Your Hard Taco Shells Are Too Cold
Hardshell tacos have a reputation for being āinauthentic,ā an aberration of the form invented by a white fast food mogul named Glen Bell. (Can you guess which popular chain he founded?) And while Glenāand Taco Bellāare responsible for the hardshell tacoās massive popularity in the United States, not to mention the many spin-offs and riffs that deserve to be called āaberrations,ā he did not earn the title of āHard Shell Taco Inventor.ā
As Andrew Fiouzi of MEL explains in āAn Oral History of Hardshell Tacos,ā there was no one āinventorā of the hardshell taco. According to Gustavo Arellano, author of Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America, tacos doradosāāgolden tacos,ā made with tortillas that have been fried until crispyāare considered by experts to be the inspiration for the ubiquitous hardshell taco now snaggable in drive-throughs across the country:
Tacos dorados is a hard shell pocket. Thatās what it boils down to. So no one invented the hard shell taco ā there is no āoneā creator. I know, people want to find the originator, but itās really a confluence of all these different people capitalizing on what was already there. Actually, the first tacos in the U.S., they were all hard shell tacos. That was just the style of eating tacos that people brought up with them from Mexico. In fact, the earliest known recipe for a taco in the U.S. in English is a hard shell taco; it was in the L.A. Times.
You should read the entire oral history of the hardshell taco over at MEL, but the upshot is this: The hardshell taco deserves your respect. And that means showing it a little warmth.

A cold taco shell is a brittle taco shell
Every hardshell taco preparer knows the frustration of trying to pack in the ingredients without cracking anything, but thereās a way to make the process less fraught: Warming the shells beforehand gets the fats within moving and grooving, making them more pliable and less likely to shatter during filling (and eating).
It also makes them taste better, as warm fats taste better than cold fats, as they are able to move around your palate a little better. (Imagine eating a piece of toast with cold bacon fat spread on top, then imagine eating a piece of bread fried in bacon fat. Which one sounds more appealing?) Toasting the shells also brings out the sweetness of the corn, decreasing bitterness and wafting those nixtamalized aromas into the air. Place your shells in a 200ā oven for a three minutes or so until they smell nice and toasty. Fill as usual (respectfully).
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