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Al pastor taco truck8/16/2023 ![]() When I asked why they decided to do pastor (their other standard taco offering is cochinita pibil, a Yucatán specialty), Manuela said simply, “We couldn’t find it.” Káahal Nuestro translates as “our beginning” and refers to owners Raul and Manuela Perea taking the leap, when the pandemic hit, of leaving construction to start their own food business. But when I bit into a taco al pastor from Káahal Nuestro, I immediately knew that whatever I may have been looking for, this was it. I had been trying to sidestep the importance of the tortilla, but El Cotorro makes their own, and it was while I was sitting on their patio that I realized I couldn’t not judge a taco at least partly by its cover.Īll the places I’ve named make good tacos. At El Cotorro, in contrast, there was little to no pineapple, but the pork was nicely roasted, more lightly and a touch more mildly seasoned than elsewhere. The spit-roasted meat was lean, heavily marinated, and served with large chunks of pineapple and lots of cilantro in tortillas that, if store bought, had picked up some sauce and grease (and hence flavor) from the plancha. “These are the best,” my partner declared-unaware that he’d sampled only a fraction of the tacos I had-when we ordered from nearby Tacos la Mordida. I can do this, I thought, downing two loaded tacos in less than the space of a pilsner. With outdoor temperatures approaching one hundred, I could sympathize, and the pork here, finished off on the griddle, was closer. My second trompo sighting was behind the no-nonsense lady taking orders at La Catrina on Juan Tabo-although it too was turned off. “Son muy ricos,” one purveyor assured me after I asked whether the meat was prepared on a trompo (the answer was no).Īt Tako Ten (which does use a trompo, but I managed to visit on an evening when it stood sparkling clean behind the register), the pork on the taco al pastor was tender, tasty, but it was overpowered by guacamole, and the fried chicken taco outshined it. ![]() Often, as at one spot on Airport Road in Santa Fe, the salsa was tastier than the marinade or the meat. At one truck on Unser, the unexpected sides-refried beans with cheese, very good rice-overshadowed the tacos. But sometimes what fell short was more difficult to see, or articulate. The trompo was an easy criterion to settle on. Alternating bites from a taco at one truck on Bridge with bites from another, the distinctions were instantly clear-and, just as instantly, gone, traceable only in the red stains on my plate. In fact, the more tacos I ate, the less sure I became that I even knew what I was looking for-sort of like what happens if you set out on an afternoon of wine tasting and swallow all the wine instead of politely spitting it into the provided receptacle. I wasn’t looking for a replication of that experience-that would be impossible, for more reasons than the tacos themselves. Salsa was almost (but never quite) superfluous. To prepare the tacos, they shaved roasted meat off the edges, crisped it up on the flat top, filled a freshly made corn tortilla, and topped it with cilantro and finely chopped pineapple. At one taqueria there, I watched, wide eyed, as the cooks slathered huge, thin pieces of meat with red adobo and then folded them onto a vertical spit in a way that reminded me of folding clothes. Tacos al pastor are often associated with Mexico City, where they likely evolved from the tacos árabes devised by Lebanese and Iraqi immigrants to Mexico, but I first encountered them in Xalapa, Veracruz. “They’re not my favorite,” people told me, or, referring to quesobirria, “Is that the one you dip in the sauce?” Maybe that’s why so many taco lovers never order them or don’t quite know what they are. ![]() Chewing (and chewing, and chewing) on a mouthful of factory tortilla stuffed with pink cubes of pork, I considered more accessible pursuits, like reporting on the birria craze or tracking down well-made carnitas.īut no, I’d decided on a taco that is both elusive and ubiquitous-one that is served nearly everywhere, is almost always easy to eat, and is, almost as often, easy to forget. I had yet to find a taqueria that used the traditional trompo, or vertical rotisserie, and of the places on my list, at least one had gone out of business. Early on in my quest for a seriously good taco al pastor, which involved trolling the streets of (mostly) Albuquerque for trucks and taquerias serving tacos al pastor and then eating so many tacos that I began to believe in such a thing as a taco overdose, I wondered if I’d embarked on a fool’s errand.
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