In a city featuring the best variety of authentic regional Mexican cuisine in some beautiful, creative spaces and prepared by polished, market-savvy chefs, why would anyone go to a dumpy, cheesy, overpriced ($20.95 fajitas), frat-boy and yuppie-laden, unadventurous Tex-Mex living room crammed between comedy clubs in the culinary wasteland (ducking) that is North and Wells?
Having enjoyed epic meals and storytelling sessions
Las Piñatas many times over the past decade, here are a few of my answers:
- a friendly, no-nonsense family of owners who work seven days a week and always remember your face and engage you in calm Spanish if you've visited repeatedly. On my last visit (yesterday), I hadn't been there in 18 months and was still warmly greeted along with two other less-than-regulars, and they comped us flan (more about that below) at the end of the meal with a smile and week-late "feliz Cinco de Mayo."
- really strong, virtually straight-tequila margaritas by the pitcher or half-pitcher with lots of fresh lime, even if I suspect there is a pre-mixed component
- an unabashedly spicy table salsa with usually excellent, salty, home-fried chips made from their tortillas de maiz, which are very nice in their own right. I don't know of another Mexican restaurant where the only sauce put on the table will burn a hole in your soft palate slowly over several hours.
- a consistently pleasing marinated carne asada ($16.95) which comes with a decent quesadilla and a brace of grilled green onions, maybe the only fair price on the menu, as it's a generous portion. It also constantly reminds me of how inedible asada can be at other purportedly "good" places like
Nuevo Leon (motto: our good chefs leave after breakfast).
- a mole negro sauce that is, to my experience in Mexico, inauthentic, but very tasty: quite sweet and homogeneous but a good counterpoint to the other basic ingredients they use in their enchiladas
- a delicate, silky flan with hardly any "eggy" flavor, caramelized at the edges, poured over with cinnamon liqueur and presented with an additional shot of dulce de leche liqueur
- very little if any wait for a table, even on a Friday or Saturday night. Not the hallmark of a great restaurant, but a nice feature for a fallback.
These reasons, perhaps the hypno-margs most of all, combine for me sufficiently that even though I paid the same for a meal last night at Pinatas as I did last week at
Avec, I'm not really pissed off, and instead leave full and content.
With guests from out of town I'll more readily go to Cuatro, Fonda del Mar, Salpicon, Frontera, Taco Veloz, or Tio Luis depending on circumstances and budget, but if I'm in the neighborhood with the right company, Pinatas typically satisfies. I'm curious as to your own thoughts and experiences, and other restaurants that you go to for calories and calm but wouldn't necessarily recommend to those seeking the finest exemplars of a given cuisine.
The Devi(tte)l in me does acknowledge: the wall art is God-awful, and made worse by the fact that I don't think it's intended to be self-mocking. I especially love the Aztec lord ravishing the Colonial maiden. The staircase to the lower level smells like old flood damage. The bathrooms are hideous. Every time I go in there, one overserved table is always laughing obnoxiously, or a Trixie couple is breaking up loudly and sobbingly. Your clothes are saturated with chimichanga after even an hour's visit. But that salsa is burntoxicating.
Las Piñatas
1552 N. Wells
Starts with a C, ends with an O, and in the middle is HICAG, IL
Last edited by
Santander on May 14th, 2007, 9:23 am, edited 1 time in total.