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Cochinita pibil takes over Echo Park at Tania’s Tacos

A cochinita pibil taco in a blue corn tortilla from Tania's Tacos in Echo Park.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
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It’s Saturday morning at Echo Park Lake when Tania Macin hoists the heavy lid off a vintage yellow Le Creuset stock pot.

Peeling back a damp stratum of aromatic banana leaves, she unveils a bubbling, adobe red guisado of cochinita pibil, the Yucatecan specialty of achiote-rubbed, citrus-marinated, slow-braised pork, before ladling a large spoonful into a single blue tortilla made by Kernel of Truth Organics in Boyle Heights.

The 32-year-old Macin, who moved to L.A. from her hometown of Mexico City in 2018, launched Tania’s Tacos in October with her girlfriend, writer Erin Mosbaugh.

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Frustrated by an endless job search — she worked as a digital marketing specialist in Mexico — Macin, who learned to cook from her Veracruz-raised grandparents, stumbled into cooking.

After receiving heavy praise for the cochinita pibil she brought to a friend’s dinner party, she and Mosbaugh purchased a grill online and brought Tania’s Tacos into existence.

“At first I thought, ‘What if I do a pop-up and nobody comes?’” she said. “Well, at least I’d have a lot of food for three months.”

While the traditional recipe for cochinita pibil involves suckling pig cooked underground in a stone-lined pit, Macin uses bone-in, skin-on pork shoulder for both the cochinita tacos and the sloppy Joe-style sandwiches on King’s Hawaiian rolls that are the core of her four-item menu.

Tania Macin prepares a cochinita pibil taco at her taco stand in Echo Park.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

First she grills the banana leaves to make them pliable enough to line her pot and to impart similar flavors as you’d find in a banana-leaf wrapped tamal colado.

She makes her recado rojo in a molcajete, grinding achiote paste with ingredients including clove, garlic, pepper and oregano, and then loosens it with naranja agria, a mixture of lime and orange juice that mimics the tart tang of the Yucatán Peninsula’s native oranges.

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After marinating overnight in the fridge, the dish simmers for eight to 10 hours on low heat on the stove before it is transported to the park.

The result is a clean cochinita pibil rich with the essences of pork, achiote, clove and cinnamon. Onions pickled in naranja agria and a salsa of pineapple and chile manzano provide a vital kick of acid.

Tania Macin at her taco stand at Echo Park Lake with possible customers, a girl on a bike and a woman walking a dog.
Tania Macin at her taco stand at Echo Park Lake.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Each taco overflows with broth, the sturdy tortillas demonstrating tremendous load-bearing capabilities as guests start by sipping excess broth off the top before going in for their first bite of saturated, shredded pork.

For the meat-free, Macin also offers mushroom quesadillas and an excellent version of the Mexican cornbread pan de elote that should not be neglected, regardless of your dietary orientation.

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The positive reception of park-goers and the encouragement of the veteran vendors of Mexican, Salvadoran and Vietnamese street cooking who work the same beat has been uplifting, Macin said.

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“You can only apply for jobs for like, four hours, and then what do you do?” she asked. “This has brought back my dignity. I’m doing something. I’m not unemployed. I have a thing.”

Tania’s Tacos will pop up next on the north side of Echo Park Lake on Jan. 26 at 11:30 a.m.

751 Echo Park Ave., Los Angeles, instagram.com/taniastacos

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