Press "Enter" to skip to content

Food Review: Cafe Herrera Denton

Tex-Mex makes its way to the Denton historic square

*Originally in the June 11, 2014 Issue of The Lasso*

By: Alex Ancira, Managing Editor

Denton’s historic square may have a lot, but it certainly doesn’t have ev­erything a Dentonite could wish for in a night out on the town. Luckily, one more item can be crossed off the list as a sit-down Tex-Mex restaurant has taken a spot on the square in the form of Café Her­rera.

The restaurant is part of a local chain from Dal­las, easily accessible from the DART lines. A huge plus for the Denton loca­tion is how spacious the inside feels after entering. Yes, there are many tables for different parties to be waited, but overall there’s a comfortable openness that makes it easy to relax and enjoy the food and festivi­ties. The atmosphere for the restaurant is modern in look and feeling, which suits the location. With a somewhat industrial use of stone flooring and sim­ple woods, the restaurant boasts a contemporary chic vibe, adding a new type of internal appearance along with a different cuisine to Denton’s square.

Now we move on to the most important aspect: the food. First off, the food is not incredibly expensive for a sit-down restaurant. Across the square, you could easily go to The Ab­bey Inn or Lone Star At­titude Burger Company and spend about as much without trying. Second, the service is really fast and helpful, with waiters that seemed concerned about how everything was and whether I needed more chips and salsa or more to drink. The portions are definitely hardy and leave enough food at the end of a meal to take some home for another time. The salsa is an extremely wet blend of standard salsa stock (to­matoes, cumin, paprika, onion) and fire-roasted gar­lic that adds a pleasantly stingy bitter flavor to the courtesy appetizer.

The enchiladas, which could be considered one of the Tex-Mex staples, were excellently fried and topped with smooth creamy cheese. The que­sadillas were also excellent, comprised of a blend of cheeses melted into hard­ened flour tortillas and cut for convenience. What re­ally seemed to make Café Herrera worth checking out is the freshness of the ingredients. Tex-Mex is all about the flavors and how they blend together for a cohesive and distinguish­able taste, and Café Her­rera hits that concept on the nose.

The best aspect of Café Herrera is what the restau­rant brings to Denton’s his­toric square. With a frozen yogurt shop, a community theater, pizza place, a few bars, a british pub, an ice cream shop, comic shop, record store, and a used book store built in an op­era house, Denton’s square is easily one of the most diverse night life spots in the DFW area. Throw a Tex-Mex restaurant into the mix and, well, it doesn’t get much better.

Compared with off-the-square Tex-Mex fix­tures of Denton such as El Guapo’s, Herrera Café (confusing, I know), Rusty Taco and Fuzzy’s Taco Shop, Café Herrera is very middle of the road. The pricing is fair and what you might expect for a sit-down restaurant, offering food that is fresh and good but not necessarily great.

They don’t have the best tacos (Fuzzy’s or Rusty come to mind) or the best enchiladas or tamales (that goes to Herrera Café), but they certainly are very good for the price you pay, especially when put next to On the Border or any oth­er major chain. Come out to Café Herrera if you’ve been craving Tex-Mex that doesn’t require leaving Denton’s night life for even a second to get to.

Be First to Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *