Carne Asada burrito at Lito’s Burritos
I’ve long suspected that Richfield held a world of culinary wonders, and smashing a Lito’s Burrito this week proved it. Behind a strip mall facade, with a sign promising “A different Mexican eatery,” lies a daytime feast of big-time burritos.
The restaurant is a pop-up courtesy of Miguel Hernandez (affectionately known by his mother as Miguelito, or Lito). No joke, these burritos are the best I’ve tasted outside of Southern California. The size of something you’d toss on a couch for comfort, flour tortillas are stuffed with goodness. Like the L.A. Burrito ($14.99): char-kissed carne asada, sunset-colored rice, ripe avocados and super crunchy French fries. (And it’s never too early for a burrito; Lito’s opens at 7 a.m. on weekdays, 10 a.m. on weekends.) We also got a selection of fresh salsa, and I would immediately like to request a vat of the Diabla, a toasty yellow-colored variety that we were cautioned was the spiciest, to live in my fridge forever. The tomatillos and dried peppers have an irresistible roasted piquant flavor that would take a bite of anything from basic to sublime.
The list of other things I’d like to order is longer than my arm, but at the top are carne asada fries — a cheesy decadence that reminds me of late nights in San Diego. (Joy Summers)
6519 Nicollet Av. S., Richfield, 612-243-9699, litos-burritos.com

Chicken Karahi at Afghan Darbar Restaurant
Ever have one of those moments when you forget what you’re looking for?
That’s how my dining companion and I ended up at Afghan Darbar Restaurant after circling Bloomington looking for … was it pastries? But then we spotted a sliver of a sign — for a different restaurant — on the overhang of Town & Country Shopping Center, and peeked in to find this literal hidden gem that opened last summer.
We were the only ones there for lunch (we sincerely hope that changes), and ordered the chicken karahi ($16.99), a homestyle slow-simmered stew of braised chicken and chickpeas in tomato sauce, popular across South Asia. The fragrantly spiced dish — we got ginger, garlic, chiles, garam masala — is named for the vessel it cooks in, a process that can take hours. It comes with half of an enormous round of flatbread for you to tear into pieces to scoop up the chicken and soul-warming sauce. We added a samosa ($2.99), blistering hot and flaky out of the fryer, a mouthwatering spiced meat filling within.
Had the timing worked out, we would have ordered the Kabuli Pulao, Afghanistan’s national dish. Rice with raisins, carrots, almonds and lamb, it’s the dish the restaurant is proudest of — but it’s available only later in the afternoon and for dinner. At least we know exactly what to order when we go back. (Sharyn Jackson)