The stretch of Diversey between California and Kedzie was, for a while anyway, spare on good places to eat. However in the last 2-3 months there have been some welcome changes. I've already mentioned in another post the opening of the Guatelinda Bakery on Diversey at Whipple. The grocery store at Sacramento is reopened under new management, with fresh mexican ricotta (requeson), carnitas, chorizo, and puerco adobado prepared in house. The formerly crappy pizzeria a little further east has been replaced with a colorful and pleasant Potosina taqueria called "San Luis Taqueria". They have the infamous enchiladas potosinas, deepfried masa turnovers with red chile worked into the dough, fried whole snappers, and a wide range of alambres - skillets with meat pepper & cheese.
And now, the counter-style restaurant the ever rotating ownership just east of Kedzie on the north side of Diversey, which was for a while Rocque's Snack Shop and then a mediocre taqueria, has emerged from the latest management change - the new incarnation is a vast improvement over the old.
My first indication that things were getting better was a couple of weeks ago when hand-lettered signs for huaraches, zopes [sic], quesadillas and gorditas showed up in the window. Today, Kerensa and I popped in for an impromptu lunch, and if today's meal is typical, the new Taqueria el Mago is very good news for the neighborhood. Every antojito is made by hand; several that we ate today were patted into shape to order. We had a huarache with carne asada, the masa was crisp and tenacious with a thick layer of black beans folded between the layers. Two sopes, each hand shaped and then deepfried, overfilled with pork al pastor or beef. Again, the masa was just right, crisp where it should be crisp and pliant where it should be pliant. The gordita with stewed chicken was slightly less successful, but still very good.
The masterpiece however was the gordita de requeson, a thick patty of masa about 6 inches in diameter shaped around a filling of white crumply cheese, jalapenos, and epazote, fried first in a well-seasoned skillet, then crisped on the flat top. I noticed them only after eating myself into a semi-comatose state, but when I expressed an interest, Paola, (whose hands we heard slapping masa throughout our meal) pulled one off the flat top and sliced off an edge, two pieces for me and kerensa and the rest as a snack for the waitress. Incredible comfort food, mild and hot, steaming masa, soft white cheese, perfect with salt. I wished I'd skipped the last half of the huarache.
I'm very excited about this restaurant - it's literally 300 yards from my front door. I'll be back to check on the quesadilla, the chilaquiles in the morning, the caldos de pollo and de res. The staff (who are from Michoacan) speaks nearly no english, the space is utterly without charm, there are only two tables, but this is the best eating news to hit my block in a while.