Tapatio Tastes Food Tour
Guadalajara, Jalisco | Friday, February 20, 2026
Operator: A Chef’s Tour
The Route
The tour started at El Kiosco De Santa Tere in the Santa Teresita neighborhood and wound through local streets and a market, ending at Nieves de Garrafa Chapalita. Approximately 3.5–4 hours, 13+ tastings.
Stop-by-Stop
1. Street Cart — Tacos de Canasta
Near the meeting point, Santa Teresita
A street vendor cart selling tacos de canasta (basket tacos) — steamed tacos kept warm in a cloth-lined basket. MX$16 each. Fillings included chicharrón, lomo, mole, picadillo, papa, and frijol. Soft, oily, and intensely savory from steaming in their own juices. Delivery and event catering available (33 1126 0379).


2. La Birotera — Lonchería & Bakery
Santa Teresita
A local lonchería with a full chalkboard menu: lonches (fleiman, pegadito, telera, mancuerna), chilaquiles, guisos del día, chorizo, huevo en salsa, chicharrón, pierna, and more. The kitchen had a massive array of guisos bubbling in pots. The tasting was chilaquiles topped with crema — the classic Guadalajara breakfast.
The name “La Birotera” is a nod to the birote (Guadalajara’s signature sourdough bread), and you also received an educational card explaining how birote is made: flour, water, salt, sourdough starter → kneaded and shaped → fermented with distinctive pointed loaves → baked in wood-fired ovens until golden and crispy. Birote is essential to the famous torta ahogada.

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3. Mercado — Multiple Stalls
Likely Mercado de Santa Tere or nearby market
The tour group sat at a counter inside a bustling market. Several stalls were visited:
3a. Onda Marquita — Quesadillas & Enchiladas
Since 1959. Menu: quesadillas ($45 — champiñón, rajas, flor de calabaza, papas, pastor, chicharrón, chorizo, pierna, pollo, deshebrada, suadero, jamón), enchiladas (suizas, pollo y pierna, sencillas), sopes ($25), and full comidas (caldo de res, chiles rellenos, cortes, res y pollo, espinazo, albóndigas, pipián, mole, and more).
3b. Tacos La Morena — Comida Mexicana
Tacos, lonches, quesadillas, gorditas, holletes, and more. Jugo stand alongside. The tasting here looked like a quesadilla — golden fried, served in a pink plastic bag.
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4. Market Vendors — Dried Chiles, Beans & Cheese
Inside the market
A spice/dried goods stall with bins of chile indio ($20), chile yahualica ($32), texano ($40), frijol negro ($46), lenteja grande ($42), and tamarindo ($100). A separate cheese vendor displayed manchego, panela fresca, Parmesano Gourmet, kefir, and nata de leche.


5. Tejuino con Nieve Nico’s — Street Cart
Outside the market area
A street cart selling tejuino con nieve — the iconic Guadalajara drink made from fermented corn masa, piloncillo, lime juice, and salt, served with a scoop of nieve de limón. A mildly fermented, sweet-sour-salty refreshment unique to Jalisco.

6. Mr. Paco’s — Tortas & Lonches
Street-level restaurant
A casual sit-down spot with Chivas Guadalajara branding. The group gathered at red plastic chairs and tables. Menu included tortas/lonches and a dulcería (candy counter). Likely sampled a torta ahogada or lonche here — the classic Guadalajara sandwich on birote bread.
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7. Los Hombres de la Barbería — Tortillería/Taquería
Street-front location
A modern-looking open-front tortillería with visible tortilla machines inside. The guide explained the process. Clean, industrial-chic aesthetic.


8. Tamales y Elotes Valdez
Storefront
Tamales and elotes (corn). Menu included various tamales with a promo: “2 tamales y 1 atole chico $60” and “8 tamales, 1 litro de atole gratis.” The tasting was a tamal de pollo en salsa verde — shredded chicken in green salsa wrapped in masa and corn husk.


10. Panadería Del Río
Street-front bakery
A traditional neighborhood bakery (panadería). Wrought iron gate with painted signage. Likely sampled traditional Mexican pan dulce or more birote here.

11. La Jericallería
Blue and yellow storefront
A shop specializing in jericalla — Guadalajara’s signature baked custard dessert made from milk, eggs, sugar, vanilla, and cinnamon, with a characteristic burnt top. A must-try Tapatio specialty, distinct from flan or crème brûlée. The group gathered outside at yellow benches.

12. La Casa de la Karne en zu Jugo
Rustic brick-front restaurant
The main savory highlight: carne en su jugo (karne en zu jugo) — Guadalajara’s signature dish of thinly sliced beef simmered in its own broth with bacon, beans, cilantro, onion, and crispy tortilla strips. Served in a traditional clay bowl (cazuela de barro). Rich, porky, beefy, and deeply comforting.


13. Nieves de Garrafa Chapalita — Final Stop
Since 2002
The tour ended at this nieves de garrafa (hand-churned ice cream) shop. Nieves de garrafa are made the traditional way — in a wooden barrel (garrafa) surrounded by ice and salt, hand-churned to a creamy consistency. Flavors are typically fruit-forward: mango, guayaba, limón, etc.

Key Guadalajara Food Concepts Covered
| Concept | What It Is |
|---|---|
| Birote (salado) | Guadalajara’s sourdough bread, crusty and tangy, essential for tortas ahogadas |
| Torta ahogada | Birote stuffed with carnitas or beans, “drowned” in tomato-chile sauce |
| Carne en su jugo | Beef simmered in its own juice with bacon, beans, and cilantro |
| Tejuino | Fermented corn drink with lime and nieve de limón |
| Jericalla | Baked custard with burnt top, Guadalajara’s signature dessert |
| Nieves de garrafa | Hand-churned ice cream in a wooden barrel |
| Lonche | A Guadalajara-style sandwich (similar to torta but distinct) |
| Gordita | Thick corn masa pocket stuffed with fillings |
| Chilaquiles | Fried tortilla chips simmered in salsa, topped with crema/cheese |
| Botanas | Fried/dried snacks — chicharrón, duritos, churritos |
Tour by A Chef’s Tour — info@achefstour.com | Viator: Tapatio Tastes Food Tour (d0-69673P65)


