Michelin-Recommended Taqueria From Mexico to Take Over  Howard Smith Wharves

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El Vilsito, a Michelin Guide-recommended taqueria from Mexico City, is coming to Howard Smith Wharves, bringing its chefs to cook tacos the way they do at home for a limited-time takeover.



The visiting cooks are coming as part of La Mexicana, a short-run add-on to Margarita Week that expands the precinct’s cocktail calendar into a broader food-and-culture program.

The dates are split over two bursts: La Mexicana runs 5–8 March and 12–15 March, while Margarita Week continues across the full 5–15 March stretch.

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For locals, the interesting part isn’t the branding. It’s the idea of a tight, street-food style operation built around one of Mexico’s most recognisable taco formats. It’s landing in a polished waterfront precinct and trying to keep its identity intact. 

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Two El Vilsito chefs will work alongside local teams to cook the tacos “as they’re served in Mexico City”, with the visiting group including Sandra Blanco, whose father, Juan Carlos Blanc,o owns the taqueria. The family connection matters because these aren’t “inspired-by” tacos; they’re recipes tied to a particular place and routine.

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If you’ve seen Taco Chronicles on Netflix, you’ll recognise the al pastor theatre: marinated pork stacked on a vertical spit (the trompo), cooked, shaved, and tucked into tortillas with the kind of speed that looks like muscle memory. The taqueria also appears in the Michelin Guide, which frames it as approachable rather than precious—busy, fast, and built for repeat visits.

So why bring it to Brisbane at all? The idea originated after Katie Moubarak, Howard Smith Wharves’ brand director, visited Mexico City on a research trip, ate there, and stayed in contact with Blanco. It’s the sort of origin story that sounds neat on paper, but it reflects something real in the way venues now “travel” without moving: chefs swap places for a week, menus arrive like pop-up postcards, and locals get a new reference point for what a dish can taste like when it’s cooked by the people who grew up around it.

Photo Credit: Supplied
Photo Credit: Supplied

The other layer is Margarita Week itself. In a city where festival weekends are often tied to sport or school holidays, a precinct-wide drinks programme fills a gap: it gives venues a common reason to collaborate, and it gives residents a clear window to visit without feeling like they’ve missed the moment. This year’s pitch includes a spread of margarita styles—sweet, smoky, spicy, savoury—plus Tommy’s-style riffs and venue-specific twists, in partnership with Patrón.

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You don’t have to be a cocktail person to appreciate what that does for a neighbourhood. A concentrated run of events changes the rhythm of a precinct: more early bookings, more groups arriving together, and more “let’s make a night of it” energy. It can also mean queues. 

If La Mexicana lands the way the organisers hope, expect peak periods around Friday and Saturday evenings, with the most interest likely in the al pastor service because it’s both the headline and the thing you can’t easily reproduce at home.



The practical advice is simple: treat it like a short-season show. Pick a less hectic time if you want a relaxed visit; go later if you want the buzz.  If you’re curious about the difference between a local taco interpretation and a Mexico City original, this is one of the rare chances to compare them without leaving the river.

Published 9-Feb-2028

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