At 8 AM the street outside Tacos y Montados La Junta hums with the clatter of bicycles and the low murmur of early commuters. The air is thick with the sweet perfume of pineapple caramelizing on the grill, a scent that pulls me past the faded blue sign and onto the narrow patio where a handful of regulars sip café de olla while waiting for their order.

Inside, the kitchen is a cramped stage of steel griddles and a humming charcoal smoker. The star of the show is the Taco de Pastor con Piña, a corn tortilla folded around thin slices of marinated pork, a bite of charred pineapple, and a drizzle of smoky salsa verde. The pork is tender, the pineapple adds a burst of acidity, and the salsa cuts through with a peppery snap. The plate comes with a side of pickled onions and a lime wedge, all for MX$45. I bite, and the flavors collide—sweet, salty, smoky—leaving a lingering heat that makes the eyes water just enough to smile.

One reviewer wrote, “The al pastor here hits the perfect balance of sweet and smoky; the pineapple is a game‑changer.” Another noted, “I come back every Saturday for the tacos; the salsa verde is bright and never too hot.” A third voice added, “The service feels like visiting family; you’re greeted by name and the food never disappoints.” These snippets echo the chorus of regulars who claim the place feels like a second home, a spot where the grill never rests and the tacos never lose their edge.
The joint started as a modest stall in 2015, run by a former butcher who wanted to share his family’s recipe for marinated pork. Over the years the menu grew, but the core—tacos, montados, and that signature pineapple—remained unchanged. Open from 7 AM to midnight, the place fills quickly at lunch, when office workers flood in for a quick bite, and again at dusk when the neighborhood’s streetlights flicker on and the scent of grilling meat becomes a beacon.
By the time the sun dips low, the patio glows with string lights and the chatter softens. I linger over a second taco, watching a group of teenagers laugh over shared salsa packets. The grill’s hiss slows, the night air cools, and the lingering taste of pineapple stays on my tongue, a reminder that a simple taco can carry a whole city’s rhythm in a single bite.




