Editor's note: This story was originally published in December 2025.
There’s nothing like a warm, steaming bowl of menudo.
It’s the meal you sit around and enjoy with your family on New Year’s Eve, reminiscing on all the fun the past 365 days had to offer.
It’s there for you the next morning, and always the perfect cure for last night’s shenanigans.
For Isaac Matias, a bowl of menudo was waiting for him every Sunday at his mother’s house. Sundays were his mother, Teresa Matias's, days off, which gave her the chance to cook for her family. Menudo happened to be a staple at this weekly brunch, and now, that same bowl of delicious, rich soup can be found at Teresa’s Mosaic Kitchen.
Teresa first started making menudo in 1985, slowly figuring out what worked and what didn’t. Soon, she was making gallons of the soup, with many people complimenting her skills.
When she opened Teresa Mosaic Kitchen here in Tucson, she decided to add menudo to the menu, because of all the positive feedback she got from it.
Her secret? Taking her time. Teresa makes sure she is using the freshest ingredients, taking her time to thoroughly clean the tripe, resulting in a cozy, savory bowl of soup.
At the restaurant, Teresa makes four to five giant pots of menudo a week. The weekends seem to be the most popular days for the beloved soup, and her customers rave about the warm feeling it gives them.
A waiter serves two bowls of menudo during lunchtime at Teresa’s Mosaic Cafe.
Even if you’ve never had it before, once you see the families enjoying a bowl with each other, you’ll be tempted to order your own.
“On the weekends we go through quite a bit of menudo, you’ll even see young children, enjoying it, Isaac Matias said. “It’ll start to pique your interest. Then you’re asking if you can try a small bowl. Just seeing other people enjoying it makes others want to join in on the fun.”
Once you have a bowl of red menudo placed in front of you, along with cilantro, a perfectly toasted slice of bread, and a warm, homemade flour tortilla, you’ll find yourself coming back every Sunday for a taste of the comforting soup.
A gallon of menudo gets poured for a to-go order on Feb. 1, 2022 at Tania's 33.
Over in Barrio Hollywood, they are also cooking up something special.
The back of Tania’s 33 is like if what lurked behind the Wizard of Oz’s green curtain was actually amazing. Past the plastic flaps that separate the front and back of house, behind the horseshoe-shaped grill, steam table and fry bay that produce most of the items on their prodigious menu, you’ll find a narrow hallway lined with stock pot stoves.
You may never have seen burners like these before: rather than the smaller, waist-height gas stoves you may associate with commercial kitchens, these are made of cast iron and hover low to the ground, so that the 80-quart pots are at arm’s reach.
A customer takes a look at the menu at Tania's 33 on Feb. 1, 2022.
This hallway is the domain of Rudy Lira III, whose grandmother founded Tania’s in the '70s. He grew up watching his parents cook for their community and now runs their bulk foods program, responsible for the wide array of soups and stews at the west-side institution. Tania’s has been slinging menudo at 614 N. Grande Ave. for nearly four decades.
On a Thursday morning, four of the eight burners are cooking menudo. Rudy got to work at 5 a.m. (as he does every day) so customers can order the soup fresh when the restaurant opens at 7 a.m. “We’re chasing our own tails,” he said. “As soon as one pot gets low, we have to start another one.”
One of the 80-quart pots, which could fit an elementary schooler in the fetal position, is full of birria and covered in armfuls of spices waiting to be stirred. Another is full of barbacoa. The crowning pot, perhaps the largest one in the kitchen, is the 200-quart they use to cook the hominy that goes into their menudo and is ground into masa for their tamales.
Bread for the menudo toasts and gets turned by an employee on Feb. 1, 2022 at Tania's 33.
“The recipe for menudo is quite simple,” said Rudy Jr., Rudy III’s father and co-owner of Tania’s. “You can’t really change it that much, except refusing to cut corners. We don’t add any water to our menudo to make the broth last longer. Our menudo is three-quarters meat and hominy, one-quarter broth.” In other words, they don’t skimp on the good stuff.
What can make menudo polarizing is the tripe, the stomach lining of a cow. People who love tripe like the gelatinous texture, its whisper of funkiness. People who don’t love tripe probably dislike it for the same reasons. It’s a mild, nutritious cut of meat, which takes on the flavors of its fellow ingredients, whether in menudo or other dishes like phở or andouille.
While there are technically four types of tripe — one for each chamber of the cow’s stomach — Tania’s menudo seems to mainly use rumen, or blanket tripe, from the first stomach of the cow. One side of the rumen might have sea-kelp-beds of papillae, which allow the cow’s stomach more surface area to absorb nutrients. One or both sides might be smooth.
Red and white menudo are each more popular in different regions. “Here, our orders for white menudo outnumber red 10:1,” Rudy Jr. said. “But in New Mexico, people might never have even heard of white menudo before.” He explained that white menudo, which is pretty much only tripe, garlic and hominy, is culturally specific to the Sonoran region. “But some people think it should be all meat and no hominy,” he said.
Rudy III prefers red for the spice. “There’s a little more room for personal flair with red menudo than white. Each person has their own unique blend of spices,” he said.
While the recipes for menudo might be relatively simple, what makes it a special occasion food is time. The four-hour minimum to concentrate the flavors and get the tripe to the right texture means many restaurants only serve menudo on the weekends. Tania’s prides themselves on making it every day of the week.
“In the food service industry, you do the work for others as much as yourself,” said Rudy III.
Teresa’s Mosaic Cafe
Location: 2456 N. Silver Mosaic Dr.
Hours: 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-Saturday | 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday
For more information, check out their website.
Tania’s 33
Location: 614 N. Grande Ave.
Hours: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday | 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sunday-Monday
For more information, check out their website.
Other places to get bomb menudo:
- Birrieria Guadalajara — 304 E. 22nd St.
- Mi Nidito — 1813 S. Fourth Ave.
- La Estrella Bakery (on weekends) — 5266 S. 12th Ave.; 120 S. Avenida del Convento; 901 N. Grande Ave.
Our readers recommend:
- Toto’s — 1118 W. St Marys Road
- Cora’s Cafe — 4525 S. Park Ave.
- St. Mary’s Mexican Food (Saturday only) — 1030 W. St Marys Road
- Micha’s — 2908 S. Fourth Ave.
- El Herradero on Prince — 1310 W. Prince Road
- Los Jarritos — 4832 S. 12th Ave.
- El Minuto — 354 S. Main Ave.
- Jalisco Restaurante — 425 W. Irvington Road



