CARNE
ASADA
Fries Done Right
The #1 Ordered Dish at Lax Tacos Since 1986
Crispy fries. Charred asada. Melted cheese. Fresh guacamole. The dish that turned a corner spot in Inglewood into a destination — and keeps people coming back for decades.
There are dishes people drive across Los Angeles for. The Carne Asada Fries at Lax Tacos in Inglewood is one of them. Crispy fries, perfectly grilled and seasoned beef, melted cheese, creamy guacamole — it sounds simple. It tastes like something else entirely.
If you’re searching for the best carne asada fries in Inglewood, this article will tell you everything — the history of the dish, what makes a great plate, why Lax Tacos has been the community’s go-to for nearly 40 years, and exactly how to order. No filler, just the real story behind the most-talked-about plate on our menu.
THE ORIGIN OF CARNE ASADA FRIES
To understand why carne asada fries matter in Southern California, you have to go back to where it all started — and follow the trail from the ranches of northern Mexico to the taco shops of San Diego and eventually to the streets of Inglewood.
Carne asada traces its roots to the cattle ranches of Nuevo León and Sonora in northern Mexico, where beef was a way of life. Ranchers marinated skirt and flank steak in lime juice, garlic, and spices — then grilled it over open flame. The phrase “carne asada” literally means grilled meat, and it referred as much to the social gathering as the food itself.
As Mexican families built communities across California and the Southwest, they brought their cooking traditions with them. Carne asada became a staple of taco shops from Tijuana to Los Angeles — a simple, crowd-pleasing protein that worked in tacos, burritos, and on its own. It became shorthand for quality in Mexican-American food culture.
Lolita’s Mexican Food in San Diego is widely credited with originating the carne asada fries dish — born from a customer who added fries to his carne asada burrito, and a restaurant that decided to make it official. The dish combined the deep flavors of carne asada with the humble American french fry, topped with guacamole, sour cream, and cheese. It made immediate, irresistible sense.
What started in San Diego spread north — through Inglewood, East LA, the South Bay and beyond. Carne asada fries became a defining dish of the Southern California Mexican-American food experience — one that cultural critics noted occupies a unique liminal space: neither purely Mexican nor purely American, but completely, authentically SoCal. Lax Tacos in Inglewood has been serving it throughout this evolution, their version becoming one of the most praised in the area.
Carne asada fries represent something significant — the intersection of Mexican tradition and American life. Critics of the dish miss the point entirely. As one cultural writer noted, the dish occupies the same in-between space many Mexican-Americans live in: “no son ni de aquí, ni de allá” — from neither here nor there. That duality is the dish’s power, not its weakness.
WHAT GOES INTO A GREAT PLATE
Not all carne asada fries are created equal. The difference between a forgettable plate and one you talk about for days comes down to the quality and execution of each layer. Here’s what makes the Lax Tacos version stand apart.
Crispy, well-salted french fries — the structural base. They need to be fresh, hot, and sturdy enough to hold the toppings without turning into mush. Done wrong, they collapse. Done right, they’re the backbone of the whole dish.
Grilled and seasoned beef, chopped into bite-sized pieces. The marinade — lime, garlic, and Mexican spices — must penetrate deeply. The grill must char the edges without drying out the inside. This is where most places fail and Lax Tacos delivers.
Whole beans add an earthy richness that cuts through the fat of the asada. Melted cheese — warm, slightly gooey — ties every element together. The proportion of cheese to everything else matters enormously.
A generous dollop of cool, tangy sour cream is essential. It cools the heat of the asada, enriches the texture of every bite, and provides a creamy contrast to the crunch of the fries. No skimping.
Made fresh in-house at Lax Tacos, the guacamole adds buttery, herbaceous richness to the top of the pile. It’s the layer that elevates asada fries from great to unforgettable. Fresh, not pre-made. Always.
THE LAX TACOS CARNE ASADA FRIES
A full, loaded portion. One of the most complete single dishes in Inglewood — and at $13.99, one of the best values in Los Angeles.
WHY LAX TACOS DOES IT DIFFERENTLY
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01The asada is grilled fresh — every time
The carne asada at Lax Tacos isn’t pre-cooked and held warm under a heat lamp. It’s grilled to order, seasoned with the same family recipe that’s been used since 1986. The difference in flavor between freshly grilled asada and reheated asada is significant — and our regulars notice it immediately.
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02The guacamole is made in-house, fresh daily
This is not a minor detail. Pre-packaged, shelf-stable guacamole is everywhere — and it tastes like it. At Lax Tacos, the guacamole is made fresh in the kitchen every day. You can taste the difference. It’s part of what makes the dish so consistently praised by Inglewood regulars and first-time visitors alike.
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03The portions are honest and generous
A common complaint about carne asada fries across LA is that the portions shrink as the prices grow. At $13.99, the Lax Tacos plate is genuinely filling — a real serving of every element, not a modest garnish on a pile of fries. Reviewers consistently call out the portion size alongside the flavor.
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04Four decades of community trust
The Miranda family has been on this corner since 1986. That’s not a marketing angle — it’s a track record. The same families who ate here 20 years ago bring their kids today. That kind of loyalty doesn’t come from an average plate of asada fries. It comes from a consistently exceptional one.
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05Located in the heart of Inglewood’s food culture
Inglewood is recognized as one of the best neighborhoods for authentic Mexican food in all of Los Angeles. Being in this community means access to the freshest ingredients, the most discerning customers, and the highest expectations. It pushes quality every single day.
For the best experience, eat the asada fries within 10 minutes of receiving them — whether you’re dining in or picking up. The crispiness of the fries is at its peak right out of the kitchen. If ordering delivery, we recommend placing the order when you’re ready to eat immediately.
PAIR YOUR ASADA FRIES WITH
The Carne Asada Fries are a meal on their own, but the right side or drink takes the experience to another level. Here’s what our regulars always add to the order:
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Lax Tacos at 543 W Arbor Vitae St, Inglewood is one of the most consistently praised spots for carne asada fries in the area. Yelp’s own “Top 10 Carne Asada Fries in Inglewood” list includes Lax Tacos — and reviewers specifically call out the freshness of the asada, the portion size, and the quality of the guacamole.
Crispy french fries topped with freshly grilled carne asada, melted cheese, whole beans, sour cream, and fresh guacamole. All toppings are made in-house. The asada is seasoned with a family recipe and grilled fresh for each order.
The Carne Asada Fries are $13.99 for a full, loaded portion. Available for dine-in, takeout, and delivery via DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Postmates.
Carne asada fries are a Mexican-American dish that originated in San Diego in the late 1990s. Lolita’s Mexican Food in San Diego is widely credited with inventing the dish after a customer began adding fries to his carne asada burrito. The dish spread north through Southern California and is now a staple across Los Angeles, including Inglewood.
They travel well when eaten promptly. The asada and toppings hold up during a 20–30 minute delivery window. For the crispiest fries, plan to eat immediately upon arrival. Order through DoorDash, Uber Eats, or Postmates.
Yes — Lax Tacos is approximately 1.5 miles from LAX airport, about a 5-minute drive heading east on Arbor Vitae Street. A perfect stop before or after a flight, and within delivery range of most LAX-area hotels.
Open Monday–Thursday and Sunday from 9 AM to 10:30 PM, and Friday–Saturday from 9 AM to 11:30 PM. Breakfast is served all day on every menu item.
COME GET YOURS
The carne asada fries are waiting. Dine in, take out, or get delivery — Lax Tacos is open 7 days a week.
