Elevated Mexican Fare at Uno Mas
By: Anna Eileen White | Photos By: Ashlee Glen
Neon signage and greenery floating overhead usher visitors into 5th Street’s latest culinary spot. It’s almost as bright inside as outside. Walls of windows illuminate cactus-green subway tiles and conversation buzzes beneath the electric pulse of a well-curated playlist.
This is Uno Mas, and if the experience lives up to its name, visitors will be tempted to stick around for “one more.”
Upon entering, a mustard-yellow bus with a rust-speckled fender doubles as a hostess stand —this is chef and owner Alan Gutierrez’s favorite design element. He said they cut the bus in half allowing servers to walk and stand behind the dashboard. License plates and road signs reading “Uno Mas,” “Tacos BLVD,” and “Tequila Way” are affixed around the antique VW badge.
Where to sit is the first choice: pick a table or booth in the main dining room and admire colorful homages to Mexico’s Day of the Dead, find a seat at the bar, slip into the secluded side room and dine under a blue haze away from the crowd, or feast al fresco on the patio. Any location will more than complement the extensive menu of Lynchburg’s self-proclaimed “home of street tacos.”
“Everybody loves tacos,” said Gutierrez, who has been cooking for most of his life.
His menu features 10+ tacos served on house-made corn or flour tortillas with endless customizations. Choices include two styles applied to any taco—Gringo and Street. Choose Gringo and receive a taco topped with lettuce, tomatoes, crema, and cheese. Choose Street and enjoy the bright addition of cilantro, onions, and lime. Among protein choices like melt-in-your-mouth lengua (tongue) for the adventurous and tender carne asada, visitors can find a standard favorite and stick with it, or never eat the same taco twice by swapping salsa verde for a creamy avocado salsa and vice versa.
Everything at Uno Mas is made in-house, the result of skills Gutierrez has built over his 29 years.
“Since I was little, I would always cook for my brothers, my mom, my dad, and I wanted to be a chef,” he said. Born and raised in Mexico, he grew up watching his mom navigate the food industry there. He said she rarely measures, and her culinary methods are subconscious and natural, “I definitely got that from her.”
When his parents opened El Camino on Lakeside Drive, it was another opportunity for Gutierrez to explore the food industry and eventually become part-owner.
“Little by little, I started liking the restaurant business,” he explained.
Though busy splitting his time between construction in the mornings and El Camino in the afternoons and evenings, Gutierrez didn’t have any doubts when
512 5th Street came available. His dad first saw the listing.
“He showed me a picture, and as soon as he told me, I called the number,” he said. After multiple unanswered calls, Gutierrez’s persistence paid off.
“[The agent] showed me the place, that same day or the day after, and I told him I wanted it, and then we jumped on it the day after that.”
Now the location is Gutierrez’s canvas, and his preferred mediums are the sights, sounds, and flavors of the big city. He says the details are inspired by his travels, where he pays close attention to “the colors, the decorations, the food, how they present things, the drinks.” He’s taken “a little bit of everything” from favorite locations including Acapulco, Guadalajara, Jalisco, California, and Puerto Rico. “Everywhere I would go, either Mexico or bigger cities, I would look at things and get ideas,” he explained.
Despite the main dining room’s joyful allure, the patio is irresistible on a 75-degree spring evening. Sheltered on two sides by buildings, but open to 5th Street, traffic hums and occasionally roars by—an organic addition to Gutierrez’s big-city bent. Several of 5th Street’s iconic cherry trees mark a chiffony margin between the roadway and patio. On one side, life as usual; on the other, good food, good drinks, good atmosphere, and good music, according to Gutierrez.
“[People] always have a good time,” he explained. “They kind of just come and hang out, and they bring their friends, and those friends bring more friends. It’s kind of just like a cool hang-out place.”
Open since February 3rd, Gutierrez says they never truly announced they were open and didn’t do any paid advertising. Instead, they used social media and let news spread word-of-mouth.
“We just turned the lights on and opened the doors and people just started coming in,” he shared. “We’ve been getting really good feedback. I knew it was going to be successful.
I just didn’t think it was going to be this quick.”
Top-ordered food items so far include tacos, Burrito Cocino, and Maria Bonita. Gutierrez says the top-ordered drinks are margaritas and palomas. He is already envisioning a second location in the near future. “If you want to try new Mexican food that’s not at any other restaurants around,” he explained, “this is the perfect place.”
Gutierrez says it’s not just the food—he’s worked hard to create an atmosphere that visitors won’t find elsewhere. The way diners stick around, soaking up the many sensory delights, confirms that he’s concocted something magnetic.
A toddler finds his groove dancing atop the patio’s flagstone pavers and his parents join the fun in between polishing off a few more bites. Conversation keeps pace with the playlist even as daylight dwindles. “I think people just love to be here,” said Gutierrez.
Whether looking to enjoy one more drink or one more round of steak nachos, Uno Mas is meant for lingering, and visitors will surely leave with one more colorful moment in time under their belts than they began with.