bdmackler wrote:The menu is very simple and is divided into a taco section with 6 different kinds of tacos and the second section being the other entrees. We choose to get one of each of the tacos for $22.00. The tacos were good, but not great and for $22.00, I would say it was a tad on the expensive side as the tacos are small. They are served with a slaw salad of sorts and a sensational corn salsa.
David Hammond wrote:Patronize no Mexican restaurant that offers Margheritas.
G Wiv wrote:David Hammond wrote:Patronize no Mexican restaurant that offers Margheritas.
Hammond,
First I laughed, then though, hummmmm, oddly true.
Enjoy,
Gary
I may be on the threshold of developing a new Universal Law for Selecting Mexican Restaurants: Patronize no Mexican restaurant that offers Margheritas.
hungryrabbi wrote:I may be on the threshold of developing a new Universal Law for Selecting Mexican Restaurants: Patronize no Mexican restaurant that offers Margheritas.
Right, and by the same token, try to steer clear of Chinese restaurants that serve tea or German restaurants that serve beer.
Reb
Kennyz wrote:The - imho - pretentious attitude that decries immensely popular drinks because they are not "authentic" is also the reason so many people complain about their favorite restaurants closing. Good food and authenticity alone are not enough to survive. Marketing savvy is important too. I hate restaurants that are all glitz and no substance, but the best restaurants find a way to have both.
David Hammond wrote:Kennyz wrote:The - imho - pretentious attitude that decries immensely popular drinks because they are not "authentic" is also the reason so many people complain about their favorite restaurants closing. Good food and authenticity alone are not enough to survive. Marketing savvy is important too. I hate restaurants that are all glitz and no substance, but the best restaurants find a way to have both.
Kennyz,
With due respect, I believe you misunderstand me...or perhaps I didn't completely explain myself. In my experience, the Mexican food I've enjoyed most has not been at restaurants that serve frozen tequila drinks; the Mexican food I've enjoyed least has been at restaurants that serve frozen tequila drinks. The logical conclusion is not that all restaurants that serve frozen tequila drinks are bad; I do believe, however, that if they don't serve these drinks, the likelihood is higher that the food will be good.
Authenticity is a different, though related, issue.
David "Hey, it's ALL marketing, babe" Hammond
David Hammond wrote:Kennyz wrote:The - imho - pretentious attitude that decries immensely popular drinks because they are not "authentic" is also the reason so many people complain about their favorite restaurants closing. Good food and authenticity alone are not enough to survive. Marketing savvy is important too. I hate restaurants that are all glitz and no substance, but the best restaurants find a way to have both.
Kennyz,
With due respect, I believe you misunderstand me...or perhaps I didn't completely explain myself. In my experience, the Mexican food I've enjoyed most has not been at restaurants that serve frozen tequila drinks; the Mexican food I've enjoyed least has been at restaurants that serve frozen tequila drinks. The logical conclusion is not that all restaurants that serve frozen tequila drinks are bad; I do believe, however, that if they don't serve these drinks, the likelihood is higher that the food will be good.
Authenticity is a different, though related, issue.
Antonius wrote:A further observation I'd like to make here is that the most interesting (not necessarily the best, though indeed often of excellent quality) Mexican food I've had in Chicago is typically in places of the sort mentioned above but where the owners (who are typically also the staff) speak very little or no English.
Antonius wrote:I would say that the best Mexican food I've had in Chicago is typically from small, family-run eateries with limited menus that are in Mexican neighbourhoods and cater to an overwhelmingly Mexican clientele. They need to do the food well (i.e., 'authentically' in the sense of 'as typically done in the old country'), because their customers know what it's supposed to be like. Such places just about never have liquor licences, so no tequila frosties or mescaltinis and, for that matter, no margueritas nor even cerveza.
Antonius wrote:
What's going on here is, I believe, that they are often more recent immigrants who a) haven't yet had a chance to learn much English and b) also haven't started adapting their cooking to Mexican-American, much less Gringo-American, tastes; and consequently they offer up dishes rarely if ever seen in the more established restaurants and especially not in those with strongly non-Mexican audiences.
Antonius
eatchicago wrote:Antonius wrote:I would say that the best Mexican food I've had in Chicago is typically from small, family-run eateries with limited menus that are in Mexican neighbourhoods and cater to an overwhelmingly Mexican clientele...
I generally agree with this with one notable exception: TLO, at least the one on Milwaukee, is one of my favorite places for Mexican in Chicago, they have a liquor license, and serve a delicious margarita that I quite enjoy from time to time. No blender, no slushies.
l
Kennyz wrote:We're not in Tokyo or Oaxaqua. This is Chicago, where the competitive market demands that restaurants - even those who respect tradition and authenticity - adapt to the tastes of would-be consumers.
Rudy wrote:Has anyone been to Briosa lately? Also, do they bring complimentary chips and salsa to the table or do you have to pay for them?