

Hand-pressed to order tortillas to cradle carne asada & adobada tacos from a no-frills modern shop.
Hours
| Friday | 10 AM–3 AM |
| Saturday | 10 AM–3 AM |
| Sunday | 10 AM–12 AM |
| Monday | 10 AM–12 AM |
| Tuesday | 10 AM–12 AM |
| Wednesday | 10 AM–12 AM |
| Thursday | 10 AM–12 AM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 609 S Spring St, Los Angeles, CA 90014
Phone: (213) 988-7202
Website: http://www.tacos1986.com/
Menu Photos
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Tacos 1986 (Los Angeles, CA) – kevinEats
Reviews
It’s bad! I give it a negative 5
Chicken was bland and the cheese on side and avocado on the other side.
No love or care for the presentation.
The guacamole they put on top of the taco is top notch. I like that the handmade tortillas aren’t thick either.
Street parking. Dogs were allowed inside. No public restrooms. Credit cards accepted.
I come all the way from the San Fernando Valley just to try their amazing mushroom marinated tacos, which I was totally surprised and amazed of the quality ingredients and flavor that bursted in my mouth, when I took that first bite. The Adobada, was also delicious. something recommended to try, the only thing that was a downside was that they do not add pineapple to the Adonada taco which traditionally, that’s how it should served, but never the lease it is still delicious. Great experience, will be going back as a regular customer.
I enjoyed the texture of the adobada meat at Tacos 1986: some pieces crispy and charred like sturdy bacon, other pieces tender and sticky. I also enjoyed the white corn tortilla used in this taco, griddled until it started to brown — another unusual twist for a Los Angeles taco purveyor. I ordered my taco “con todo” and it was topped with guacamole, chopped onions, and cilantro. Any application of salsas is DIY, and I recommend you add the incendiary salsa macha.
Taco 1986’s “Taco de Adobada” would perhaps be in the same top tier as the “Al Pastor” offerings from Leo’s, El Flamin’, and Ave 26 Taco Stand if the adobo glaze on the meat itself didn’t have as grassy of a finish. I like achiote laying on my tastebuds when I eat adobada pork, but Taco 1986 takes it just a touch too far, and the strawberries don’t provide enough sweetness to balance the bitterness.
A better option to order is the “Carne Asada Vampiro.” A “Vampiro” is a taco made using tortilla shells that have been griddled for a while over low-heat until they are dry and crunchy; the tortillas contract and ruffle a bit during this process, often resembling a “vampire bat wing,” hence the name. Some taquerias serve their vampiros as one tortilla topped with melted white cheese and the toppings, while other places, including Tacos 1986, use two corn tortillas to make a “sandwich,” similar to a mulita, stuffed with the toppings and melted cheese.
The “Carne Asada Vampiro” here lacks for nothing. Besides being stuffed with one of the most deliciously-seasoned renditions of carne asada I’ve had in Los Angeles, the supporting guacamole and melted white cheese are also top notch and issued in a perfectly harmonious ratio with the smoky beef. Vampiro “shells” elsewhere can often end up with a stale texture due to lazy cooking, but here they are perfectly crispy.