Birria in this family has never been a restaurant item. It's a Sunday morning. It's the smell of dried guajillo chiles toasting in a dry pan before the house wakes up. It's the decision made the night before — to start the braise, to soak the chiles, to let the beef marinate overnight in that dark red adobo. By the time everyone else is making coffee, the kitchen smells like a decision was already made for you: today is a birria day.
That's not a business idea. That's just how the family eats. The business idea came later — when we realized that the people around us wanted what we were making, and there was nothing in Pinal County that could give it to them.
"We'd been feeding neighbors informally for years. People would find out we were making birria and just show up. At some point you stop being surprised and start making more." — Founder, Birria Kings AZ
The formal decision to build a business happened in stages. First the recipe was locked — not written down, but understood. Then the hydroponic garden was built, because we weren't willing to compromise on herbs and aromatics just because Arizona City doesn't have a weekly farmers market. Then the website. Then the menu. Then this.
