
A Eulogy for the $3 Breakfast Taco
Austin's signature food used to be cheap fuel, not a lifestyle brand.
"A breakfast taco shouldn't require a financial plan."
There was a time — and I know this sounds like folklore now, like something your uncle mumbles about at Thanksgiving — when you could walk into a gas station on East Riverside, point at a handwritten menu board, and walk out with a breakfast taco that cost less than a gallon of regular unleaded. That time was 2011. It was not the Bronze Age.
The $3 breakfast taco wasn't aspirational. Nobody photographed it. It came wrapped in foil so thin you could read your electric bill through it, and it was perfect. Egg, potato, cheese, a salsa that could strip varnish. You ate it over the steering wheel of a car you were still making payments on, and you were grateful, because this was the social contract: Austin gives you cheap tacos, you tolerate the heat and the bats and the guy playing didgeridoo on the Congress bridge at 7 AM.
That contract has been breached.
The Three Stages of Taco Grief
- Stage 1: The "Premium Tortilla" Era (2015-2018). Suddenly every new taco spot needed hand-pressed heirloom corn tortillas from a single-origin masa operation in Oaxaca. The tortilla became the main character. The taco hit $5 and nobody blinked because we were all pretending our salaries had kept up with the housing market.
- Stage 2: The "Protein Upcharge" Pivot (2019-2022). Brisket tacos. Duck egg tacos. Wagyu barbacoa tacos. The breakfast taco stopped being breakfast and became brunch, which is just breakfast with a venture capital mindset. $7 felt normal. $9 felt "worth it." You started tipping on a taco. Your grandmother would have wept.
- Stage 3: Acceptance, or $14 Migas (2023-Present). You are now paying more for two tacos than your parents paid for a tank of gas in 1997. The restaurant has Edison bulbs. The menu says "provisions." You eat your taco with a fork because it's plated on a reclaimed wood board. You have become the thing Rainey Street warned you about.
What We Lost
It's not really about the money, though it is absolutely about the money. It's about what a $3 taco meant. It meant that Austin was still a place where you could be a musician, or a grad student, or a line cook, and still eat well. The cheap taco was a barometer. When it moved, everything moved.
Now the same corner lot that had a trailer selling $2.50 bean and cheese has a fast-casual concept called something like "Masa Haus" with a waitlist on Yelp and a $6 agua fresca. The taco is fine. The taco is always fine. But you used to get change back from a five, and now you're splitting a check on Venmo for a meal that your 2009 self would have laughed out of the parking lot.
I've heard people argue that prices just go up, that this is inflation, that you can't fight economics. Those people are correct, and I don't care. When someone tries to sell me a blockchain-verified breakfast taco for $16, I will think of the gas station on East Riverside, and I will mourn.
A breakfast taco shouldn't require a financial plan.
If you've ever held a foil-wrapped miracle in your hand at 6:45 AM and felt, briefly, that the world was survivable — you already know what we lost. The rest of you can check the menu at Masa Haus. They take Apple Pay.
Previously in Things That Used to Cost $3: Lone Star at the Bar. Next: Parking Downtown.
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