THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Indy Eats: 11th Street Station Brings Hipster Vibes To Downtown Durango

Indy Eats: 11th Street Station Brings Hipster Vibes To Downtown Durango

By Ryan Simonovich

Author: Bodine, James/Monday, November 13, 2017/Categories: Culture, Opinion

Rate this article:
No rating

11th Street Station is like a casino. You could stay there all day and night, and never have to leave. There’s booze, coffee, and food. What more do you need?

 

The property on the corner of 11th Street and Main Avenue is home to a bar, a coffee shop and five food trucks. Each establishment are individually owned and lease space from Ernie’s bar.

 

The novel business idea provides lots of outdoor sitting and standing space to enjoy lunch or a late night drink. Furthermore, the business gives an answer to tight city restrictions on food trucks, as well as brings big city culture to Durango.  

 

The city of Durango has tough regulations for food trucks. Food trucks are not allowed to park on public streets or parks. They must find a private lot to park and apply for a six month permit from the city. After six months is up, they must vacate the lot for another six months.

 

At 11th Street Station, the food trucks can remain in the lot as long as they have a lease with the business. I recently visited 11th Street Station for lunch and tried two of the food trucks.

 

I ordered the holiday special from Backcountry Gourmet, who serves slider style sandwiches. This one had turkey breast, cranberry sauce, brie cheese, caramelized onions, arugula and an apple slice. It was five dollars.

 

I enjoyed this twist on Thanksgiving dinner. It was tasty, but I’m not too sure if this sandwich had too many ingredients. I love all the individual ingredients, however it might take a larger sandwich to fully enjoy the combined flavors.

 

Overall, the price was decent and the food tasted good. The slider was a reasonable size, but if you want a more complete meal you should order two.

 

I also ordered a smoked chicken taco from the barbecue truck Smoking On Wheels. You could also choose pulled pork, and the taco comes with a topping of lime, cilantro and jalapeno cole slaw, and queso fresco cheese.

 

This taco was fantastic. The chicken had the right texture and flavor to make me want to inhale the taco in one bite. I put the house barbecue sauce on the taco, which only increased the taco experience. The sauce was more on the tangy side, but it was not too tangy nor too sweet.

 

My only complaint is the price. A taco is four dollars plus tax, so more on the pricey side as far as tacos go. A taco at Zia Taqueria, for instance, is right around three dollars.

 

The modern food truck movement is largely attributed to the Kogi BBQ truck, which opened in Los Angeles in 2008. Food trucks are now a place to eat gourmet food, rather than greasy pizza and hot dogs found in generations past.

 

11th Street Station brings a feel of the big city to small town Colorado. In other words, it feels like a place where hipsters ride to on their bike to take an instagram picture. They even have those lights that hang on a string and make you feel like you're in a scene from an indie film.

 

I see myself coming back often for food and drinks.

 
 
Print

Number of views (4378)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Bones from the Bisti Badlands

Anja Tabor

What it takes to get a dinosaur to Fort Lewis College

A dinosaur skeleton cast and cousin of the Tyrannosaurus rex moves onto campus from the Bisti Wilderness Area in New Mexico, also known as the Bisti Badlands. The fossil is being loaned to the college for undergraduate research this semester, professor of geosciences, Gary Gianniny said. But how is the cast coming to Fort Lewis College? The most recent discovery of the dinosaur was found...

Screaming Rubber Band Chickens

AJ Repinski

Contestants test their pain limit for Snowdown glory.

  Contestants and spectators pack into 11th Street Station’s “Screaming Rubber Band Chickens” Snowdown event at 4:30 p.m. on Feb. 2.    11th Street Owner Marcos Wisner prepares a tournament-style bracket for the event. Randomly drawn for the bracket after entering, contestants prepared themselves for several rounds of rubber band slaps all...

ASFLC Meeting 1/24

AJ Repinski

During the first ASFLC meeting of the spring semester, several important agenda items were viewed. 

During the first meeting of the 2024 spring semester, the Associated Students of Fort Lewis College viewed several key agenda items. During the meeting, two resolutions successfully passed.  First, the proposed Financial Allocation Board Bylaw Amendments were approved. The new bylaws state RSO II’s wishing to become RSO III’s no longer need to apply solely in the fall...

Measuring CO2 with Machine Learning

AJ Repinski

How artificial intelligence could replace expensive measuring instruments.

Artificial intelligence seems almost inescapable in today's increasingly technology driven world. Deep learning models, such as OpenAI’s Chat GPT, have been at the forefront of public amazement and controversy since their mainstream introduction in late 2022. Today, Fort Lewis College students are discovering new ways that artificial intelligence can be used to reduce the costs...

Durango's Beloved Beaters

Morgan Smith and Sienna Reese

Fort Lewis College students will drive anything with four wheels! 

Whether cars are used to get to the slopes, back home or simply the grocery store, some Fort Lewis College students see their vehicle as the connection they have to the world outside of campus.  Take a look into the tales of five FLC students and their beloved beaters, to see the trust, love and tears that are put into owning an old car.    1999 JEEP...

First2345791011Last