I was out in Fort Wayne recently for meetings with our largest account. I got into the hotel on Fort Wayne's far north side around 6 p.m., and after getting settled in, I looked up some restaurants in the area. There was a Mexican taqueria that also specialized in serving locally-brewed craft beers that caught my attention. It was about 3 miles north of where I was staying, so I took off to go find Solbird Kitchen & Tap.
Jerry Perez grew up in Laredo, TX where as a young boy he acquired an affinity for street tacos. As an adult, he moved to Fort Wayne and fell in love with some of the cuisine in town. One evening, he was in downtown Fort Wayne and came across the Bravas food cart that sold tacos and hot dogs. (Bravas eventually became a brick and mortar restaurant specializing in burgers. Click here to see the Road Tips entry on Bravas.) Perez was inspired by the Bravas food cart to come up with his own food cart concept that would sell street tacos like the ones he loved as a youth. In 2012, Perez started his Sol Kitchen food cart and sold street tacos at a local farmers market. He liked The Doors and fashioned his business' name after their song "Soul Kitchen" that was on their eponymous first album. Only he gave the name of his food cart a bit of a Latin flair.
The food cart turned out to be a hit and within a couple years Perez acquired a food truck and went around to different events and venues in his Sol Kitchen food truck. It was during this time that he was introduced to a young man who had his own brewpub in Fort Wayne. Ben Thompson was the owner of Birdboy Brewing, a small craft brewery that had opened in 2015. Thompson was brewing beers in a facility on the north side of Fort Wayne and distributing the beers around the area. He wanted to have his own taproom/brewpub, but needed to collaborate with someone on the food.
Perez and Thompson hit it off and decided in 2017 to do a joint venture together. Thompson was already working on a brewery/tap room with food from the great Joseph Decuis restaurant in Roanoke (click here to see the Road Tips entry on Joseph Decuis), and he and Perez announced they would open a brick-and-mortar restaurant with Thompson's beers and Perez's street tacos. They announced their plans for their Fort Wayne venture in the fall of 2017, but the Roanoke project came about more quickly than anticipated. That pushed back the Fort Wayne opening date by a few months.
By the end of the food truck season in October of 2018, Perez - along with his wife Laurie - and Thompson were ready to open their collaborative venture - Solbird Kitchen & Tap. The connection between Perez and Thompson continued for three years before Thompson sold his shares of Birdboy and the brewery was eventually closed. That allowed Perez to focus on serving beers from other local craft breweries such as Fortlandia, Hop River and Mad Anthony.
Solbird Kitchen & Tap is located in a strip mall near the corner of Lima Rd. and W. DuPont Rd. (see map) It's sort of tough to find - you have to go west on DuPont and turn into a roadway next to a Marathon gas station. Solbird is on the end of a building with plenty of parking available.
Walking into Solbird, the small place was packed with diners. It was obviously a popular place as nearly every table was filled and there were just two or three open spots at the L-shaped bar. The long narrow dining area was well-lit with strings of Edison lights below exposed HVAC ductwork. Banquette seats lined the wall opposite the bar with a row of two-seater high-top tables were in between. A really crappy sound system consisting of a shitty sounding sound bar on a shelf behind the bar was playing 70's and 80's classic rock way too loud as the place was already loud with all the conversations going on. True to Jerry Perez's love for The Doors, a large photo of Jim Morrison hung on the wall by the open kitchen.
I took a seat at the bar and was greeted by a young lady by the name of Isabel. She gave me a menu to look over and asked me what I wanted to drink. There was a QR code on the menu that allowed me to download the beer list. At the top of the list were the lagers and they had a dark Mexican lager from the Fortlandia Brewing Company - Dark Side of Pedro. That sounded interesting to me, so I ordered that. Isabel soon brought me pint and pushed it across the deep bar to me. I took a sip of the beer and found that it was more of a coffee-style stout than a dark lager Mexican beer. It was OK, but I went with the Hop Rivers Lasers in the Jungle IPA that they had on the list.
To say the menu at Solbird Kitchen & Tap was interesting is putting it mildly. They had the regular appetizers such as guacamole, salsa with chips, and chips with queso; but they also had shrimp ceviche and a shiitake mushroom/Mexican truffle quesadilla that sounded really interesting. On Sundays, they served a number of brunch items such as breakfast tacos, a steak burrito, and a Mexican-style poutine with chorizo sausage gravy topping ancho-seasoned fries and cheddar cheese with a fried egg.
While Solbird Kitchen is primarily a taqueria, they also had burritos, quesadillas, rice bowls (with or without protein), and las papas fritas - basically fried potatoes topped with different items including a Korean-inspired dish with fried potatoes topped with bulgogi beef and kimchi. But I was there for the tacos.
And some of the taco selections were also very interesting. They had a taco that was also a Korean-style taco with bulgogi beef and kimchi, as well as a shrimp taco marinated in Korean sauces and grilled. They had an Indian/Mexican Chicken Tinga fusion taco with chipotle-braised chicken breast meat; there was an ancho-marinated grilled shrimp taco with a pineapple-mango sauce; and then there was "The Jazzy" - basically the same thing as the shrimp taco only with house-made chorizo sausage added.
They did have pork carnitas tacos topped with the pineapple/mango sauce with green onions and cilantro, but I went with something they called "The Texican" - basically a beef blend of ground chuck, brisket and short rib that Solbird Kitchen sourced from a local farm, then topped with pico de gallo, a lettuce/cabbage blend, finished off with Tapatio hot sauce, cheddar cheese, and a single pickled jalapeño all in a crispy fried corn tortilla shell. The presentation was pretty basic, but I really didn't care much about that.
And the tacos had a lot of flavors going on - savory, spicy and, of course, beefy. The beef blend really stood out even with the spiciness of the add-ons. The corn flour shells were pretty brittle and much of the beef and toppings spilled onto the plate with nearly each bite. But the tacos were very good and the Hop Rivers Lasers in the Jungle IPA went very well with the tacos.
Really, other than the way-too-loud music being played on a crappy soundbar system (as a long time audio industry veteran who knows good sound, I was embarrassed for them), Solbird Kitchen & Tap was a great find. The tacos I had were very good, and the rest of the menu seemed to be pretty intriguing. Isabel did fine job of taking care of me and I felt bad because she was a short young lady who had a hard time placing things in front of me on the nearly 4 foot-deep bar. Solbird Kitchen & Tap was definitely a unique experience.