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Mexico City, Mexico

Taquería Orinoco

CuisineMexican
Executive ChefVarious
LocationMexico City, Mexico
Opinionated About Dining

Ranked #13 on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list for 2025, Taquería Orinoco has earned consecutive annual recognition since 2023 — a signal that Mexico City's taco tradition, at its most rigorous, competes on the same critical stage as the capital's fine-dining tier. Located on Avenida Horacio in Polanco, it operates late into the night and draws a crowd that spans neighbourhood regulars and visiting food critics alike.

Taquería Orinoco restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico
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Where Late Nights and Critical Recognition Meet in Polanco

Polanco is the kind of Mexico City neighbourhood that can make a taquería feel incongruous. The tree-lined avenues host the capital's densest concentration of four-dollar-sign dining: Pujol, Máximo, Em. Yet Taquería Orinoco, on Avenida Horacio, has spent three consecutive years on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America list — ranked #26 in 2023, #25 in 2024, and #13 in 2025. That trajectory isn't noise. OAD's Cheap Eats rankings aggregate submissions from a specialist critic network, and consistent upward movement in that system reflects sustained execution, not a single good season. It places Orinoco in a peer set that has nothing to do with price point and everything to do with rigour.

The pattern matters because Mexico City's taco scene is enormous and deeply stratified. Street-level stands operate on volume and neighbourhood loyalty. A smaller tier of taquerías has crossed into critical vocabulary — places that draw not just local devotion but the kind of annotation that appears in serious food writing. Orinoco operates in that second tier, and its OAD ranking puts it above the vast majority of competitors in both categories. For context, the same OAD list tracks cheap eats across the entirety of North America, meaning Orinoco is ranked against operations from New York, Los Angeles, Toronto, and every major Mexican city simultaneously.

The Taquería Format and What Polanco Demands of It

The taquería as a format is among Mexico's most codified food traditions. At its core , masa, protein, salsa, the choice of corn tortilla thickness and char level , there is very little room for reinvention without losing the thing itself. What distinguishes serious practitioners from the middle of the market isn't novelty. It's consistency of tortilla quality, the sourcing and preparation of the meat, and the calibration of the salsa program. Critics who specialise in this format are evaluating execution depth, not creativity for its own sake.

Polanco adds a specific pressure. The neighbourhood's dining clientele includes a high proportion of international visitors and Mexico City's own food-aware professional class, both of whom arrive with calibrated expectations. A taquería that earns a 4.6 rating across 4,580 Google reviews in that context isn't surviving on proximity or habit. The volume of reviews at that score suggests both broad appeal and sustained quality control , the kind of average that typically drops over time if a kitchen is cutting corners.

Hours as an Editorial Statement

The operating hours at Orinoco function as an argument about what this kind of venue is for. Monday through Thursday and Sunday, service runs from 1pm to 3:30am. On Friday and Saturday, the kitchen stays open until 5am. Those hours describe something specific: a place that is not organised around the tourism clock or the early-dinner convention of formal restaurants. It is operating in the hours when Mexico City actually eats , the post-theatre meal, the post-club stop, the 2am hunger that has no polite alternative in most cities.

Late-night credibility in Mexico City's dining scene carries weight precisely because the city's serious food culture doesn't stop at midnight. The fact that Orinoco's hours extend deep into the early morning while maintaining a critical reputation separates it from venues that earn recognition on early service alone. The OAD ranking, compiled from critics who eat at volume across multiple visits, reflects what the kitchen produces across the full service window, not just the prime-time slot.

Reading the Awards Trajectory

Three consecutive OAD Cheap Eats placements , with upward momentum , is the kind of signal that warrants close reading. The Opinionated About Dining platform has become one of the more rigorous third-party arbiters of the cheap eats category globally, drawing from a contributor base that includes professional critics, food writers, and serious independent voices rather than mass-review aggregators. Moving from #26 to #13 over two years while North American competition intensifies is not a statistical accident.

For comparison, the Mexico City venues that dominate the capital's higher price tiers , Esquina Común, Expendio de Maíz , earn their recognition through a different critical apparatus, one that emphasises concept, sourcing narrative, and tasting-menu architecture. Orinoco's recognition comes through a narrower, harder-to-game lens: does the food hold up, repeatedly, across critics who have eaten it multiple times? The answer, evidently, is yes.

Mexico's taco tradition is well represented in the OAD framework across multiple cities. Levadura de Olla Restaurante in Oaxaca operates within a regional food culture that draws heavily on indigenous grain traditions. KOLI Cocina de Origen in Monterrey approaches northern Mexican protein traditions through a more formal lens. Orinoco's position in Polanco is distinct: it is not a regional showcase, not a chef-driven concept, but a discipline-first taquería that has earned national-level recognition through repetition rather than reinvention.

Mexico City's Wider Eating Map

Polanco's density makes it a reasonable base for a serious eating week in Mexico City, and Orinoco fills a specific gap in any itinerary built around the capital's range. The neighbourhood's fine-dining options are well documented, but the need for a late-night option that doesn't compromise quality is harder to satisfy , Orinoco addresses that gap directly. For visitors building a broader picture of what the capital's dining scene looks like across formats and price points, our full Mexico City restaurants guide maps the field in detail, alongside our full Mexico City hotels guide, full Mexico City bars guide, full Mexico City wineries guide, and full Mexico City experiences guide.

Beyond the capital, Mexico's critical restaurant map extends across regions with distinct food identities. Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe works within Baja's wine-country dining tradition. Le Chique in Puerto Morelos applies a technique-heavy format to the Yucatan coast. Olivea Farm to Table in Ensenada connects Baja California produce to a more informal format. Lunario in El Porvenir brings wine-country context to northern Baja. For those following Mexican food culture across borders, Alma Fonda Fina in Denver and Cariño in Chicago represent the tradition being interpreted seriously in the United States.

Know Before You Go

Address: Av. Horacio 400, Polanco V Secc, Miguel Hidalgo, 11560 Ciudad de México

Hours: Monday–Thursday and Sunday: 1pm–3:30am | Friday–Saturday: 1pm–5am

Awards: Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America , #13 (2025), #25 (2024), #26 (2023)

Google Rating: 4.6 from 4,580 reviews

Booking: Walk-in format; no booking information available

Getting There: Located in Polanco, accessible from Polanco metro station (Line 7) or by ride-share from central areas

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