skess wrote:An asada and pastor taco at the newish Rockin' Taco on Irving Park. I had high hopes, cause I pass by twice daily on my walk to/from work and wouldn't mind a solid taco place on the way. This was not it.
The good: I like the space, the counter service was incredibly nice. The tortillas were fine, and tacos come default with onion and cilantro, as it should be.
The bad: That meat. Ugh. The asada and pastor tasted almost identical. I think they marinate their meats and they must use the same marinade. If that's the case, they overmarinated by a longshot, the meat was mushy and bland, slightly sweet, absolutely zero char. There is a line between tender and mushy, and when I have to open the taco to make sure the asada hasn't been pre-chewed, we've crossed that line. The negatives were enhanced by the way the meat was hacked into chunks instead of chopped.
fearlessfitz wrote:
I've tried this place a couple times and I've been quite happy with the results. Granted, the bar hasn't been set high because my go-to quick fix is El Gallo Bravo #5. What has jumped out at me the most that the veggies are not mushy, they have a good crunch factor. My other highlight is the chipotle garlic chicken.
I found the asada and al pastor meats were tender, but I went back for the chicken.
trudie wrote:The torta cubana at the Hacienda in Michigan City,Indiana.Just amazed how that place has been in business over 25 years, seems to be always packed or at least doing decent business.
skess wrote:
An asada and pastor taco at the newish Rockin' Taco on Irving Park
Mikelipino wrote:The KFC Double Down.
eatchicago wrote:This past weekend, I was at a family event where Pizza Hut pizza was ordered as dinner. Personally, I don't think I've had Pizza Hut in over 15 years, possibly 20.
Truth in advertising, I suppose. They used to have these ads on the El which had the nastiest looking food I've ever seen photographed (yes, including this). Greasy, sad-looking burgers, soaking through stale buns.Kennyz wrote:And the most densely packed hamburger in history, cooked into oblivion despite a medium-rare order, with carbonized bacon that crumbled into a powder upon contact.
Ratticus says:
this place sucks to eat.
dansch wrote:Greasy, sad-looking burgers, soaking through stale buns.
Kennyz wrote:
tatterdemalion wrote:Is that a side of shed snakeskin on the right ?
Kennyz wrote:French fries with a weird crunchy coating and fluffy, tasteless insides reminiscent of mashed potatoes made from a mix.
SandyR wrote: Horchata can't just sit----it needs to keep moving and mixing.
Kennyz wrote: .... that "lettuce" really did have a texture exactly like what it appears to be. It was tough - like a piece of fabric rather than a food item.
EvanstonFoodGuy wrote:Words cannot describe how unappealing that hockey puck hamburger looks, and that lettuce just pushed it into awful territory.
teatpuller wrote:EvanstonFoodGuy wrote:Words cannot describe how unappealing that hockey puck hamburger looks, and that lettuce just pushed it into awful territory.
Unfortunately I find burgers like this more often than not. Often you'll see a metal "tub" full of them, pre-cooked, sitting in grease along side the grill. When an order comes up the cook tosses one on the grill for a few seconds. And there you have it! yum.
JeffB wrote:The real problem here is that you went to the atrocious tourist trap, the Reagle Beagle. CND is right by there. Coulda had a gyros melt.
Kennyz wrote:JeffB wrote:The real problem here is that you went to the atrocious tourist trap, the Reagle Beagle. CND is right by there. Coulda had a gyros melt.
I'm willing to take the blame. It looked bad enough that I avoided it for the first year or two of its existence despite having an office a mere block away, but I eventually succumbed to curiosity. Not only is CND basically across the street, but one can get a juicy, perfectly respectable burger at Blackie's, right next door to The Reagle Beagle.