PitaChip wrote:I will be cruising around Orange County, Riverside County, and San Diego very often for the next several months (work related.)
Any and all LTH-approved dining suggestions would be a welcome respite from the hundreds of chain restaurants I have already driven past!
Fresh back from a weekend in Southern California (Temecula & San Diego), palate recalibrated & soul rejuvenated, you need not, for perhaps the only time in your life, listen to the
estimable authors of this post.

Shackled by wedding obligations in Temecula, my opportunities were limited, and I do regret not being able to get to
nr706’s favourite winery in the area, but I was able to salvage the trip in large part thanks to half-dozen-time-LTH-poster (but frequent lurker!),
kare_raisu (Alex).
While acknowledging the relative dearth of dining destinations in Temecula, Alex did have about a half-dozen tips for me, the top of the list being
Las Brisas Taqueria in nearby town of Fallbrook. Las Brisas seems to primarily focus on homecooking-style comfort foods, with a steamtable up-front lined with soulful guisados. I got there one day too early (Friday) to slurp my therapeutically needed menudo, which I’m told should not be missed, but I did manage to negotiate a plate of things to try and in the meantime sized up the salsa bar.
Totopos
Salsa bar
Right before I started rapidly falling into the salsa-bar trap (not unlike the salad-bar trap), my plate of carne hit the table.
Carnitas (bottom), costillas de puerco (middle), barbacoa de res (top)

Pay no attention to the rice and beans (even if the beans were rich and lardy). Do pay attention to the guacamole, which for some reason I can’t put my finger on, was just head and shoulders above others. The obvious answer is that you’re in avocado country stupid (even an
Avocado Festival here), but there something else to it for sure. Alex hypothesized they threw chicharrones in there, I couldn’t tell if he was joking or not.
The sweetheart proprietoress steered me towards the
flour tortillas, and I’m glad she did, as they were evocative of the chapatis of my youth.
Tortillas
Slow-cooked ribs were meaty & tender, in a mild but savory gravy.
Costilla de puerco 
One of the house specials is beef barbacoa, which was a different style than what I’m used to, this one served in a chili-laden sauce with peppers and onions. I don’t know my regional barbacoa variants well, but I think this is common in Zacatecas where the folks are from (Alex, help me out here). Regardless, it is outstanding.
Barbacoa de res
But what’s still haunting me are the carnitas, among the very best to be had. Crispy & juicy on the outside, melting yet meaty on the ins, the best of pork worlds.

Las Brisas Taqueria
1005 S Main Ave Ste A
Fallbrook, CA 92028
(760) 723-0115-----
While I hadn’t actually had my heart set on sampling fish tacos on this trip, Alex did mention that a place in Temecula, when on their game, makes one of the best around. It’s hard to have your mind altered and your life changed for a buck seventy-five, but it does happen to folks on occasion (eg, Tacos del Pacifico). The tacos at
Senor Baja did neither of the above, but were a well-above average version, excellently seasoned & expertly fried, worth getting if you’re in the area anyways.
Fish and Shrimp tacos
Senor Baja
26491 Ynez Rd
Temecula, CA 92591
(951) 296-2164-----
Back in San Diego and, despite thinking about several curb-side-type meals, couldn’t help but want to sit at a bar and linger over a variety of plates with my good pal sake.
Izakaya Sakura is a tiny spot in a tiny strip mall, with a tiny handwritten sign taped to the window, the only sign with its name.
To get the party started, a plate of
ankimo:

Then came a commonly seen appetizer on west-coast Japanese menus,
shishitou tempura. The thin-skinned pepper lends itself well to tempura, and its slight sweet / slight heat lends itself well to being a great bar snack.
Maguro yamakake, another standby, was a particularly excellent version, and I didn’t feel the usual need to shoyu-up the sometimes bland glue (Japanese mountain yam).

While I don’t think it’s
Aji (Spanish mackerel) season, I don’t argue with the itamae when he breaks down a clear-eyed, smiling fish in front of you and slides it down your way.

Sashimi was astoundingly good - rich, buttery and full-flavored fishy in every good sense of the word.
Aji sashimi
While this may look like the makings of any Northeast cheesesteak grinder, it was marinated nicely, extremely tender and perfectly accented by a spritz of lemon juice and a dab of shoyu.
Marinated, grilled beef
As I was just contemplating my next plate, the grisly remains of my mackerel were resurrected after a hot-oil bath and set before me. The salty, crispy cracker bones and the burst of hot fish fat from the head was enough to roll my eyes back up into my skull.
Deep-fried Aji bones
At that point, the best that I could do was have pork belly for dessert, and I think the following photo reflects the state of mind at that point:

It’s going to be hard not going back to Izakaya Sakura on every subsequent visit to San Diego.
Izakaya Sakura
3904 Convoy St #121
San Diego, CA 92184
(858) 569-6151-----
The morning before my flight, I had the distinct pleasure of meeting up with Alex, at a spot he found that specializes in
barbacoa de borrego. Alex is a very interesting dude with vast knowledge of regional Mexican cuisine and so I looked forward to getting down to borrego business with him.
Aqui es Texcoco was founded in Tijuana over 15 years ago and only recently opened up in Chula Vista. They don’t mess around with plates of rice & beans & salad, the menu is laser-focused on what they’re all about. The heady smell of steam-roasted maguey-wrapped lamb hits you like a ton of bricks as you walk in, and you notice a tall glass of fresh
papalo at the tables and you know they’re taking it seriously. And if you’re still not convinced, sip on a cup of consomme, smooth but de-fatted, intense lamby nose, rich in flavor but yet still very clean-tasting (PIGMON are you listening?

) , it was obvious there was a certain special skill at hand.
We opted for the full
cabeza, which came de-boned upon request, but complete with brain, tongue, cheeks and all bits in between.
Cabeza – brain (right), random head meat (middle), tongue (buried on the left)
Unadorned taco
While there’s no need to dress them up, they do eat particularly well with a few sprigs of papalo, some onions, a squirt of the excellent deep-red pasilla chile salsa.

Simply outstanding.
I’d never had the pleasure of fresh huitlacoche until then, and it was a totally different experience, like comparing canned mushrooms to fresh.
Quesadilla con huitlacoche
To finish, we had a
pancita taco, which Alex affectionately described to me as “Mexican haggis”. Cooked in a spicy chile sauce, quite meaty in texture, I found the flavor of liver most prominent (which I happen to like).

Aqui es Texcoco is a gem and a truly outstanding place serving up delicious tradition.
Aqui es Texcoco
1043 Broadway Ste 108
Chula Vista, CA 91911
(619) 427-4045-----
At a time when I had to hit the reset button on my tastebuds, the San Diego area came through. You just never know.
Alex, I hope you share more with us here on LTH.
-Nab