[an error occurred while processing this directive]


Best All-You-Can-Eat Buffet
Best Bagel Bakery
Best Bagels
Best BBQ
Best Bread Creations
Best Breakfast Under $5
Best Breakfast
Best Burgers
Best Butcher Shop
Best Cannoli
Best Casual Dining
Best Chinese
Best Delicatessen
Best Desserts
Best Dim Sum
Best Diner
Best Fine Dining
Best Fish Market
Best Food On I-10
Best Formal Dining
Best Free Snacks
Best Fresh-Baked Bread
Best Greek
Best Hot-Links
Best Ice Cream
Best Indian
Best Italian
Best Korean
Best Late-Night Restaurant
Best Local Flavor
Best Lunch Over $5
Best Lunch Under $5
Best Margarita For Kids
Best Margaritas
Best Marinara Sauce
Best Mexican (No Lard)
Best Middle Eastern
Best Middle-Eastern Market
Best New Restaurant
Best Omelet Bar
Best Outdoor Dining
Best Pizza
Best Place To Eat Fried Pickles
Best Produce
Best Salads
Best Salsa
Best Sandwich Advocate For Fire Safety
Best Sandwiches
Best Smoothie Bar
Best Sonoran Hot-Dog
Best Sunday Brunch
Best Sushi
Best Sweet Shop
Best Taco Stand & Hot-dog Stand
Best Take-Out
Best Taste Of New York
Best Thai
Best Tortillas
Best Truck Stop
Best Vegan Selections
Best Vegetarian Fine-Dining
Best Veggie Burger
Best Vietnamese Soup



Best Mexican (No Lard)

El Saguarito Mexican Food
7216 N. Oracle Road


READERS' PICK: We all want that promised future free of heart disease, but are we ready to give up Mexican food? Hardly. And that's just what Albert and Blanca Vasquez decided eight years ago when they opened El Saguarito--traditional, family cuisine that caters to the ticker and the gullet. A feat more amazing than triple by-pass, the Vasquez's revamped their Mexican recipes, removed all need for animal lard (including the tortillas!), and substituted canola oil and salutary creativity in their great kitchen concoctions. Items like green corn tamales, nopalitos colorados, burros and chimichangas can be found on El Saguarito's El Corazón Contento menu (with less than 21 percent of calories from fat), designed with input from the University Heart Center. Forget the guilt of dining out: Drop by El Saguarito whenever the urge arises. You, too, will say hóla canola and adiós brussels sprouts.

READERS' POLL RUNNER-UP: La Indita, 622 N. Fourth Ave. Ordering a la carte from La Indita's star-studded menu (stars mean no lard) may be the best way to approach a vegetarian meal here: Offerings include guacamole tostadas, cheese enchiladas, chile rellenos, chalupas, beans and rice. Meat-free burritos are available as well, filled with potatoes and eggs, or beans and cheese. Daily specials may even be vegetarian, like the calabacitas plate with beans, rice and a tortilla for $4.95. Colorful murals and storefront windows looking out onto the avenue give diners additional food for thought. The service is friendly, the horchata sweet and fresh, and the beer is as it should be: Mexican, cold and served in a short, thick, frosted glass.

A REAL SCREAM: With Sedona red-rock walls and polished concrete floors, The Black Bean Burrito Bar & Salsa Co. (2965 N. Campbell Ave.) is a place that's all-Arizona. There's a "Build Your Own


Case History

1998 Winner: La Salsa Fresh Mexican Grill


Page Back

Home | Arts & Culture | Cafés | Chow | City Life | Kids | Outdoors
Saloons | Shopping | Most Wanted | Credits | Search

Copyright © 1995-98 Tucson Weekly

Page Forward