A food truck famous for its giant bacon-wrapped burrito has opened a brick-and-mortar restaurant on ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥â€™s south side.
Only a mile separates the food truck at 4860 S. 12th Ave. from the new 3,600-square-foot Percheron Mexican Grill restaurant at 444 W. Ajo Way, but owner Diego Valencia’s philosophy for the twin eateries takes him on a slightly different route.
While the food truck, which he opened in 2013 on the corner of South 12th and West Irvington Road, offers steak, pork and vegetarian burritos, Sonoran hot dogs, quesadillas and caramelos, the brick-and-mortar version, which opened Feb. 29 on the corner of South 12th and West Ajo, is leaning more into the fast-food model of some national burger chains.
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“We want to focus on the burrito and Sonoran hot dog combos,†he said — think meals complete with a drink and fries. “We want to do it fast and good and give it to the customer at a good price.â€
The new restaurant only offers carne asada burritos, although you can get it regular or wrapped in bacon, a specialty that put Percheron on the foodie map in 2017 and forced the restaurant to change its name from WhataBurro once the Texas burger chain with a similar name got wind of it.
You can get the burritos and hot dogs a la carte, as well as carne asada tacos, quesadillas and caramelos. And unlike the food truck, the restaurant opens at 5 a.m. to serve breakfast burritos made with chorizo, bacon or ham.
Valencia has been considering opening the second location since he bought the building in 2019, after the Mexican restaurant closed. For three years, he used the space as a commissary kitchen to support the food truck and for storage before renovating the building.
“When you are thinking of carne asada burritos, we want you to think of Percheron,†he said.
Making the jump
Percheron is the latest ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ food truck to expand to a brick-and-mortar. Last November, the longtime ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ hot dog stand Brucedog took the plunge and opened up shop in a strip mall at 5975 W. Western Circle Way, off West 36th Street. That was around the same time that Cuppa Gogo went from its candy-apple-red mobile operation to a storefront at 4877 E. Speedway.
Last year, the Mexican food truck El Antojo Poblano made the transition in February into a west side location at 1108 W. St. Mary’s Road followed in the spring by , which spun off from the food truck Cowpig and settled into American Eat Co. on South Fourth Avenue. To find where Cowpig is parked, visit them at .
In February, the grilled cheese food truck Special Eats, which employs adults with special needs, spun off Special Eats Sweets, which opened its brick-and-mortar location at 5009 E. Fifth St.
ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ has a solid track record of successful restaurants born from food trucks, including the grandaddy of them all, Eegee’s, which started as a cart in 1971 and is now a chain of nearly 30 locations in ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ and the Phoenix area. Serial Grillers, which opened its first brick-and-mortar in fall 2013, now has four locations, as well as the Detroit-style pizzeria Transplant next door to its taproom, Craft, A Modern Drinkery, both on East Speedway.