[Editor’s note 06/11/2026: this article contains photographs from a comped meal]
Downtown Tucson’s Penca has expanded its hours and offerings this summer, launching a new lunch menu and a revamped happy hour program called Hora Feliz.
Lunch Arrives at 50 E. Broadway
Penca’s new lunch menu covers a range of central Mexican staples, from lighter salads to heartier bowls and tacos. The Penca Bowl ($14) features poblano rice, black beans, corn, greens, avocado, toasted pepitas, pickled onions, and chipotle crema. Meanwhile, the Ensalada de Primavera ($16) brings together chopped butter lettuce, sugar snap peas, avocado, radish, mint, and a citrus vinaigrette.

For guests who prefer something more substantial, the Torta de Milanesa ($17) stacks a breaded ribeye steak with tomato, pickled onion, lettuce, and chipotle aioli on a house-made telera bread. Tacos ($7 each) include options like carne asada, guajalote (turkey), rajas y hongos, pescado, camaron, carnitas, and cabeza. All corn tortillas come made to order.

The lunch menu also carries a guacamole con salsas caseras ($16), a Pozole Blanco ($14), and chicharrones in two sizes ($7 small, $13 large). Several items carry vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free designations, reflecting the kitchen’s commitment to accommodating a range of diets. Guests can also add proteins like shrimp ($6), carne asada ($8), carnitas ($7), cabeza ($7), or hongos ($7) to any order.
The bar remains open during lunch, offering draft and bottled beers, tepache, and sangria alongside house-made non-alcoholic drinks like jamaica, prickly pear tea, horchata, limeade, and cola.
Hora Feliz Runs 3-5 p.m. Daily
Penca’s Hora Feliz program runs from 3-5 p.m. and centers on a simple offer: pick three items for $33. Guests choose from cocktails, wine, and bocadillos (small bites), each priced individually at $13.

The cocktail list includes the Mezcalita, Diablo, Jardinero, Tepache & Beer, Bourbon & Tepache, and Mosquito. Wine selections span a sauvignon blanc, cinsault, rosé, bubbles, and an orange wine.

On the bocadillos side, Penca offers 10 options. Tetelas (two per order) come filled with avocado crema, chipotle crema, queso, braised mushrooms, cilantro, and squash blossoms.

Oysters (four per order) arrive with lime, lemon, pickles, and garnishes.

Other bocadillos include guacamole and salsas caseras, pozole, quesadillas (three per order) with queso Oaxaca, epazote, escabeche, and salsa verde, and tacos (two per order) with a full range of fillings including rajas y hongos, guajolote, pescado, camaron, carnitas, cabeza, and carne asada.


Additionally, chicharrones, ceviche with lime-cured fish, red onion, cucumber, serrano, and avocado, and an ensalada mixta with butter lettuce, green and white onion, red cabbage, nopales, cilantro, corn, avocado crema, and lime round out the bocadillos menu.

The pick-three format gives guests flexibility to mix and match across all three categories. A diner could pair two cocktails with a bocadillo, or combine a glass of wine with two small plates.

A Downtown Tucson Institution Expands
Penca opened in 2013 under owner Patricia Schwabe, who drew from her mother’s Mexico City kitchen to shape the restaurant’s culinary identity. The restaurant sits in a renovated historic space on Broadway Boulevard, near the bustling heart of downtown. Over the years, it has built a reputation for agave-forward cocktails, seasonal menus, and an approach to central Mexican cuisine that sets it apart from most options in southern Arizona.
Visit Penca
Penca is located at 50 E. Broadway Blvd. in downtown Tucson. For hours, reservations, and menus, visit pencarestaurante.com or call (520) 203-7681. Follow Penca on Instagram.
Stay in the Tucson Foodie Loop
Weekly digest of new openings, events, and guides. No spam.
Article written by:

Jackie Tran
More about JackieJackie Tran is a Tucson-based food writer, photographer, culinary educator, and owner-chef of the now-closed food truck Tran’s Fats. Although he is best known locally for his work for Tucson Foodie, his work has also appeared in publications such as Bon Appétit, National Geographic, and the New York Times.
An adventurous foodie, he enjoys culinary experiences ranging from seasonal omakase to sloppily devouring green chili patty melts in his car afterhours. His favorite foods include aguachile, garlic noodles, and leftover fried chicken illuminated by the fridge light. His favorite drinks include morning micheladas, fireside imperial stouts, candle-lit negroni, and grassy mezcales.
Outside of food, he also loves playing musical instruments, karaoke, Tetris, Super Smash Bros. Melee, and petting Addie’s dog Spaghetti.
If you’d like to stalk him, visit his Instagram @jackie_tran_ or jackietran.com.















