A man stands in front of a fenced taco truck labeled "Tacos El Norteno" with another person nearby and a bright sky overhead.
Rafael Quintanar, owner of the El NorteƱo taco truck, stands in front of his truck on May 19, 2026 that has been open in the same parking lot for 30 years. Photo by Zoe Malen.

Rafael Quintanar’s first job was pushing a handcart in Fresnillo, Zacatecas, in central Mexico, selling newspapers, oranges, pumpkin seeds and ice cream.

He was 4 years old and couldn’t see over the top of the cart, he said, so he had to crane his neck around one side in order to see where he was going. 

Nowadays, at 75, Quintanar’s still working. He works five days a week alongside his wife, Magdalena Quintanar, running El NorteƱo taco truck at a parking lot at the corner of Bryant and Harriet streets, just across from the Hall of Justice.

Two people are inside a vehicle; one is seated at the wheel holding a phone, while the other stands nearby. The scene is viewed through a reflective glass window.
Rafael and Magdalena Quintanar at the head of their truck as they take a break between orders. Photo by Zoe Malen.

He gets up at 1 a.m. and starts cooking. By 7 a.m., the truck is open for business. 

The early crowd tends to be construction workers. Residents of the Tahanan, a 145-unit permanent supportive housing complex, stop by throughout the day. 

ā€œGood morning, Rafa!ā€ says a man in a wheelchair, in Spanish.

ā€œWere you at the hospital?ā€ Rafa replied. ā€œThat’s what we’ve heard.ā€

ā€œYeah,ā€ the man said with a smile.ā€I got a new wheelchair. Check it out.ā€

El NorteƱo’s chef, who goes by ā€œEl Cocinero,ā€ cooks up some tacos for a customer on May 19, 2026. Photo by Zoe Malen.

The lunch rush starts a little before 11:30 a.m., and is mostly workers at the Hall of Justice and other offices nearby.

ā€œI’ve been coming here almost every day since my company moved here a month ago,ā€ said Jon De La Cruz, a designer who put in an order for three carnitas tacos. ā€œIt’s pretty good food and good people. They take care of you.ā€

ā€œMy company moved to the East Bay seven years ago, but I always tell them that it’d be a sin for me not to come by if I’m in San Francisco,ā€ said Gabriel Perez, a construction worker. 

Perez has been a regular for 16 years, he said. ā€œIt’s all about the way they cook and how they treat you. I believe they have loyalty to us, their customers.ā€

ā€œIt’s just like Mexico City’s flavor,ā€ added Perez’s brother, Gustavo. 

Two men stand in front of a food truck; one holds a baguette and smiles, while the other stands with hands in his pockets. Various drinks and snacks are visible inside the truck.
Long-time customers and construction workers, Gabriel (left) and Gustavo Perez (right), pose in front of the truck after ordering a ā€œtorta grandeā€ on May 19, 2026. Photo by Zoe Malen.

It’s hot and stuffy inside the truck, and lunch orders keep mounting. Rafael, Magdalena and another man they call ā€œel cocineroā€ move around each other quietly in a nearly synchronized dance. 

Over the years, El NorteƱo has seen judges retire, Hall of Justice staffers come and go and small children grow up to become customers. Quintanar becomes particularly close with the Spanish speakers. He still remembers public defender Marla Zamora and her regular order (three chorizo tacos), even though it’s been nearly a decade since her death. 

ā€œShe was so nice,ā€ said Quintanar. ā€œWe used to call her corazonzito.ā€ Little heart.

Quintanar wasn’t always at this location. His first spot, at Eighth and Townsend streets, saw such slow business that he lost his home in South San Francisco. Still, he was committed to making the truck work, he said.

Slowly but surely, clientele and business started to grow, but within five years of opening, he was forced to relocate because the area was going to be developed. 

Two people work inside a food truck kitchen, preparing food and organizing supplies, with metal counters and shelves lining the space.
Rafael Quintanar and ā€œEl Cocinero” inside their taco truck preparing meals and taking orders for the customers waiting outside. Photo by Zoe Malen.

Business has improved since then.

Quintanar has served food to local politicos like former Mayor London Breed and former District Attorney Kamala Harris, but was also, he said, hired to cater campaign events for then-presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, though he was too shy to ask for a photo with either.

Quintanar is shy in general, he says. If someone speaks to him in English and he doesn’t understand what they are saying, he’ll just nod and say ā€œYes, yes.ā€ 

His favorite part of the job is the customers, he says. ā€œTo see men in suits waiting in line with construction workers and other regular folks. Everyone is the same in my eyes. I see it when they wait in the same line to order food at my taco truck,ā€ said Quintanar, in Spanish, as his eyes filled with tears. 

A man in a suit buys food from a vendor at a food truck window stocked with various bottled and canned drinks.
A suited customer stops by the truck, located right in front of the Hall of Justice, in the morning for a quick meal on May 19, 2026. Photo by Zoe Malen.
A uniformed officer receives a plastic bag of food from a food truck, with an array of sodas and drinks displayed in the window.
Jorge Urbina, working with parking meter enforcement, stopped by to grab some tacos on May 19, 2026. Photo by Zoe Malen.
A man in a red shirt stands at the window of a white food truck lined with drinks and snacks on a sunny day.
A customer orders food at the El NorteƱo taco truck on May 19, 2026. Photo by Zoe Malen.

Rafael and Magdalena Quintanar have been married for more than four decades. Though, at times, he needs a little help remembering.

ā€œHow long have you been married?ā€ he asked Magdalena as she walked by.

ā€œAs long as you have,ā€ Magdalena replied. They two broke into laughter as they shared a hug.

The Quintanars met in the heart of the Mission District, outside of the former Cine Latino, across from the New Mission theater. The two walked out of a Pepe Carrasco show they described as ā€œboringā€ and struck a conversation, the first of thousands.

After about 45 years of marriage, the couple now has six children — some of whom have occasionally helped at the truck — 16 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. 

After the hard, early years, the two were able to buy a new place in south San Francisco, then, later, a small ranch near Chico, which helped to fulfill another longtime dream of his. 

ā€œEver since I was a little kid, I dreamt of having horses, and I was never able to until, thank God, it happened,ā€ said Rafael Quintanar.

Rafael Quintanar in front of his truck on May 19, 2026. Photo by Zoe Malen.

Now Quintanar has eight horses at the ranch that he rides whenever he finds the time, while listening to Vicente Fernandez, Pedro Infante, Luis Aguilar and Jorge Negrete, his favorite musicians.

After more than 70 years working, Rafel Quintanar said he has no immediate plans of retiring.

ā€œI’ll die if I stop.ā€ he said. ā€œYou gotta stay active.ā€ 

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Reporting from the Mission District and other District 9 neighborhoods. Some of his personal interests are bicycles, film, and both Latin American literature and punk. Oscar's work has previously appeared in KQED, The Frisc, El Tecolote, and Golden Gate Xpress.

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