It’s 7 AM on a crisp weekday and the line outside Tacos y Montados La Junta snakes around the corner of Avenida Reforma. The air is thick with the sweet smoke of pork and the sharp bite of fresh cilantro. A group of students chat in rapid Spanish while the vendor flips meat on a battered steel grill, the clang of the spatula echoing down the street.

Inside, the menu is short but each item feels earned. The Taco de Carnitas al Pastor costs MX$45 and arrives on a soft corn tortilla, the meat caramelized at the edges, a slice of grilled pineapple perched on top, a drizzle of salsa verde that tingles the tongue. One reviewer wrote, “The pork is juicy, the pineapple adds a perfect pop, and the salsa cuts through the richness.” The texture of the meat – tender yet with a crisp edge – makes the bite linger just long enough to crave another.

Beyond the signature taco, the Montado de Barbacoa, priced at MX$55, layers shredded beef on a toasted bolillo, topped with pickled onions that add a bright crunch. A different patron noted, “The barbacoa melts in your mouth, the onions give it a zing I can’t get enough of.” The Taco de Suadero, MX$50, offers a thin slice of beef that’s buttery and slightly salty, finished with a squeeze of lime that brightens the whole palate. A third comment reads, “Every bite feels like a celebration of flavor, simple but unforgettable.”
La Junta started as a family stall in 1998, run by the Hernández brothers who learned the art of slow‑cooked pork from their grandfather. The walls are plastered with faded photographs of the original cart, and the wooden counter still bears the same scratches from decades of elbows and plates. Regulars come for the consistency – the grill never cools, the salsa never changes, and the service is brisk but friendly. By 3 PM the lunch rush peaks, the line grows, and the chatter turns to jokes about who will finish the last taco.
As the sun dips low, the line thins and the scent of charred meat softens into a warm afterglow. I linger at the last table, watching a child tug at his mother’s sleeve, eyes fixed on the next batch of tacos. The experience feels less like a meal and more like a ritual that ties the neighborhood together, one tortilla at a time.




