Chilean Roots · French Technique · Mexican Soul

Our Story

A family. A kitchen. A way of making tacos nobody else makes quite like this.

From Chile to Connecticut — with a stop in a French kitchen

The Munoz del Castillo family came to America from Chile in the early 1980s. They didn't come with a restaurant plan. They came with a way of cooking — careful, patient, deeply felt — and that way of cooking eventually became Rincón Taqueria.

Maria grew up in the kitchen of her parents' French restaurant, Bistro du Soleil, in Norwalk. Her mother, Soledad, trained as a French chef and taught Maria everything she knows about building flavors from the bottom up. Long braises. Skimming fat. Patience as an ingredient.

When Maria told her mother she wanted to open a taqueria, Soledad wasn't sure. Serving "ordinary Mexican dishes" after French culinary training felt like a step backward. But Maria had a different vision: she'd visited taquerias up and down the East Coast and in California, and she saw something nobody was doing.

"I convinced her I could make tacos and other Mexican dishes the French way."
— Maria Munoz del Castillo, to The New York Times

What "the French way" actually means

At most taquerias, meats are cooked quickly. At Rincón, they go into braziers the night before and cook low and slow until they fall apart — often 10 hours or more. Then every bit of fat is carefully skimmed off. What's left is meat that's intensely flavorful but clean, tender but not greasy.

It's why the burritos are enormous but never heavy. It's why the braised beef in a taco tastes like something that took all night — because it did.

This is what makes Rincón different. Not a gimmick. Not a fusion concept. Just a family that knows how to cook, applying everything they know to the food they love.

Hidden in plain sight

The New York Times found us in a strip mall on Route 1 in Norwalk. The parking lot had three Lexuses, a Mercedes, and a Honda Accord. Inside: knotty pine panels, Mexican tiles, Tiffany-style glass on the refrigerated cases, six bowls of dried chiles behind the counter.

The staff dressed casually. The first thing they said to every new guest was: "Is this your first time here?"

That hasn't changed. That's the whole thing, actually.

The atmosphere at Rincón Taqueria — New York Times
The atmosphere at Rincón Taqueria. Credit: Lisa Wiltse for The New York Times.
Homemade guacamole and chips at Rincón Taqueria
The house-made guacamole. Worth every cent.
Beef tacos at Rincón Taqueria
Beef tacos. Ten-hour braise. No shortcuts.

What we stand for

Powered by Love

This isn't a chain. Every dish that comes out of that kitchen has a family behind it. That's not marketing — that's just the truth.

French Technique

Maria's mother trained her well. Low and slow. Skim the fat. Build the flavor from the inside out. Apply that to a taco and watch what happens.

Taste the Pacific

Chilean, Mexican, California, Connecticut shoreline. The Pacific coast runs through everything — the ingredients, the philosophy, the welcome.

As featured in

The New York Times Review ↗

The Space

A neat, tidy spot at the left end of a small strip mall opposite Kohl's on the Post Road, serving 30 people. Inside walls trimmed in Mexican tiles, cactus plants in the windows, Tiffany-style glass panels on the refrigerated cases. Wheelchair accessible.

The Crowd

Diverse at lunch, from small business groups to solitary diners, most casually dressed. Service is brisk, friendly, and informal.

What We Liked

Beef tacos; beef, cheese and chicken empanadas; beef and pork burritos; chicken quesadilla; huevos rancheros; chilaquiles; and tres leches cake.

The Parking Lot

Three Lexuses, one Mercedes, and a Honda Accord. Free parking in front and along the sides of the strip mall.

SALUD
DINERO
AMOR

Thank you. We love you. Come in hungry and leave full — that's all we've ever wanted.

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