Da Beef wrote:As long as this thread is active I should point out that I saw a second location of Los Barrilitos has opened up on the 4100 block of West 47th street.
Santander wrote:At La Lagartija you have traditional tacos al pastor, with charred pineapple on top of the spit slivered and served over the taco. Again at the right time, they are wonderful, and close to Mexican street food than, for example, Big Star, which also has fruit-topped pastor.
mdpilam wrote:
We went to Big Star last night (my god, what a mad house). The al pastor was good, and probably near the top (definitely not as good as Los Barrilitos) of my list (so far). But what is the deal with rice flour tortillas? Definitely takes away from the tacos. They should stick with corn tortillas.
(we also had the taco de pollo, which had a texture problem - it was kind of "slimy", but the chicken was good. The Sonoran hot dog was pretty good, but damn near impossible to eat, and IMO you shouldn't put mustard on a Sonoran dog, it dominates the flavor profile. I thought the salad was just meh.)
mdpilam wrote:So is Taqueria Ochoa the same as Los Barrilitos?
jimswside wrote:the trompo looks great, but what pushed Los Barilitos to the top of my list of spots to his was that bowl of habaneros and onions pictured upthread.
Rene G wrote:Da Beef wrote:As long as this thread is active I should point out that I saw a second location of Los Barrilitos has opened up on the 4100 block of West 47th street.
Thanks for mentioning the Archer Heights location. I was told this Los Barrilitos has been open a year come May. It's well disguised, though.
Positive comments both on and off line from people whose palates I respect drew me back to Los Barrilitos. Pleasing earthy achiote notes, nicely crisp edges an overall good al pastor taco, but still distinctly, to my taste, salty, though not to the level of my first visit. Melty mouth coating cabeza coupled with the bright bite of the house habanero/onion mix will be more than enough to bring me back.G Wiv wrote: I don't see going back to Los Barrilitos anytime soon.
Da Beef wrote:I prefer my al pastor cut thin and crisp and they do an amazing job with the knife getting it as thin as those electric gyro slicers elsewhere do. The meat reminded me of Saltisa sausage, an old Italian grind that made its way into WI and the UP with immigrants, it has a cinnamon/pork taste to it.
mdpilam wrote:Los Barrilitos is as good as ever. Stopped in to do a little "research" on a project I'm working on, and had 3 al pastor tacos and one chorizo. The al pastor is so good; the nice lady seemed a little shocked that I didn't want any asada (which I normally do get there, but was trying to save room for dessert later).
Does anyone know if they just serve tacos? And are there other meats besides: asada, al pastor, chorizo, cabeza, tripas, ???