There are tacos, and then there are tacos. If you have ever stood at a bustling street-side counter in central Mexico, paper plate bending under the weight of perfectly charred carne asada, lime juice running down your wrist, you already know the difference. Taqueria La Ventana, tucked into a modest strip center on Josey Lane in northwest Carrollton, delivers that second kind — the kind that stops conversation mid-sentence and makes you immediately start planning your next visit before you have even finished the first bite.
Walking in, the room is unpretentious in the best possible way. Bright painted walls, a handwritten specials board, and the kind of background noise that comes from a kitchen that never really slows down. The open-concept prep area lets you watch the cooks work with the focused efficiency of people who have been doing this for a very long time. That transparency is confidence, and it is well earned.
The menu is built around the fundamentals of northern and central Mexican street food. The al pastor is the undisputed star — pork that has been marinated for hours in a blend of dried chiles, achiote, and pineapple, then slow-roasted on a vertical trompo until the edges caramelize into something almost impossibly savory. It arrives on warm, hand-pressed corn tortillas with a spoonful of charred pineapple, diced white onion, and a handful of fresh cilantro. Order two. Order three. You will not regret it.
But do not overlook the birria. Served in the traditional consommé-dipping style that has become a phenomenon, La Ventana’s version uses a slow-braised blend of beef and goat that produces a broth so deeply flavored it tastes like it has been cooking since Tuesday — in the very best sense. The cheese-dipped, griddle-crisped quesabirria tacos are rich, messy, and completely worth every napkin you will use.
Vegetarians are not an afterthought here either. The nopales tacos — cactus paddles grilled with onion, serrano, and queso fresco — are bright, slightly tangy, and genuinely satisfying without trying to mimic anything meaty.
The salsa bar deserves its own paragraph. Four rotating house salsas range from a mild, roasted tomato version with subtle smokiness all the way to a habanero-mango blend that announces itself clearly and lingers pleasantly. Sample all of them. The pickled jalapeños and fresh radishes sitting alongside are not garnish — they are part of the experience.
Carrollton’s dining landscape is genuinely one of the most diverse in the entire Dallas-Fort Worth metro, and Taqueria La Ventana fits right into that tradition of places where the food does the talking. It is casual, affordable, and run with obvious pride. Whether you are grabbing a quick lunch or settling in for a full spread on a Friday evening, this is the kind of neighborhood spot that earns loyalty fast.
Parking is easy, the staff is welcoming even during a rush, and the horchata — creamy, lightly spiced, served ice cold — is the ideal way to close out the meal. Get there hungry, come with an open appetite for something real, and plan to linger a little longer than you intended. That is exactly the point.