
Longing for a return to what made the original location so magical, Lori, with her oldest son Jon Carlos, looked to Fountain Square as the next iteration of their quintessential Indianapolis Mexican restaurant. But something was missing, which leads us to where we are today.

It was a location that benefitted from busy office park lunches and early-evening diners. And in early 2006, La Margarita moved once more, this time to 96th and Meridian, a fresh start.įor a half decade the restaurant continued to serve the north side of Indianapolis its homemade Mexican fare. The 86th and Township location carried on the best it could for the next five years. Larry, with his best friends Tony and Shirley Bettenhausen, and Russ Roberts, tragically lost their lives in a small plane crash on their way back from a week in Florida. The La Margarita family lost its patriarch. And like Speedway, it was a hell of a good time: Cinco de Mayo ushering in patio season each year the eight-piece Mariachi Band drifting and crooning their way through the packed restaurant on long summer nights Larry’s cooking, singing, and cursing emanating from the kitchen for all to enjoy and all the while, Lori, keeping it all together, while selling traditional Mexican pottery out of the front of the store.īut tragedy struck in 2000.

From 1990 to 2005, the restaurant grew up alongside a second generation of La Margarita-goers, all the while remaining faithful to the Speedway crowd that followed it.

The first of two north side locations was at 86th and Township Line Road. Looking to improve on the yearly race-season crowds that carried their business, the couple moved the restaurant to the north side of town, where things were steadier, and where they could grow their customer base and raise their young children.
La margarita drivers#
The timing and location couldn’t have been better for the young couple. There, just a few blocks away from the yard of bricks, at the corner of 30th and Georgetown Road, was their small cantina and kitchen.įor six years it played de-facto hospitality room to the greatest spectacle in racing - in a lot of ways it still is! On any given night in the month of May, you’d find more racecar drivers bellied up to the bar over plates of tacos and pitchers of margaritas than you could spot in the paddocks on race day. In 1984, Larry and Lori Rangel opened the original La Margarita in Speedway.
