Between the greeting cards and the beef jerky, three long tables were set for dinner.
Dark cloths were draped over the folding tables, where chef Cristian de Leon and his team set out large, blue-rimmed white plates, each artfully arranged with fish and seafood. Hugging the lower left edge of the plates were a single mussel, piece of white fish, scallop, potato, shard of fish skin, lemon wedge, plump shrimp and a crispy tortilla round — not the bagged kind with powdered cheese displayed on an endcap between the dinner guests and the kitchen, but a chip made from locally nixtamalized masa.
Zoilo Ruacho, a bartender and server, walked from guest to guest pouring a light tomato broth from a clear plastic cup, turning this deconstructed seafood lineup into a unified bouillabaisse.
You don't see that kind of tableside service much in restaurants anymore. And certainly not in a place where you have to pump your own gas. Yet here, in the middle of an Eagan BP, de Leon has been quietly raising expectations about what rest-stop food can be.
This event was the third installment of "Night at the Gas Station," a five-course tasting dinner that stretches to the limit the capabilities of a convenience store kitchen no larger than a bathroom stall.
Cristian De Leon, 38, and his wife, Karen de Leon, 33, both left stable restaurant jobs last year after decades in the business — he having run kitchens at places such as the Copper Hen, Chino Latino, the Good Earth and the Icehouse, and she as a manager at Pittsburgh Blue.
Together, with the help of their kids and extended family, they opened El Sazon Tacos & More in March 2022.
The taco part is clear, even if it is a little off the beaten path; de Leon, from Guatemala, marinates and braises meats with pan-Latin flavors for tacos, burritos, pizza and ramen, all from a corner of the convenience store.