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LA’s New Street Food Star Serves One Thing: Suckling Pig Tacos
Eater ^ | Jan 22, 2021 | Bill Esparza

Posted on 01/22/2021 10:43:30 PM PST by nickcarraway

David Delfin’s Los Sabrosos offers LA a rare treat from Nayarit, Mexico

Many of Mexico’s most coveted tacos feature pork, from carnitas and cochinita pibil to the various tacos de trompo. There’s tacos árabes from Puebla, adobada from Baja California, tacos de trompo out of Nuevo León, and the nearly ever-present al pastor, with deep roots in Mexico City and many other Mexican states. Much the same is true in Los Angeles, which makes a new type of pork taco contender here in Southern California all the more rare, indeed.

Suckling pig tacos, featuring whole roasted young pigs, are a rare delight even in Mexico, only found as a common dish in states like Aguascalientes, the tri-state Yucatán, and in the town of Acaponeta, Nayarit, a municipality just south of the Sinaloa border. Now, Angelenos can find them on Saturdays and Sundays from a small stand called Los Sabrosos al Horno in the tiny Southeast LA city of Cudahy.

Called tacos de puerquito horneado (roasted suckling pig), or colloquially puerquito echado (lying down) in Acaponeta, these sucking pigs arrive at the stand burnished and brown from a serious oven roasting. The whole pig is split head to tail and laid flat for maximum crispiness on the skin, and it all gets chopped up into various pieces on site and served with corn tortillas and a salsa de mostaza, or spicy mustard salsa, plus a squeeze of lime. This is unlike any other pork taco in greater Los Angeles.

After five years catering events for locals from Acaponeta and Tecuala, Nayarit, Delfín decided to give his own street stand a go at the end of October 2020. Now, with plenty of his paisanos showing up (and bringing friends), what may be the only puerquito echado stand in the entire United States is drawing a weekly crowd.

Workers load a cooked suckling pig onto a table. The face of a cooked suckling pig ready for tacos. Workers reach in to grab pieces of a cooked suckling pig for tacos, with masks on. Twice each weekend, Delfín roasts a whole fifty or sixty pound suckling pig, plus one or two more for private events as time allows. The best time to arrive, real fans know, is around 2:30 p.m., when Deflín’s pig — butterflied and cooked for four hours in its stainless steel box — is first revealed. Its golden skin glistens like a beacon for delicious tacos, beckoning diners to this dusty roadside off Atlantic, inside a Cudahy industrial park.

Taqueros carefully remove rectangular cuts of crispy skin before diving into the moist flesh below, building a pile big enough to handle all those waiting orders. “Okay, that’s good enough,” says Delfín, signaling from his yellow cart to the waiting crowd that it’s officially time for tacos. Plates are quickly assembled with white meat tacos and a dark, crispy strip of skin, then a dealer’s choice of spicy mustard salsa made with Roma tomatoes and chiles serranos, or a milder mustard salsa with tomatillos. Both are kissed by smoke from time in the oven, and finished with ribbons of raw, white onion. That’s it — just lightly salted pork on corn tortillas and some salsa de mostaza, which adds all the seasoning these tacos need. These plates are rich and bountiful, each mouthful chased by a bite of crispy skin.

“The tradition started in Acaponeta with Anacleto [Carrillo], a man who came down from the Sierra Madre and started to sell it,” says chef Betty Vasquez, gastronomic ambassador for the Riviera Nayarit region. “His son carried it on and then his grandson Marcelo [Carrillo], who passed away this year from COVID.”

In those intervening decades, according to Vasquez, puerquito echado has spread around the state to places like Tepíc, all thanks to people from Acaponeta. Now Delfín is one of the dish’s small handful of messengers, promoting the tradition in Los Angeles through his countrymen and women, one plate of tacos at a time.

White gloved hands pull apart cooked pork for tacos. A large cleaver works over pork for upcoming tacos, on a wooden cutting board. “These guys over here are from Acaponeta, they have a construction business and have been sending all their employees,” says Delfín, pointing across a growing crowd on a recent Saturday. “And this couple here is from Tecuala.” Throughout a day of service, Delfín makes sure to talk with each customer, to learn where they’re from, reaching for a connection to the food. Small business owners, tradesmen in construction, roofing, and landscaping, locals; everyone stops by for a five- or six-taco lunch.

Customers leave here smiling, many wiping nostalgia and pork fat from their mustard-stained lips simultaneously, as if they’re departing a family reunion. There are comments about how they haven’t had sickling pig in years, and how the flavor of the salsa takes them back to Acaponeta. Groups often seem to know each other, though in reality, it’s just the common bond of Mexicans from this pair of small towns, Acaponeta and Tecuala, who miss eating mariscos at Playa Novillero, dancing to banda at backyard parties, and spending afternoons snacking on tacos de puerquito echado. Now they’ve found it once again, except in Cudahy, the second-smallest city in LA County but a big destination for rare suckling pig tacos.

Los Sabrosos al Horno, 4901 Patata St., Cudahy, (323) 407-5930, Saturdays and Sundays only, starting around 3 p.m.


TOPICS: Food; Local News
KEYWORDS: losangeles; sucklingpig; taco
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1 posted on 01/22/2021 10:43:30 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Have you tried it?


2 posted on 01/22/2021 10:50:13 PM PST by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

I have been ti the Yucatan, participated in killing a whole pig. Stuffing it, covering with recado....achiote and chilis, burying it underground, baking for 1day and eating g it.

Yummy!


3 posted on 01/22/2021 10:55:47 PM PST by BunnySlippers (I Love BULL MARKETS!)
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To: nickcarraway

I like tacos!


4 posted on 01/22/2021 10:59:54 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: nickcarraway

Well, at least it ain’t ‘long pig’.......LOL


5 posted on 01/22/2021 11:00:29 PM PST by Viking2002 (The revolution won't need to be televised. It'll be on your doorstep.)
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To: CondoleezzaProtege

Unfortunately, no.


6 posted on 01/22/2021 11:10:35 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: Viking2002

That’s at the Armie Hammer food truck.


7 posted on 01/22/2021 11:11:14 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

How did tacos move up so far in the pantheon of Mexican foods? Forty years ago they were junk food some people ate when they were too drunk.


8 posted on 01/22/2021 11:40:36 PM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: nickcarraway

Reminds me of North Carolina pulled pork.
Eastern* North Carolina pulled pork...
*snicker


9 posted on 01/22/2021 11:49:27 PM PST by glasseye (Make the media homesick again...)
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To: CondoleezzaProtege
The pig in that picture looks pretty big for a suckling pig. They sell them in our local supermarkets vacuum packed and they are about 12-18 inches long.


10 posted on 01/23/2021 12:02:06 AM PST by Oshkalaboomboom
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To: BunnySlippers
If you ever get a chance take a look at the Netflix series Taco Chronicles. It ran for 2 seasons and it was fascinating. In Spanish with English subtitles, well worth the time.

BTW I don't subscribe to Netflix and have never given them a dime. I download from private sites.

11 posted on 01/23/2021 12:05:49 AM PST by Oshkalaboomboom
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To: dsc

I blame fish tacos.


12 posted on 01/23/2021 12:12:28 AM PST by gundog (This space for rent.)
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To: gundog

“I blame fish tacos.”

As soon as I’m king, I’m going to outlaw fish tacos, breakfast burritos, and all forms of “wrap.” (shudder)


13 posted on 01/23/2021 12:15:57 AM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: dsc

It’s part of the cult of street food these days. Plus, tacos are really a blank slate. You can do anything. Korean tacos are amazing.


14 posted on 01/23/2021 12:28:54 AM PST by Bubba Ho-Tep ("The rat always knows when he's in with weasels."--Tom Waits)
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To: dsc

When did bread become evil?


15 posted on 01/23/2021 12:30:48 AM PST by gundog (This space for rent.)
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To: nickcarraway

We dissected suckling pigs in biology class. Doubt I’d eat ‘em.


16 posted on 01/23/2021 12:50:58 AM PST by Greg123456
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To: dsc

I’d outlaw peanut butter pretzels, jalapeno poppers and crab rangoons.


17 posted on 01/23/2021 12:54:09 AM PST by Greg123456
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To: gundog

“When did bread become evil?”

Are you referring to tortillas?


18 posted on 01/23/2021 1:28:05 AM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: Greg123456

Yeah. Jalapenos, especially, are much abused.


19 posted on 01/23/2021 1:32:19 AM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: Bubba Ho-Tep

“Korean tacos are amazing.”

To me, that sounds just awful.

I don’t like to adulterate cuisines.


20 posted on 01/23/2021 1:35:08 AM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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