“Homey Mexican joint where the chile relleno burrito has a cult following and the salsas taste like someone's abuela made them this morning.”
Two separate reviews call it out — one claims it's 'my favorite chile relleno burrito in all of San Diego'.
Reviewer specifically raves 'The salsas are soooo goood!' and another mentions 'home made sauces'.
One reviewer stopped 'late at night, right before they closed' and praised service quality.
Located on Park Blvd strip in University Heights; reviews emphasize 'homey' feel and repeat-visit intent.
Google summary highlights seafood tacos; one review calls shrimp burritos and tacos 'the best'.
“El Zarape is University Heights' late-night Mexican lifeline, the one slinging housemade salsas and seafood tacos when everywhere else has dimmed the lights.”
Where Park & Rec lets you bring your own food and Gilly's pours cocktails until the bartender cuts you off, El Zarape runs the neighborhood on a different clock entirely: actual Mexican cooking, served past the hour when most kitchens have gone dark, with the kind of homemade salsas that regulars hoard like contraband. This isn't the spot for elaborately plated mole or mezcal flights. This is where you go when you need a **chile relleno burrito** that tastes like someone's tía made it — which, considering the genuinely handmade tortillas and salsas, isn't far from the truth.
The move is anything involving seafood. The **shrimp tacos** and **camarones a la diabla** run cleaner than the typical heavy-handed coastal spots — actual spice, actual shrimp flavor, nothing drowned in mayo-based sauces. The **carne asada** shows up tender, not greasy, which is harder to pull off than it sounds at this price point. And that chile relleno burrito everyone raves about? It's the kind of thing that resets your expectations for what a $10 burrito can be.
The dining room leans into folk art and bright colors without tipping into theme-restaurant territory. Service moves fast even when they're slammed, and the late-night hours mean this is where the neighborhood lands after shows, shifts, or nights that didn't go as planned. Parking on Park is the usual University Heights nightmare, but there's a small lot behind the building if you're lucky.
The prices used to be absurdly low; they've crept up slightly but still undercut most of the polished taco shops closer to Hillcrest. Outdoor seating works for the eight months of good weather San Diego pretends is year-round. Vegetarian options exist but aren't the reason you're here — this kitchen's strength is in the proteins and the salsas that make them better.
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4642 Park Blvd, San Diego, CA 92116, USA
2 months ago