Where Did the Taco Come From?
Dating back to the 18th century, the dish has jumped from the Mexican silver mines to fast food staple
- By Katy June Friesen
- Smithsonian.com, May 04, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
What made the fast-food taco possible?
The fast-food taco is a product of something called the “taco shell,” a tortilla that has been pre-fried into that characteristic U-shape. If you read Glen Bell’s authorized biography, he says he invented the taco shell in the 1950s, and that it was his technological breakthrough. Mexicans were cooking tacos to order—fresh—and Glen Bell, by making then ahead, was able to serve them faster. But when I went into the U.S. patent office records, I found the original patents for making taco shells were awarded in the 1940s to Mexican restaurateurs, not to Glen Bell.
So when do you see evidence of the hard-shell taco first becoming popular?
Already in the 1940s, Mexican cookbooks are describing the way to make these, by taking a tortilla, frying it, and bending it over to form that U-shape. It’s hard to say when people started doing this for the first time, but clearly its being done at least a decade before Glen Bell claims to have invented it.
Did the taco lead the way toward a broader commercialization of Mexican food in general?
The taco shell is crucial for taking Mexican food outside of Mexican communities. Corn tortillas do not keep very well. They’re sort of like doughnuts—if you get a fresh doughnut, it tastes really good. If you get one that’s been setting around for weeks, not so good. If the taco shell is fried beforehand, you can wrap it up in plastic and keep it sitting around until somebody wants to use it.
Has the American-born taco circulated back to Mexico? How has the wave of Mexican immigrants to the U.S. in the last 20 years changed food on both sides of the border?
Lets just say that the Mexicans have been a lot more successful at bringing their Mexican food to the United States than Americans have at bringing their Mexican food to Mexico. Taco Bell has tried on a couple occasions to establish restaurants in Mexico, and they have invariably closed down very quickly. But I think Mexican regional tacos—like tacos al pastor, tacos de barbacoa—are becoming increasingly popular in the United States. I think the reason for that is Americans want something they perceive as being a more authentic variety. They want the “real” thing.
What are some of your favorite taco joints in the U.S. today?
Tacos are street food. Where I like to go in Minneapolis is the Mercado Central, which is a little Mexican market on Lake Street. It’s got a number of vendors who are Mexican, and they make the kind of food they had back in Mexico. To me it’s like a little vacation. You can find these kinds of places all over the country now. There’s a whole world of fancy Mexican food, but every place where there are Mexican migrants you’re going to find some good tacos.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (15)
I Think originally The taco was leftover food stuft in a tortilla . Kind of like a sandwich for lunch.
Posted by Ace Williams on January 18,2013 | 03:11 PM
All I can say is that tacos are good, many people in countries around the world are discovering them, and are now enjoying them. A few years back, my brother, his son, and I were visiting Japan. My brother who was in the U.S. Navy(honorably discharged)wanted to visit Yokuska, an American naval base in that country. We were pleasantly suprised to find a Mexican restaurant in that city, named "La Costa". Curious, we went in and ordered a combination taco plate, along with its condiments. Later, we soughtout the proprietor, a Mr. Shigeru Iida. He told us that he used to live in Los Angeles, California, and its where he was introduced to Mexican food. Later, when he returned to Japan, he opened up his restaurant; mainly to serve the many American sailors, Marines, and other military personnel stationed there. The food was pretty good!
Posted by Jose on November 22,2012 | 12:52 AM
Greetings I am MEXICAN and a Chef. I run a company dedicated to the mexican gastronomical heritage in Argentina . The TACOS are an important part of the mexican food. Dated centuries before the europeans even set foot in México. Bernal Diaz del Castillo, a spanish soldier with Hernan Cortes how later wrote his vision of the conquest of México relates a fest where they where given TACOS in Coyoacan in 1520. I have no idea how the author of the article came to the conclusion of the miner and their explosive "tacos". On the other side, the product sold at Taco-Bell is NOTHING like a real taco. Thanks for reading this and please let me know if you need some background information regarding mexican cuisine.
Posted by Chef Corral on August 27,2012 | 12:08 PM
A little bit late but I couldn't let pass some of the things said on the comments section. Also I hope it serves as a way to expand the information of the article. @Trent Palmer: haha, hope there was a +1 button for the comments. @Ehren Reilly: Here in Mexico the "gringa" dish is a flour tortilla with melted cheese and pastor-type meat inside it. So, the dish you describe isn't a "gringa", also it isn't a popular dish here and I don't remember any "taqueria" serving that at least in the central, south and southest parts of the conuntry. Maybe on northern states (Nuevo Leon, Chihuahua, Baja California, etc) the dish is known and popular. @DR GONZO: I'm always confused with the names but I'll try it to explain it: with the arab meat there are two kinds of tacos, arab taco and oriental taco. The are the same and the only difference is the tortilla it's used, one goes with pita bread and the other goes with the classic corn tortilla. The thing. The thing I always confuse is which name goes with which tortilla.
Posted by miguel. on July 30,2012 | 04:01 PM
So this Glen Bell guy was basically the Steve Jobs of tacos.
Posted by Trent Palmer on May 26,2012 | 02:41 AM
Does the author not take into account that the American Southwest was politically a part of Mexico until the mid-19th century? And is still socially quite connected to Mexico? The taco did not come to the US, the US came to the taco when Texas joined the union in 1845. Foods such as tacos, chile and fajitas were common and popular for centuries, long before they appeared in Minneapolis!
Posted by Al Celaya on May 24,2012 | 03:41 PM
American franchises that serve Mexican food have had little success breaking into the Mexican market, but several American-invented dishes have been popularized within Mexico, but with different names. For example, a flour tortilla with cheese, meat, cream, guacamole and salsa might be called a "meat quesadilla" in the US, but this dish has recently become popular in Mexico, and it called a "Gringa".
Posted by Ehren Reilly on May 21,2012 | 08:03 PM
You got some stuff a bit wrong there. TACOS ARABES are tacos where instead of using a tortilla the use PAN ARABE (Pita Bread). Even though there are some famous tacos like carnitas, fish, cochinita pastor, etc.. a Taco is basically any dish wraped in a Tortilla. more info ( Spanish) http://de10.com.mx/11964.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
Posted by DR GONZO on May 19,2012 | 06:13 PM
I don't understand. I've seen the Mayan stone corn grinders. If they were making tortillas, would they only have used them to make burritos or eaten them raw? As I understand it, if you put something on a tortilla it's a taco, so how on earth would they have tortillas in pre-spaniard Mexico but not eat tacos? If you are saying the American name for such a creation didn't exist until miners named it, that I can understand. I'm guessing they just over-wrote whatever existing indigenous Mexican word for it, and since the tribes/mestizos/spaniards they would have come across in that region spoke a variety of languages, perhaps there were just a multitude of names for taco, so the miners version stuck among Americans.
Posted by Liam on May 18,2012 | 11:10 PM
I'm Mexican, and took a Mexican Society class in college with a great teacher. In this class we were talking about the Conquista and how the Spanish people destroy every Aztec legacy. It was said that the conquerors celebrated the Conquista trying to mix flavors from both cultures: chile, tortilla and pork; so they did pork tacos with salsa. It was also known that the Aztecs eat tacos putting different things in the tortilla (soft corn tortilla).
Posted by Ricardo on May 18,2012 | 10:33 AM
Did any of you commenters even read the article? And you are going on about the "authentic taco"?
Posted by Michael Dover on May 16,2012 | 05:01 PM
For an article on the history of tacos couldn't you have chosen an authentic picture-- an authentic taco with real mexican toppings is a sight to behold unlike the bland taco above with photoshopped peppers. But then again, it's highly unlikely Ms Katie has seen one.
Posted by wideopenlens on May 16,2012 | 09:26 AM
Seems to be a bit of potted history. Accounts citing other sources contemporary with the first encounters of Europeans with the peoples of the New World, including Fr. Bernardo de Sahagún who wrote the definitive account, the Florentine Codex: http://de10.com.mx/11964.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter (Spanish -- turn on your browser's translation) and http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/Tortilla_Taco_history.htm (English).
Posted by Yosemite Semite on May 13,2012 | 02:36 AM
Always thought tacos were tasty but poorly designed sandwich prototypes. Too messy.
Posted by Granite Sentry on May 10,2012 | 10:57 PM