Mission-Style Burritos

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By relache

The Eating Goodness that is a Mission-Style Burrito

You won't find burritos like this in Mexico. They are a variation that was born and bred in the Mexican-influenced Mission District of San Francisco. This is the fuel that gets a bike messenger up San Francisco hills all day long. This is what gets the local college students through the night.

To create a Mission-style burrito start with a large flour tortilla. Add rice and beans, guacamole, sour cream, salsa, hot peppers (if you wish), choice of meat or not and roll that bad boy up so it's about the size of the average adult's forearm. You don't usually eat Mission-style burritos if you're not that hungry, although that second half can make for some great leftovers later. Watch out as the "regular" size tends to be big and the "super" size tends to be enormous.

Everyone in town has their favorite haunt and favorite burritos so be ready to do a lot of tasting if you set out to find your true ideal.

Presenting... the Mission-Style Burrito

Click thumbnail to view full-size
Up-close and personal with a Mission-style burrito. This one looks veggie.

Could You Handle The Super Burrito?

Burrito Cookbooks

Burrito Lovers Cook Book: Fantastic Flavorful Fillings
Amazon Price: $8.89
List Price: $9.95
Burritos! Hot on the Trail of the Little Burro
Amazon Price: $2.95
List Price: $12.95
Internationl Burrito
Amazon Price: $6.20
List Price: $10.99
Build a Burrito: A Counting Book in English and Spanish: (Bilingual) (English and Spanish Edition)
Amazon Price: $4.28
List Price: $7.99

What To Look For In A "Real" Mission-style

Here are some qualities that I think are essential to a good Mission-style burrito. Most Mission-style that go bad have missed a few of these things.

Beans - you should have a choice: re-fried, black or pinto. And they shouldn't have a smokey or barbecue aftertaste to them.

Moist, not wet - too many bad burritos are really wet and drippy. The beans should be drained well and the salsa shouldn't be swimming. You should be able to eat a burrito in your hands without juices flowing out of them. Also, the rice should be moist, not crunchy and dried-out.

Tightly-wrapped - the correct shape for a Mission-style burrito is a really tightly-rolled log. Too many burrito jockeys roll them too loosely, or just sort of fold over the tortilla. If your Mission-style burrito has been rolled up properly, you can eat it sitting on a park bench or while walking without it coming apart on you. You should be able to slowly peel away bits of the foil outer wrappping and eat your way down.

Correct proportioning of ingredients - first the rice, then the beans, then lettuce, then salsa, guacamole, sour cream and whatever else. When tightly rolled, this puts the wetter ingredients in the middle of the burrito with the more absorbing ones on the outside. Tightly-rolled, this is what makes for a well-shaped and non-dripping burrito. You don't want the salsa, guacamole and sour cream to be on the outside as they immediately escape as you peel back the foil. Also, the wetter toppings should not be added in the same amounts as the drier ones. They should accent the flavors, not make up the bulk of the filling.

Burrito Blogs - The Adventures of the Mission-Style

  • WholeFoodVegan: Mission Style Burrito

    Mission Style Burrito. Spinach Burrito Tortilla, Rancho Gordo Black Valentine Heirloom Beans, Massa Organics Brown Rice, Guacamole, Salsa, Cashew Sour Cream, Nacho Mom's Vegan Queso, Jalapenos. Posted by Picasa ...

  • The Burrito Wars | Baghdad By The Bay

    If you look back farther as I mentioned in my Friday article the original burrito made in California for public consumption started life in 1961 at El Faro, but that was made with corn tortillas. The actually Mission style burrito using ...

Tell us about your favorite burrito!

SilverGenes profile image

SilverGenes Level 5 Commenter 20 months ago

Burritos are so good! I've never heard of the Mission burrito but just may try building one at home :-)

Michael Willis profile image

Michael Willis 2 years ago

I love good burritos. I will have to make this one. Thanks for the instructions on how to layer the ingredients also.

relache profile image

relache Hub Author 5 years ago

I'm going to be back in the Bay Area in mid February 2007! Ok, burritos just went to the top of the "to do" list for the trip...

relache profile image

relache Hub Author 5 years ago

If there's one thing that I find a burrito place gets wrong about Mission Style, it's the rice. Anyone else find this to be true?

Chris B 5 years ago

Here's a link about tortilla steamers, if you want to know abou the apparatus that Mission burrito joints use to steam their toritllas.

http://www.chowhound.com/topics/show/316243

Chris 5 years ago

Man, how great to find this page! I live in Albuquerque now, which you'd THINK would have good burritos... That is, you would if you didn't know better. I lived in SF for many years and became completely in love with them-- cheap + fast + healthy + good + interesting. I could eat one for lunch practically every day for years and not get tired of them. Sadly, nobody here even understands what they're missing!

livelonger profile image

livelonger Level 6 Commenter 5 years ago

My faves are Taqueria Cancun (Mission) and El Castillito in the Castro....although... chains Una Mas, Chipotle and Baja Fresh serve up decent fare as well (in that order).

sarahd profile image

sarahd 5 years ago

interesting close up of the inside of the burrito.

relache profile image

relache Hub Author 5 years ago

I had a lot of burrito faves after living all over town. There was El Nopalito on Sutter when I was in grad school, then a place on Noriega off 19th (now gone) and then La Avenida on Irving near 6th.

Paul Edmondson profile image

Paul Edmondson Level 5 Commenter 5 years ago

We're big burrito fans in San Francisco. Most frequently we hit El Taqueria in the Mission, but I'm not sure if that is a Mission Style Burrito. Either way it's very good.

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