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  • The Infatuation

    Tlayuda Oaxaqueña Sr San Pablo

    By Bryan Kim,

    6 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0PEv1E_0uoFS9JA00
    Kate Previte

    Corona’s street food scene is lapping the competition. Starting around 104th Street, you’ll see carts and trucks every few feet, forming a chain of incredible and relatively affordable bites that stretches over a mile down Roosevelt Avenue. Any pitstop yields worthwhile results, but the center of this universe is Tlayuda Oaxaqueña Sr San Pablo.

    In the shadow of the 7 train, across from Corona Plaza , this cart sells huaraches longer than your forearm, oversized tacos stuffed with deeply savory cecina, and quesadillas dripping with the ruby-red grease of crumbled chorizo that reached its full potential on a big, hot griddle. Fresh masa—pressed to size and cooked to order—is key, and hubcap-sized tlayudas are the main event.

    Set yourself up on a short plastic stool at the adjacent thigh-high table, and accessorize your tlayuda with squeeze bottles of hot sauce and pickled onions. You’ll need at least one person to help tackle your $17 meal, although it’s a shame if you don’t get a huarache as well. So wrangle three friends who enjoy tearing at warm masa. With operating hours that run from 8am to 3am, scheduling shouldn’t be an issue.

    Food Rundown

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2RBL9g_0uoFS9JA00

    photo credit: Kate Previte

    Tlayuda

    Choose from cecina, chorizo, carne asada, or carne enchiladas, or do the right thing and get all four meats on one massive toasted disc. No matter which variety you order, your tlayuda will come piled with beans, shredded lettuce, avocado, and two types of cheese. https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4X94l3_0uoFS9JA00

    photo credit: Kate Previte

    Huarache

    Huarache or tlayuda is a very tough call. The tlayudas are larger and more awe inspiring, but the huaraches are satisfyingly thick, with fresh, crunchy cabbage. Get both, ideally, and go the cecina route here. https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2pMtHl_0uoFS9JA00

    photo credit: Kate Previte

    Quesadilla

    This cart could only sell quesadillas, and it would still be essential. The combo of stretchy cheese, salty chorizo, and warm, crisp tortilla is tough to beat.

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