated into 5K, 10K and 10-mile lengths, all finishing at the Runners Village at Museum Way and Victory Avenue, near the American Airlines Center, where several taco vendors will be serving up their signature fare beginning at 8:30 a.m. Participants will be able to vote for their favorite taco vendor while a panel of judges will choose theirs. The winners will be announced on National Taco Day, Thursday, Oct. 4. Continue reading

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Filed under Dallas, DFW, events, festivals, National Taco Day, News, Sponsored, Texas

Taste of Home

Last week, I decried the fact that no food truck, much less a taco truck, was serving breakfast tacos. Then, I went to the Grand Prairie Farmers Market’s Hatch Chile Festival, hungry. There weren’t any taco trucks stationed on the west end of the market, but Taste of Home, a rig specializing in Chicago-style sausages, was selling breakfast tacos, Hatch chilies optional.

The line for the tacos was five deep. The number of people waiting for their orders was twice that, while the wait for said orders was 30 minutes. One woman paced, barely containing her exasperation. Shortly thereafter, her name was called with the wrong order repeated to her. She darted out of view when she got the correct tacos. But the natives were getting restless. Other customers grumbled. One threatened to demand reimbursement. Another remarked, “These breakfast tacos better come with gold plate.” Continue reading

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Filed under breakfast tacos, DFW, food truck, Grand Prairie, North Texas, Texas

Tacos La Banqueta—Arlington

I’ll never be cool. Cool people keep their cool. Eating great tacos makes me want to shout and dance. The selection at the Tacos La Banqueta in Arlington, the largest of the area chain’s outposts (two locations in Dallas, one recently opened in Fort Worth) make keeping my composure impossible.

All five tacos my wife and I enjoyed were clean—except when they weren’t supposed to be, in the case of the cabeza, which had pulling beef and nuggets of fat clinging to the meat kept tidy within bantam oil-free tortillas and no sign of cracking under the pressure of its filling. Continue reading

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Filed under Arlington, Chains, DFW, North Texas, Texas

Taquería La Providencia

Just off the Jefferson Boulevard taco corridor on Madison Avenue is Taquería La Providencia, a restaurant decorated with baubles, athletic trophies and Mexican folk art. It’s easily missed, but once inside customers find a mixed bag of tacos seasoned with sonorous telenovelas.

Unlike Mexican soap operas, La Providencia offers a surprising twist. Continue reading

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Filed under DFW, Oak Cliff, Reviews, Texas

Revolver Taco Lounge

Not all great taquerías are hovels found in neglected districts. Some shine white and clean in developing enclaves. Case in point: Revolver Taco Lounge, a contemporary Mexican restaurant awash in white with orange accents along West Seventh Street in Fort Worth.

Opened for more than a year, Revolver offers Mexican standards humble in presentation. Here, the Rojas family offers pipian, a green mole with pumpkin seeds, blankets duck breast. A lobster taco is laced with chipotle butter sauce. In the mood for huitlacoche? Revolver’s got it.

The eatery’s tacos come wrapped in house-made tortillas produced from nixtamal (i.e., the hard way) in a kitchen staffed by—stereotypically enough—smock-wearing elderly women, among them owner Gino Rojas’ mother and aunt. Continue reading

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Filed under DFW, Fort Worth, one of the freaking best, Reviews, Taco Tours, Texas

Yucatan Taco Stand Tequila Bar & Grill

A stop on the Fort Worth taco tour a friend and I took ahead of my trip to San Diego, Yucatan Taco Stand Tequila Bar & Grill offers an alternative to Fuzzy’s Taco Shop. However, Fuzzy’s and Yucatan share more in common than what distinguishes them.

Both were founded in Cowtown, both were created by Paul Willis and both use a dubious geographical conceit. Both hedge their bets on seafood tacos. Yet, Fuzzy’s is the one that has reeled in success, crossing beyond the Texas border. Yucatan once boasted area three outposts. The Fort Worth location, the first, is the only one remaining in North Texas. Another Yucatan can be found outside Houston, in The Woodlands.

After placing our order at the front counter (something else Yucatan shares with Fuzzy’s), my companion and I sat at a window booth, watching as employees from the nearby hospital gorged on large nacho platters, loaded, edible Popocatepetls similar to the dish at Fuzzy’s. Continue reading

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Filed under DFW, Fort Worth, Reviews, Texas

Cesar’s Tacos y Gorditas

There are some taquerías I decide to leave unreviewed, even if I frequent them. It’s not because I’d prefer to keep them a secret. Rather, it’s because I frequent them out of convenience, I don’t think I have much to add to the discussion, I’m saving them for a list/some other project or they’re so terrible I can’t stomach typing such vitriol.

Case in point: Cesar’s Tacos. It’s not that the Davis Street restaurant is bad. I patronize the joint regularly, especially when my in-laws visit. As a local chain, Cesar’s Tacos would be an ideal subject of a larger story. There comes a moment, though, when your original plan is scuttled and things head south. Continue reading

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Filed under Chains, Dallas, DFW, Oak Cliff, Reviews, Texas

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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Filed under Meet and Eat, Texas