Sign up with email

or

Already a member? Log in.

Trouble logging in?

Not a member? Sign up!

We’ve written previously about flautas, one of our favorite street foods. Those crisp, finger-friendly  “flutes” with their deeply savory, spiced chicken, pork, beef or potato filling are all about the gratifying crunch of the golden, deep-fried rolled tortilla (and the sour cream and grated cheese don’t hurt either). It’s hard to imagine how that winning combination can be improved upon, but at El Rey de las Ahogadas, we’ve found a delicious alternative.

Although El Rey offers quesadillas, tacos and other Mexican delicias, as the big banner above the open storefront advertises, people come here mostly for the flautas ahogadas. These “drowned” flautas sit in a bowl filled with a soupy salsa verde so that they soften. The spicy, zingy green salsa, made with tomatillos, fresh chilis, cilantro, onion and garlic, has been the house specialty for more than 40 years. These flautas are still meant to be finger food: the flat end that sticks out of the bowl serves as a kind of handle, and, using our other hand, we spoon the salsa over the flautas to saturate them further as we eat them. The best part is at the end, when the remaining salsa has collected and melded all the flavors of the dish – we slurp that straight from the bowl.

Besides the classic chicken, beef and potato fillings, El Rey also offers cheese, refried beans and al pastor, or roasted marinated pork. We’ve tried them all, and though we’re hard-pressed to choose a favorite, we especially like the way the potato and cheese flautas provide an earthy, comforting foil for the bright flavors of the salsa verde.

The salsa recipe comes from the aunt of current owner Eduardo López. She started the business in a tiny, 12-square-meter space in residential Colonia Del Valle. Today, that’s just part of the kitchen, and El Rey has taken over the adjoining spaces, sprawling across the entire street corner, with different eating areas and separate stations making and serving each of the restaurant’s specialties. And to wash all those dishes down, there are homemade horchata and jamaica and tamarindo aguas frescas.

El Rey is not the only place in Mexico City that serves flautas ahogadas, but it’s definitely the best. So when we need to drown our sorrows, our cravings or our dinner, El Rey is where we go.

Ben Herrera

Published on September 19, 2013

Related stories

March 22, 2018

All Hail the Pickle Queen

Tbilisi | By Paul Rimple
TbilisiNunu Gachecheladze, our “pickle queen” at the Deserter’s Bazaar, pickles everything on site from produce she gets at the bazaar, based on her family recipe. While they’re all outstanding, our favorites are her pickled cucumbers and carrots.
September 20, 2013

Catalonia’s Red Wines: Stairway to Heaven

Barcelona | By Paula Mourenza
BarcelonaLegend has it that in 12th-century Priorat, in the region of Tarragona in southern Catalonia, there was a shepherd who dreamt every night of a ladder leaning against a pine tree. The ladder ascended from the valley all the way to heaven and angels climbed up and down, tending to their heavenly and earthly duties.…
March 2, 2020

Dadi Wine Bar: A Liquid Bridge Between Georgia and Russia

Tbilisi | By Paul Rimple
TbilisiLast June, Georgian lawmakers invited a Russian legislator to address an international assembly of Christian Orthodox devotees from the Speaker of Parliament’s chair. This, predictably, did not go over well. Thousands poured into the streets and gathered at the Tbilisi parliament building demanding explanations, resignations and reform from a government many believe is much too…
Select your currency
USD United States (US) dollar
EUR Euro