Best Burritos
The bartender says he’s more of a heat guy. The question put to him: red chile or green chile on the burrito? You can’t go wrong, he explains. The green gives the beef a depth of flavor, with jalapenos, onions and tomatoes informing the immaculately soft shredded beef. The red is more straightforwardly picante and thus is the barkeep’s pick. Also optional are a roster of trappings: melted cheese, enchilada sauce, sour cream, guacamole and the chimichanga treatment, which includes deep frying. The only add-on to serve a practical purpose, which you’ll appreciate as you hammer-curl this chonk of a burrito, is the rice. It sops up the chile drippings like a white blouse collects a red wine spill. You could eat this burrito in the car over your good jeans and not lose a drip. You’ll be back for another — red or green, you can’t lose. Or take the Solomonic option: the red and green mix, for days when you hanker for rich flavors plus enough raw heat to make your nose run, just a little.