stevez wrote:Of course you know that a burrito is no more Mexican that chop suey is Chinese.
dddane wrote:somewhere in outer web space someone was asking if there was anywhere in chicago to get a "california burrito" (which apparently is a "san diego" burrito). the same person was using the lack of finding a good one in chicago as a benchmark that chicago's mexico food is sub-par to where they came from.. lol
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_burrito
...apparently it involves a steak burrito with salsa, cheese, and french fries in it... this to me is intriguing.
...a few people mentioned they have it at TBK, but it's not good there (i think the complaint may have related to the fries being soggy or something).
so has anyone come across a good one?
d4v3 wrote:...Rice in burritos sucks. It is just a cheap way of making a giant burrito while saving on more expensive ingredients.
d4v3 wrote:Rice in burritos sucks. It is just a cheap way of making a giant burrito while saving on more expensive ingredients.
dddane wrote: chipotle for instance throws it into a hot press for a few seconds to crispen it. i think in a perfect world the shell is supposed to get crispened and even a little blackened maybe ... but the problem is, during any sort of rush, they just basically throw it for 3 seconds at most and that's not even long enough to get warm let alone crispy... then they throw the whole thing in foil when done...and by the time you get to unwrapping it the tortilla shell is all mushy. for the longest time i never though much of it, but now i'm starting to think that it can't possibly be intended to be a mushy mess of a shell... yes/no? of course i still eat it, but i have to wonder if it's not as good as it was intended to be buy the creator.
seebee wrote:Reminds me of a "Mexico City Style Taco" that I ordered at the Border Grill in the U.P. (mi. upper peninsula.)
The CORN tortilla was not even heated!!!!!!!
seebee wrote:
The CORN tortilla was not even heated!!!!!!!
bjt wrote:I lived in SD for five years and ate many, many burritos, especially in the wee hours after working late or partying. (I was once stopped by a policeman riding my bike in my PJs with a brown bag clenched in my teeth and in it was a bean and cheese burrito.) Alberto's and Roberto's were little shacks that were often open very late and sold pretty straightforward (relatively authentic and not too gigantic ) burritos: bean and cheese and carne asada. There was never any rice in them much less french fries. I have a sneaking suspicion that enough drunk and hungry gringos showed up requesting burritos and french fries or something and voila! a burrito with FF was born? I do not know but it sounds like some sort of Americanization/devolution of the burrito. Look at scones, they are supposed to be the size of a lime, not a softball . . .
bjt[/i]
d4v3 wrote:There used to be a bar called Big John's... that... had a burrito stand inside the bar... As I recall, they also put mayo in them.
Yeah, I learned to say 'sin mayo' really quick. It was especially gross because it got warm from the grilling.JoelF wrote:d4v3 wrote:There used to be a bar called Big John's... that... had a burrito stand inside the bar... As I recall, they also put mayo in them.
AAaaaggghhh! OK, if you insist, I'll take the rice.
d4v3 wrote:Yeah, I learned to say 'sin mayo' really quick. It was especially gross because it got warm from the grilling.
They put mayo on tortas here also, and I like it. It just doesn't belong in my burrito.dddane wrote:..but they put mayo on a torta in mexico... and that's pretty good.
cjchaps wrote:I'm seeing a different description than you are seeing in WIKI![]()
The California burrito is a Mexican-American dish created in San Diego.[citation needed] it is served in almost every Mexican restaurant in southern California. It is typically a flour tortilla stuffed with carne asada, salsa fresca, cheese, and French fries. There is some debate whether sour cream or guacamole is the "real" California burrito. The burrito itself, is similar to a typical "Carne Asada Fries" dish which consists of the same ingredients without being rolled into a burrito. This burrito is an Americanized Mexican dish; having french fries combined with a burrito is not a common dish known to Mexico.