Eats Beat

Pink tacos hit the big time: Family cafe grows into full-size Fort Worth restaurant, bar

Cafecito, a taco stand that made its reputation for its pink-tinted tortillas and fresh, fiery sauces, will move to a Magnolia Avenue restaurant space with a bar, a patio and longer hours, owner Cinthya Duran said Friday.

Cafecito will take over the former Easy Monkey restaurant, 401 W. Magnolia Ave. The 99-year-old building, a former flower shop, is better known for its long run as Fixture Kitchen.

Cafecito is currently in a stand at 1229 Eighth Ave. after starting nearby as a food truck.

Duran said the restaurant has already outgrown that location.

“We’re so excited to stay in our beloved Near Southside,” she wrote by email.

Cafecito serves burritos and tacos to go on fresh tortillas, including “pink tacos” with beet juice added for color, as shown Sept. 2, 2023.
Cafecito serves burritos and tacos to go on fresh tortillas, including “pink tacos” with beet juice added for color, as shown Sept. 2, 2023. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

Cafecito’s menu has steadily grown and now includes chilaquiles rojos with chipotle salsa, open-face sandwiches (molletes), Coahuila-style ham-and-cheese quesadillas sincronizadas and cold brew lattes.

Hospital workers discovered Cafecito first along with its “pink tacos” tinted with beet juice.

Back then, Cafecito was just a tiny taco truck open early mornings, serving simple breakfast egg-and-potato burritos and “pink tacos” on fresh-made tortillas, with powerful chile arbol or jalapeno-serrano sauces and cinnamon-spiced cafe de olla.

Originally, Cafecito sold only about 10 tacos a day.

Cinthya Durán and her family moved their Cafecito tacos and cafe de olla from a food truck into a restaurant, shown Sept. 2, 2023.
Cinthya Durán and her family moved their Cafecito tacos and cafe de olla from a food truck into a restaurant, shown Sept. 2, 2023. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

“We were beginning to wonder,” Duran said in an earlier interview. “Somebody would come buy two tacos and leave, and then we’d see them walking back toward the truck and we’d say, ‘Oh, my gosh! Did we mess up?’ But they would come back and say, ‘I’d like two more of these tacos.’ “

The family’s roots are in Monclova, Coahuila, about 550 miles south of Fort Worth.

“I had a hard time finding authentic breakfast tacos like the ones we grew up eating at home,” Duran said.

“We did not expect people to love us as much as they have,” she said.

Cafecito is open from 6 a.m. daily except Sundays for breakfast and lunch; 682-376-9649, cafecitofw.com

Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Bud Kennedy is celebrating his 40th year writing about restaurants in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has written the “Eats Beat” dining column in print since 1985 and online since 1992 — that’s more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat. Support my work with a digital subscription
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