How did a guy named Nick Hammer from Collierville learn to make tacos and eventually open the Texas Tacos food truck in Byhalia, Mississippi?
First, the restaurant business runs in the family. His grandmother owned Hammerโs Homestead House in the late โ70s in Pickwick, Tennessee. His uncle owned another Pickwick restaurant, Snoopyโs.
Hammer, 45, learned to cook as a child. โWe were taught as kids that you need to know how to cook for yourself,โ he says. โIron your own clothes.โ
He learned to make fajitas when he was 16 from a friend in McAllen, Texas. They began winning fajita cooking contests after Hammer moved to Texas. They used sirloin because good fajita meat or โskirt steakโ is expensive.
Hammer also learned to cook Mexican food, including different salsas and sauces, from the wife of another friend in McAllen. โShe had a very clean way of cooking Mexican food,โ he remembers. โIt wasnโt super greasy, unhealthy.โ
Mexican food was a part of Hammerโs daily life in Texas, where he and his ex-wife, who was half Hispanic, lived for 15 years. โBreakfast tacos. Maybe tacos for lunch. But not every single day. Itโs just that the tortilla down there is such an important part. Itโs just like bread,โ he says.
And there are so many ways to eat tacos. โYou throw something together with meat, chicken or pork or beef.โ
A carpenter by trade, Hammer worked with groups of men in the Texas oil fields. โAll of these guys are either from South Texas or from Mexico,โ he remembers. โThey would cook out every night.โ
He realized food he gets in Mexican restaurants โnorth of San Antonioโ is โnot the same food they are cooking for themselves at home. Or the same food that theyโre eating while theyโre here. Totally different. Itโs almost like thereโs a commercial Mexican food and the actual home-cooked stuff they eat.โ
It includes โa lot more of everything. Lots of garlic. Lots of onion, cilantro, lime, and jalapeรฑos.โ
Hammer and his family moved to Marshall County in 2019 to work on family property. He and his son, Cole, 23, also worked construction jobs around the country for an Atlanta-based company. But they wanted a change. โWe just got tired of traveling and living in hotels.โ
Hammer bought a 22-foot-long trailer and opened his Texas Tacos food truck with his son and his mother, Bunny Hammer, in September 2021. โI just wanted something that was local where I could make a decent family wage and stay close to home.โ
As for the food, he says, โWe cook all of our food fresh every day. And sometimes several times a day.โ
And, Hammer points out, everything is โmade from scratch.โ
In a nod to his roots, he calls his food โTexasโ instead of โMexican,โ Hammer says. โThe further you get from the border coming this way, the food changes until youโre left with a watered-down version of what the original was. We donโt want to give a watered-down version of Mexican food. If you went to South Texas, youโd get something similar to what weโre making.โ
For his tacos, Hammer uses sirloin meat for the steak and tenderloin for the chicken.
His tacos also have the right texture. โWhen you eat a taco, you want it to chew up easily.โ
They also sell โbig nachosโ and the โBig Tex Potato,โ which is a papa loaded with meat, cheese, and vegetables. โEnough to feed two or three people.โ
Texas Tacos is about to introduce โstreet cornโ โ โAn ear of corn, whether itโs cut off the cob or on the cob, that has Cotija cheese, butter, a layer of mayonnaise to coat the Cotija cheese, and chili powder. Itโs grilled roasted corn.โ
Hammer, who also caters events, features a potato loaded with ingredients, but he didnโt want to feature a menu loaded with items. โWe wanted a simpler menu. And things on the menu we wanted to do really, really well.โ
Texas Tacos is in the Crain Auto parking lot on MS-178 in Byhalia, Mississippi. For orders or catering, call (662) 420-9562

