What to order at El Huarache Azteca

Must order
Huarache with chicharron prensado.
Editor tip
Salsa bar has six options; ask for cebolla curtida on the side.
CuisineMexican
Price$$
Neighborhoodfruitvale
Last verified

Must order: Huarache with chicharron prensado.

Why locals love it: Mother-daughter team running a Mexico City counter on a stretch of International Boulevard most visitors never walk.

Tip: Salsa bar has six options; ask for cebolla curtida on the side.

Location

Address: 3842 International Boulevard, Oakland, CA 94601

Also in fruitvale

Wahpepah's Kitchen ★ 4.5

Native American$$fruitvale

Wahpepah's Kitchen in Oakland's Fruitvale is a rare Native American restaurant. Bison, rabbit and squash tacos by Kickapoo tribal member Crystal Wahpepah.

Order: Bison taco with native squash.

Why locals love it: First Native American restaurant in Oakland, steps from Fruitvale BART. Crystal Wahpepah was first Native chef on Food Network's Chopped.

Tip: Lunch service is quicker; the kitchen sources greens from a nearby rooftop garden. James Beard nominated.

Vientian Cafe ★ 4.3

Lao$$fruitvale

Vientian Cafe on Allendale Avenue in Oakland has cooked Lao-Vietnamese-Thai plates for two decades. Off the main strips, regulars only know.

Order: Lao sausage with sticky rice and papaya salad.

Why locals love it: Allendale neighborhood, away from Telegraph and the Fruitvale strip. Two decades of Lao-Vietnamese-Thai cooking with no media noise.

Tip: Cash only is faster; the rice plate combos are the under-radar value lunch.

Full fruitvale food guide →

More hidden gems in Oakland

Wahpepah's Kitchen ★ 4.5

Native American$$fruitvale

Wahpepah's Kitchen in Oakland's Fruitvale is a rare Native American restaurant. Bison, rabbit and squash tacos by Kickapoo tribal member Crystal Wahpepah.

Order: Bison taco with native squash.

Why locals love it: First Native American restaurant in Oakland, steps from Fruitvale BART. Crystal Wahpepah was first Native chef on Food Network's Chopped.

Tip: Lunch service is quicker; the kitchen sources greens from a nearby rooftop garden. James Beard nominated.

Cenaduria Elvira ★ 4.3

Mexican$$jack-london-district

Cenaduria Elvira in Oakland's Jack London district makes Jalisco-style tostadas with Mexico-imported shells. Quietly off the tourist radar for now.

Order: Tostadas Jalisco with shredded pork.

Why locals love it: Tucked behind the Jack London warehouse district; tostada shells flown in from Mexico make it unlike any other Bay Area Mexican spot.

Tip: Order three different salsas to compare; the kitchen will let you sample.

Geta Sushi ★ 4.4

Japanese$$piedmont-avenue

Geta on 41st Street is the small sushi counter that quietly runs a ten or fifteen-piece omakase, hidden behind Piedmont Avenue's higher-profile rooms.

Order: Ten-piece omakase at the counter.

Why locals love it: Small Piedmont Avenue counter overshadowed by Commis nearby. Quietly serves the East Bay's most-trusted neighborhood omakase.

Tip: Tuesday through Saturday only, lunch and dinner. Reservations a week ahead for the counter.

Champa Garden ★ 4.4

Lao$$san-antonio

Champa Garden on 8th Avenue in Oakland's San Antonio neighborhood runs Lao family recipes since 2006. Quiet block, line out the door on weekends.

Order: Nam khao crispy rice salad.

Why locals love it: Off Lake Merritt on a quiet 8th Avenue block; the Bay Area's most authentic Lao kitchen runs largely by neighborhood word of mouth.

Tip: Bring two friends and order across the menu; portions are generous.

Vientian Cafe ★ 4.3

Lao$$fruitvale

Vientian Cafe on Allendale Avenue in Oakland has cooked Lao-Vietnamese-Thai plates for two decades. Off the main strips, regulars only know.

Order: Lao sausage with sticky rice and papaya salad.

Why locals love it: Allendale neighborhood, away from Telegraph and the Fruitvale strip. Two decades of Lao-Vietnamese-Thai cooking with no media noise.

Tip: Cash only is faster; the rice plate combos are the under-radar value lunch.

Battambang ★ 4.2

Cambodian$$chinatown

Battambang on Broadway in Oakland Chinatown has run a Cambodian counter since 1993. Beef lok lak and amok at thirty-year regulars-only prices.

Order: Beef lok lak.

Why locals love it: Oakland Chinatown Cambodian institution since 1993, frequently passed over by visitors heading to dim sum down the block.

Tip: Order across the menu with two friends; the spice levels are conservative by default.

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