Skip to Content
History

Taco Research: 1922 L.A. Taco Recipe Discovered

11:22 AM PDT on September 5, 2013

    taco_research_dept
    Screen Shot 2013-09-04 at 5.33.14 PM

    The above recipe is from the Castelar Crèche Cook Book. The Castelar Crèche was a "home for homeless babies" and the cookbook was printed to raise funds for the charity in the city of Los Angeles in 1922. And what of the recipe's author? Not much is known about Carlota L. Algara, except that at some point (possibly after this recipe was published, as she uses her maiden name) she married Eduardo J. Creel, son of wealthy  Mexican businessman Enrique C. Creel and Maria de Los Angeles Elena Dolores Terrazas. The Creel-Terrazas family is an old and powerful family from Chihuahua, Mexico. Enrique Creel had to leave Mexico for the United States during the Mexican Revolution, but later returned and died in Mexico City in 1931. His father-in-law, who owned millions and millions of acres of land in Chihuahua is one reported to have said "No soy 'de' Chihuahua; Chihuahua es mío".

    A different  publication from 1914 is usually cited as the first appearance of a taco recipe in the United States. That was in the "California Mexican-Spanish Cookbook" by native Angeleño Bertha Haffner-Ginger, which included the following recipe for tacos:

    Screen Shot 2013-09-05 at 10.05.09 AM

    It's worth noting that in 1905 the Los Angeles Times published a book of "Old Time California-Spanish-Mexican" recipes that included many tamale, enchilada and albondigas recipes, but makes no mention of tacos. The very first mention of tacos in English seems to be Olive Percival's "Mexico City: an Idler's Notebook" which was published in 1901 and excerpted in the Los Angeles Times a couple of years prior, according to Gustavo Arellano's Taco USA. Below is the first mention of 'taco' in print in the USA:

    Screen Shot 2013-09-05 at 10.37.57 AM

    Non food definitions of taco remained for some time (and do today, although not in the United States). As late as 1920, the United States Bureau of Mines defined a taco as: "Tacos (Mex.) Stones in the bottom of an arrastre.". An arrastre, by the way, is "A rude apparatus for pulverizing ores, esp. those containing free gold".

    Stay in touch

    Sign up for our free newsletter

    More from L.A. TACO

    Swarm of Police in Riot Gear Destroy Peaceful Pro-Palestine Encampment At UCLA During Early Morning Raid, Over 200 Arrested

    At 4 AM, CHP broke through the fencing on the other side of the encampment and set up a police line, consistently firing flash-bang grenades into the air. They also fired on protestors with “less-lethal” munitions and rubber bullets, causing an injury to one protester’s face that required stitches. 

    May 3, 2024

    Ten Palestinian-Owned Restaurants to Support in L.A. and O.C.

    Supporting our local Palestinian restaurants not only allows you to experience excellent cooking and recipes from a culture and people who have been making these dishes for generations, but it also helps to broaden our worldviews on a culture some forces seek to bury and erase. 

    May 2, 2024

    New Date for TACO MADNESS 2024 Event Confirmed: June 15th at La Plaza de Cultura y Artes

    After getting rained out, our new date promises to be our biggest and most fun festival to date. Come out and eat all the tacos, drink all the micheladas, dance to the best DJs in L.A., and support our independent journalism! Of course, L.A. TACO members get in for free. Tickets on sale now.

    April 29, 2024

    An Update On Our Membership Drive: Some Bad News, and Good News

    Some bad news, and some good news on our pledge to survive and stay sustainable.

    April 26, 2024
    See all posts