20 Best Restaurants in Side Trips from Mexico City, Mexico

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We've compiled the best of the best in Side Trips from Mexico City - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Antojería Nacional

$ Fodor's Choice

Decorated with brightly colored papeles picados and tables with Talavera tile tops, friendly and traditional Antojería Nacional is a bit of a contrast with the many hip and modern spots in this neighborhood of Cholula close to the campus of Universidad de las Americas. The specialty of this hugely popular spot is traditional street food—tortas milanesas, chicken pelonas, chorizo gorditas, and more.

Calle 10 Oriente 210, Cholula, 72810, Mexico
222-934--4492
Known For
  • Refreshing, and spicy on request, michelada cocktails
  • Artfully prepared, boldly flavored renditions of classic Mexican snacks and street foods
  • Lively multigenerational mix of locals, students, and tourists
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Casa Manzano Restaurante

$$ Fodor's Choice

This sprawling, open-air restaurant in an affluent neighborhood northeast of downtown has a lush garden setting that makes it a perfect choice for a relaxing meal on a balmy day, of which there are many in Cuernavaca. The farm-to-table-inspired menu features a mix of classic and contemporary dishes, such as shrimp tacos with a mildly spicy sambal salsa, aguachile with tangy passionfruit sauce, or pasta with classic fettuccine carbonara.

Conejo en la Luna Teotihuacán

$$ Fodor's Choice

Although best known for the artisanal mezcals produced by its widely known and well-regarded Conejo en La Luna label, this bustling restaurant with a long, covered patio is a great option for grabbing a meal before or after your time visiting the adjacent pyramids. It's one of the area's better breakfast options, with a nice range of classic Mexican egg and chilaquiles dishes, and later in the day you can enjoy hearty fare like lamb barbecue (on weekends only), escamoles (ant larvae) sauteed in herb butter, and tacos filled with cecina (locally produced cured beef). It's open until 6 on weekdays and 7 on weekends, making a potential early-dinner option after exploring the ruins. There's a second location in CDMX's Condesa neighborhood.

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Moyuelo

$$ Fodor's Choice

This eatery does a welcome, contemporary take on the cemita, Puebla's version of the classic Mexican torta sandwich. The smoked brisket comes with a plantain puree and flavorful pepper sauce while the chilaquiles are garnished with watercress in avocado oil. The usually basic milanesa (breaded pork loin) has a Parmesan-garlic breading and artisanal cheese from the nearby town of Chipilo. Terrific soups and salads round out the menu. The stylish decor and hip crowd is a rarity in conservative Puebla.

Av. 7 Poniente 312, Puebla, 72160, Mexico
222-232–4270
Known For
  • Hip, stylish vibe
  • Inventive appetizers like beef tongue carpaccio with coriander seeds
  • Creative cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.

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Mural de los Poblanos

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Among the city's countless restaurants specializing in Pueblo-style mole sauces, this relaxing spot set in a gracious galleried building with wood-beam ceilings, soaring arches, and tile floors is one of the finest. The sampler plate with chicken or cheese enchiladas smothered under three different kinds of mole sauce are a delicious way to learn about the differences in preparation of these complex sauces. Other beloved dishes like Tacos árabes with shaved lamb and albóndigas (meatballs) with a slightly spicy jalapeño sauce are executed perfectly here. The friendly staff can help explain the differences among the many kinds of mole sauces offered. 

San Pedro Tortas and Cemitas

$ Fodor's Choice

Across the street from the dramatic spires of Parroquia de San Andrés Cholula, this simple sandwich shop serves delicious versions of classic tortas as well as Puebla's beloved version of these hearty sandwiches, the cemita. Try it with chicken milanesa (with thinly pounded and breaded chicken) or local sausage with all the fixings, including cheese, avocado, jalapeños, and chipotles in adobado sauce.

Tía Calla

$ Fodor's Choice

Be prepared to wait for a table, especially on weekend evenings, at this hugely popular no-nonsense restaurant just off Plaza Borda that's famous for pozole. There are three options---green (available only on Thursday and Saturday), red (served only on Thursday), and white, the classic version that's on the menu daily. These rich and hearty soups, especially if you order a large portion, are quite filling, but if you aren't completely full, save room for an order of queso fundido or chicken tostadas.

Axitla

$$

This smart establishment near the town's mountains is surrounded by ponds and bridges. Among the delicious concoctions are pork chops with a mango-pineapple salsa and grilled octopus in a rich garlic sauce. You can dine in the pink, high-ceiling dining room overlooking the trees and river or alfresco on a beautiful brick terrace with views of the mountains.

Av. del Tepozteco, Tepoztlán, 62520, Mexico
739-395–0519
Known For
  • Live music many afternoons and evenings
  • Lushly landscaped outdoor seating
  • Beef, chicken, and seafood with rich traditional sauces
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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Casa Hidalgo

$$$

The marvelous view of the Palacio de Cortés is a major draw of this rambling restaurant with sprawling patios, leafy plants, and traditional artwork. The menu mixes Mexican and international foods; you might try the breaded veal stuffed with Serrano ham and manchego cheese, the trout stuffed with shrimp and roasted red peppers, or the tacos filled with grilled cactus.

Calle Hidalgo 6, Cuernavaca, 62000, Mexico
777-312--2749
Known For
  • Great views of Plaza de Armas and Palacio de Cortés
  • Live jazz on weekends
  • Excellent breakfasts

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El Ciruelo

$$$

Tables at this casually stylish restaurant are centered on a partially open patio with grand views of the mountains. The varied menu includes contemporary takes on regional Mexican fare, including a fragrant soup of corn, zucchini, squash blossoms, and huitlacoche; spaghetti with duck ragu; and salmon cooked over a charcoal fire and served with cauliflower puree and grilled asparagus.

Evoka

$$

One of the best restaurants in Mexico is in the sleepy town of Apizaco, in Tlaxcala state, a quick 20 km (12 miles) from the capital city of Tlaxcala. Opened in 2011, Evoka shows that Mexico's gastronomic revolution, which celebrates local ingredients, small producers, and traditional techniques, isn't limited to the big cities. With a simply elegant dining room, impeccable service, and a clientele largely consisting of in-the-know foodies from Puebla and Mexico City, Evoka could be the hottest restaurant anywhere, but could only exist in the Valle de Tlaxcala, from where its ingredients, and chef-owner Francisco Molina, come. The tasting menu is a must, where you might find aged rib eye in a mole sauce of huitlacoche (corn fungus) and amaranth with plantain dumplings, or a salad of tiny wild tomatoes and local cheese with powdered, root-beer-like hoja santa herb shaken table-side over the top.

Calle 2 de Abril 1022, Apizaco, Mexico
241-113–1949
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Fonda del Convento

$

In a low stone building on a tree-lined street, this unassuming café is overlooked by most travelers but is always packed with locals. The series of small dining rooms means it won't be hard to find a quiet table. The delicious traditional fare includes such dishes as chicken broth with creamy avocados and strips of cactus flambéed with bits of onion and chilies. Ask your waiter if there's caldo de habas, a bean soup with strips of cactus; it's something of a local specialty, and is quite tasty. Open until 8 pm, and quiet after 6, it's best for breakfast and lunch.

Calz. de San Francisco 1, Tlaxcala, 90500, Mexico
246-462–5419
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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La Gruta

$$$

Easily the most famous---though also touristy---dining option in the area, this hulking restaurant dates to 1906 and is set within an immense cave with dramatic rock ceilings. The traditional Mexican fare served here is consistently good, including hand-made corn quesadillas filled with seasonal ingredients, tortilla soup, albóndigas (meatballs) in a tomato-chipotle stew, and traditional barbecue. There's a pretty good kids' menu, too. Reservations aren't required, but they're a good idea on weekends and holidays. Although open every day of the year, La Gruta closes at 7 nightly.

Circuito Arqueologico, Av. del Puente S/N, 55820, Mexico
55-5191--9799
Known For
  • Lots tour groups and big crowds
  • Truly unique and Instagram-worthy setting
  • Short walk from Pirámide del Sol

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La Michoacana

$

You can gaze out over the lake and the town's red rooftops at the Michoacana, which is just a short walk from the zócalo. It's one of the town's best sources of regional fare and a great place for a family meal—and open from 9 am to 11 pm 365 days a year. You can't go wrong here—all the typical Mexican plates you'll recognize are available, but the house specialties include a terrific chamorro (lamb shank) and pre-Hispanic dishes that you won't find everywhere else, such as chapulines con cebolla y chili de arbol (toasted grasshoppers with onion and a spicy red chili sauce), and escamoles a la mantequilla (ant eggs lightly fried in butter).

Los Colorines

$$

Hung with colorful papeles picados (paper cutouts), this family-friendly restaurant with bright pink walls and regional folk art serves great soups (try the creamy fava bean or earthy lentil varieties), sopes topped with grilled chicken or cecina, and mole enchiladas made in an open kitchen. A specialty is the huauzontles (a broccoli-like vegetable you scrape from the stalk with your teeth). 

Tepozteco 13, Tepoztlán, 62525, Mexico
739-395–0198
Known For
  • Welcoming, unpretentious vibe
  • Machaca (seasoned, shredded dried beef) with eggs at breakfast
  • Margaritas and mezcal cocktails

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Los Virreyes

$$
The best seats at this sprawling, multilevel restaurant in the heart of Tepotzotlán's historic center are on the upstairs terrace and take in sweeping views of Templo de San Francisco Javier and the surrounding mountains—it's especially dramatic and romantic at sunset. The kitchen turns out reliably good, quite traditional Mexican and European fare from rib-eye steaks to mole poblano, but the big draw here is the view.
Plaza Virreinal 32, 54605, Mexico
55-5876–0235
Known For
  • Terrace views of Tepotzotlán's historic center
  • Hearty steaks and seafood grills
  • Escamoles (ant larvae) and gusanos de maguey (mezcal worms)

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Mi Ciudad

$$

This longtime favorite is the place for a tasty traditional meal. The interior decoration is typical Puebla—complete with tile floors, colorful murals, and a newspaper stand inside—as is the menu. The mole is as traditional as it comes, and the sopa poblana (a cream soup with poblano chilies, mushrooms, and corn) is exceptional. This is also a great place to enjoy grilled meat.

Av. Juárez 2507, Puebla, 72160, Mexico
222-231–5326
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No dinner Sun.

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Restaurante El Adobe

$$

This intimate spot has excellent food and hanging lamps and masks. You'll find a fairly typical selection of meat, poultry, and seafood dishes, including salmon with grilled onions and spicy chile de árbol sauce and steak with a savory mustard sauce, but the favorites are garlic-and-shrimp soup and the queso al cilantro, fried cheese on a bed of potato skins, covered with salsa verde.

Restaurante Peña Los Jarritos

$

This cavelike restaurant might only be open on Friday and Saturday, but it has unforgettable regional cuisine and a fun atmosphere with live music. Even simple items like the salsas and frijoles (black beans) are intensely flavored. There's an exquisite sopa de setas (soup of oyster mushrooms), or you could try the signature dish, enchiladas de picadillo con mole de olla (ground beef and raisin enchiladas with a savory local mole).

Adolfo López Mateos 7, Cuetzalan, 73560, Mexico
233-331–0558
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.–Thurs.

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Restaurante Yoloxochitl

$

Just above the market, with a view of the main plaza, this plant-filled restaurant makes delicious regional cuisine served by a friendly staff. The envueltos de mole (chicken-filled tortillas covered in a thick, smoky mole sauce) are an excellent choice if you want to take a break from walking around the market and enjoy a snack. There is often live traditional music at lunchtime.