ABC News February 17, 2021

Hundreds of tacos delivered to seniors amid brutal winter storm

WATCH: Houston volunteers serve breakfast to seniors in need

Taco Tuesday came Wednesday for hundreds of Houston-area seniors who have been suffering in the cold following this week's winter storm.

A group of volunteers from the nonprofit group Texas Relief Warriors used a donation of 6,000 eggs to cook 700 breakfast tacos and distributed them Wednesday morning. Cara Adams, the group's founder, told ABC News she and volunteers scrambled to use the eggs overnight and were able to serve two senior centers in the area that lost power and hundreds of homebound seniors who requested help.

"We had our volunteers going door to door, going up stairs in the dark delivering tacos," Adams told ABC News. "[The seniors] were excited and hungry for hot food. They were so grateful."

MORE: Millions without power in Texas as dangerous winter weather continues

Adams said she received the offer for the eggs from a generous volunteer who posted about it on Facebook. The owners of Iguanas Ranas Cantina in Pearland offered their kitchen and volunteers began cooking early Wednesday morning, according to Adams.

Texas Relief Warriors
Derrick Pittman, Cara Adams, Zeke Presley and Ray Villarreal at the Houston Food Bank picking up food to go to the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston.

"We had materials to make tortillas and we’ve used up all of the eggs," she said. "We are working to get more."

Adams, who has worked on Gulf Coast hurricane-related relief efforts over the last four years, said the seniors who received the breakfast were overjoyed and humbled by the generosity. She added that her group had no shortage of people willing to get in the kitchen, drive delivery vehicles, or get on the phone to make the breakfast run possible.

Texas Relief Warriors
Texas Relief Warriors make 2,000 eggs to be donated for breakfast tacos.

"They were excited, they were ready to help," Adams said of the volunteers. "A lot of people in Houston have that giving spirit and help."

MORE: Historic winter storm in Texas

"This is much different from our hurricane relief," Adams said. "When we run in hurricane season it’s hot," she said and they don't have to contend with the ice the winter storm has brought. "The supplies are limited because the trucks aren't delivering," in the brutal winter weather, Adams explained.

Adams said there is still much more work to be done as millions of Texans remain without power and heat and the cold continues to hit the South.