Credit: Photos by Aaron Lee

The news last month that beloved Cully institution Angel Food & Fun is no more (at least as we know it) was yet another blow to the psyche at the end of a year when we were already full up on bad tidings.

Its chef, Manuel Lopez, was reportedly targeted for deportation (although a friend told the Mercury later it was over a business dispute with the buildingโ€™s ownerโ€”something we were never able to verify). Either way, the cityโ€™s best source of deeply flavored and hard-to-find Yucatecan gems remains lost to the dregs of 2017.

But all is not lost for lovers of cochinita pibil and relleno negroโ€”thereโ€™s another Northeast Portland hole-in-the-wall ready to fill your southern Mexican cravings: Taqueria La Mestiza.

The small, five-booth restaurant on Fremont at the base of Rocky Butte has long been a taqueria, but in mid-2016 Patricia Lavadores and her husband, Tivo Aviles, bought it from a family friend. Under their watch, La Mestiza has ascended via word-of-mouth, adding more regional dishes and turning a bustling trade of handmade panuchos and killer poc chuc.

Lavadores, 36, helped her parents run Taqueria La Estacion, a double-decker bus with a cult following at Northeast 67th and Killingsworth, that closed in 2015 after 14 years. Her parents have retired, but Avilesโ€™ sister also works in the kitchen, and the coupleโ€™s adorable eight-month-old son, Roberto, is often smiling out from a booth.

โ€œThere is not a lot of Yucatecan restaurants in Oregon, really few,โ€ Lavadores says. โ€œItโ€™s mostly northern Mexican restaurants.โ€

The top seller are the panuchos ($1.50-$2.50), fresh corn tortillas made in-house daily, stuffed with black beans, and fried to a perfect crispy-yet-yielding softness before being topped with your choice of meat, pickled red onion, avocado and tomato. Theyโ€™re really damn good, although Lavadores says that only she has โ€œher secretsโ€ on how they get that way. Salbutes ($2), are panuchosโ€™ close cousin, a griddle-puffed tortilla with the same goodies on top.

Lavadores says the poc chuc ($12) is her favorite, thin slices of marinated and grilled pork served over lettuce, avocado, and radishes made delightfully tangy with fresh lime juice. Itโ€™s meant to be piled onto corn tortillas with black bean puree, but itโ€™s almost better plain.

The rich stews are what really got me going, in particular the cochinita pibil ($10), pork shoulder braised for hours in a plantain leaf with achiote paste, emerging orange, supple, and deep. Itโ€™s one of the most famous of many Yucatecan soups, and this is a textbook example. La Mestiza may also be one of the only places (especially west of I-205) making relleno negro ($10). Available only on weekends, itโ€™s a shredded turkey stew with a jet-black broth made of charred chilies, hard boiled egg, and thick slices of ground turkey wrapped around a yellow yolk center, Scotch-egg style. Despite its semi-intimidating appearance, itโ€™s super approachable, lightly smoky, and soothing.

The guacamole, slightly chunky and citrus-bright, is better than most, but skip the tamale unless youโ€™re really craving itโ€”while made with my preferred style in a banana leaf, theyโ€™re a touch bland. However, even the tacos and burritos are a step above. My friend raving about the tacos was how I wound up at La Mestiza in the first place, and a carne asada burrito arrived stuffed full of goodies and obviously having been grilled after wrappingโ€”a sign of craft and care.

On my last visit, a flat screen showing Donald Trump on the Spanish-language news hung over our diverse group of diners like a specter, reminding us that 2018 is gonna get worse. But as we shook our heads, laughed darkly to each other, and dove into our dinners, you couldnโ€™t help but think things will eventually arc toward the better.

Andrea Damewood is a food writer and restaurant critic. Her interests include noodle soups, fried chicken, and sparkles.