After furniture shopping Saturday afternoon (Roy's on Sheffield is highly recommended), we decided to do an early dinner for Cinco de Mayo a few blocks north at Barcocina.
Despite being neck-deep in loud, drunk millenials at 5PM, we immediately got a table on the sidewalk and had a very nice meal. Service was a little hectic (we got four people asking us if we'd ordered drinks in the first 10 minutes, but finding our server later was much harder). For drinks, SueF had a glass of Pinot rather than what sounded like a high-proof sangria; I had the Smoke House of mezcal, cointreau and house sour -- just about the perfect drink for me: smoky, sour, some bittter and sweet, but hit like a brick to the temporal lobe.
Guacamole (they have two types, one with bacon, one with a balsamic-pasilla glaze - we had the latter) was solid. The balsamic glaze is a nice touch, but I'd have liked a little heat.
Queso fundido was different from others I've had. For one, it was topped with a poached egg -- just what you need to top rich cheese and chorizo. It was also a soft creamy cheese, like a ricotta, rather than a melty chihuahua or jack. Very nice, though.
The short rib empanadas had very thin -- almost crepe-like -- shells, rich meat, and very good salsas: a nicely spicy 'adobo' and a chimichurri. These sauces were also put to good use on the next dish.
Lastly, lollipop lambchops came with shishito peppers, a nice combo. They were maybe a touch more toward medium than I'd like, but hard to nail with small chops.
We didn't order any tacos (not wanting to figure out how to split 3 between two people mainly), but they had an interesting array of traditional styles and more fusion-oriented things such as poke.
Prices aren't unreasonable - items were $10-$16. Certainly more than you'd pay for tacos in Pilsen, but not for dinner in Lakeview. The crowd there seemed more "let's have a party" than "let's find a date" due to the holiday nature of the day -- I don't know what it would be like later in the evening.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang