Tito’s Tacos, founded in 1959, is first and foremost a nostalgia trip. No one is going to tell you Tito’s has tacos that are going to impress a discerning chef. That’s not the point. En savoir plus .
Solid, workmanlike tacos. A small hill of tender, grilled steak lay on the doubled-up corn tortillas. Dressed simply with diced onion, cilantro, fiery red salsa, and a generous squeeze of lime. En savoir plus .
All the tacos—carnitas, pastor, and salmon—are solid, but the fish—nicely charred grilled salmon, delicate and flaky, enshrouded in warm, soft corn tortillas—stands out in the crowd. En savoir plus .
Chef Wes Avila makes tacos that are unlike any you’ve had before. Try the sweet potato with feta and scallions ($4), the crab with guajillo chili [$12 for an order of three], or spicy wild boar ($5). En savoir plus .
The tortillas are handmade and thicker than normal, but they are wonderfully moist. The tender chicken and subtly chocolatey mole is complemented wonderfully by a potent red salsa served on the taco. En savoir plus .
Even though Tacos Leo opens at 9 a.m., the good stuff usually doesn’t come out until after dark. That's when the huge pork spit (on which a pineapple is perched), is fired. En savoir plus .
Yucatán-style pork is particularly good. Wrapped in a banana leaf and slowly roasted, it has a slightly citrus-y taste. Equally good is the asada, generous chunks of grilled steak with pico de gallo. En savoir plus .
Ricky’s Ensenada-style fried catfish tacos are among the best in town. The fish is crisply coated in a light and magically greaseless jacket of batter; the fish within is remarkably tender. En savoir plus .
Get the potato tacos, or tacos de papas: creamy, airy, whipped potatoes held by a fried tortilla, pinched closed like a clamshell. They’re smothered in crema and salsa verde. En savoir plus .
As at Leo’s, pastor is king here. Delicate slices of slightly charred reddish pork are sliced from the ever-rotating spit and layered onto tortillas with a little chunk of pineapple. En savoir plus .
The potato and chorizo tacos ($9 for an order of two) are unbelievably tasty: steak fry-like wedges of well-seasoned potato mixed with perfectly greasy chorizo, lightly sprinkled with cotija cheese. En savoir plus .
Order your $1 tacos (Lengua is the best, imo, but asada and pastor are pretty good, too) and get the taquero to toss some cebollitas on the plate. They’re a mouthful of tender, fat caramelization. En savoir plus .
Here’s something for you vegetarians out there. The nopales have the flavor of a mild pepper and a pleasing texture; ever-so-slightly slimy like a piece of fresh okra. En savoir plus .
The al gobernador is the winner: juicy, grilled shrimp layered on a tortilla with a thin layer of melted cheese. The taco is covered in a piquant, onion-y tomato sauce and covered with avocado slices. En savoir plus .
The tacos themselves? Not bad at all. But this place is worth visiting once just to see what East-siders go for when they want something fast, easy, and reasonably approximating actual Mexican tacos. En savoir plus .