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Chicago’s best al pastor taco

A pork fiend chows 16 al pastor tacos to find his favorite.

By Nick Kindelsperger
Published: July 26, 2012

387.rb.ft.taco.alpastor
Cilantro
Pastor
pineapple
lime
onion
corn tortillas
  • Cilantro

    Ingredients that make up an al pastor taco. First: cilantro

    387.rb.ft.taco.alpastor.1.jpgCilantro155323511
  • Pastor

    Pork

    387.rb.ft.taco.alpastor.2.jpgPastor155323562
  • pineapple

    Pineapple

    Photo: Nicole Radja387.rb.ft.taco.alpastor.3.jpgpineapple155323613
  • lime

    Lime

    387.rb.ft.taco.alpastor.4.jpglime155323664
  • onion

    Onion

    387.rb.ft.taco.alpastor.5.jpgonion155323715
  • corn tortillas

    Corn tortillas

    Photo: Nicole Radja387.rb.ft.taco.alpastor.6.jpgcorn tortillas155323766

Ingredients that make up an al pastor taco. First: cilantro

To achieve a perfect al pastor taco takes effort and skill. Pork, once marinated in chilies and achiote powder, must be sliced, stacked onto a vertical spit and flame-grilled until the exterior is caramelized. (Too many places griddle marinated pork to order.) A smart restaurant will perch a pineapple atop the spit so that a fruity glaze drips down to lacquer the meat. Sliced off in strips and nestled in a corn tortilla, this pork is the crowning achievement of the taco arts.

Al pastor loves a crowd. The more customers there are, the less opportunity the meat has to sit around and dry out. This helps to explain why the best al pastor tacos come from the packed Maxwell Street Market, held on Sundays in the South Loop (Desplaines Street from Roosevelt Street to Harrison Street; see our Maxwell taco crawl). Rubi’s and Manolo’s both spin towering hunks of red-hued pork, crowned with pineapple and cooked by the glow of charcoal. On my last visit, Manolo’s pastor was a little juicier, and the charcoal aroma a little stronger. But the real answer is to try both.

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