From a humble street-side cantina near DLSU-Taft to a Michelin Selected restaurant — the El Poco story is built on grit, birria, and community.
El Poco Cantina opened its doors in 2019 along Estrada Street in Malate Manila, just a stone's throw from De La Salle University. Co-owner Richard Ken "Tots" Ramirez had a clear vision: bring authentic, Mexican-inspired birria tacos to Manila's student community without the fine-dining price tag.
The name itself — "El Poco," meaning "the little" — was a nod to humility. A small space, a short menu, and a singular obsession with getting the birria right. The slow-cooked beef, the golden consomé, the crispy cheese crust — every element was obsessed over until it was exactly right.
Word spread fast. University students, young professionals, and food enthusiasts across Manila discovered that El Poco was doing something genuinely special. The line outside the Taft branch became a familiar sight. Social media lit up. And the rest, as they say, is taqueria history.
Three principles that guide everything we cook, serve, and build.
Great food should never be gated behind a premium price. We believe every person deserves a satisfying, thoughtfully crafted meal — no matter their budget. Affordability and quality are not opposites at El Poco.
El Poco was built for the neighborhood. For the students, the workers, the late-night craving crowd. Our second location in UBELT-Recto doubled down on that commitment to being part of the community fabric of Manila.
Success is not linear — and we know it firsthand. We keep tasting, adjusting, and listening. The Michelin recognition in 2026 wasn't an endpoint; it was a reminder to keep pushing for better, always.
These aren't words on a wall. These are the standards we hold ourselves to every single day.
We honor the Mexican tradition of birria — slow-cooked, deeply spiced beef with rich consomé — and bring it faithfully to Manila. No shortcuts, no compromises on flavor.
We opened El Poco knowing our neighbors are students, workers, and everyday Filipinos. Keeping our food accessible is not just a business decision — it's a moral one.
When Michelin Selected was announced, Tots said it clearly: "This is not just me — my team did this." El Poco's culture starts with taking care of the people behind the counter.
We've been featured on FEATR, recognized by Michelin, and gone viral across social media. But we still show up every day to make the same tacos with the same care as day one.
Every expansion, every new hire, and every partnership is an opportunity to create more jobs and give back to the communities that gave us our start.
Six years of slow-cooked progress, community love, and milestones worth celebrating.
El Poco Cantina opens its first location at 945 Estrada St., Malate Manila near DLSU-Taft. A small space, a focused menu: birria, burritos, tacos, quesadillas.
The pandemic tested every food business. El Poco pivoted with takeaway and delivery, keeping the kitchen running and the team together through the hardest years.
Short-form food videos of El Poco's quesa birria tacos begin spreading across social media. The Taft line grows longer. A new wave of fans discovers the cantina.
Responding to growing demand beyond Taft, El Poco opens at 2073 Pinagpala Bldg, C.M. Recto Ave, Sampaloc — bringing birria to the UBELT university belt.
Featured on FEATR — the popular Filipino food media channel — alongside chef and food personality Erwan Heussaff, cementing El Poco's place in Manila's food culture.
El Poco Cantina is recognized in the Michelin Guide Philippines 2026 as a Michelin Selected restaurant — the first guide of its kind in the country. A historic moment for Manila's food scene.
Every taco we serve carries the history, hustle, and heart of El Poco Cantina. Come see what all the fuss is about.