8 Best Restaurants in Ensenada, Los Cabos and the Baja Peninsula

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We've compiled the best of the best in Ensenada - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Madre

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Tucked away on a quiet street, this Ensenada restaurant is located in an 80-year-old house whose cozy dining room gives a glimpse of the home-turned-restaurant with local artwork and adobe archways piled high with books. Chef Miguel Bahena and Carolina Verdugo have created an innovative Baja fresh menu showcasing oysters with chili butter, squid ink risotto, confit duck with guava mole, and bay scallops with barley. Handmade tortillas are made Sanora style, slightly thicker to soak in the flavors. Weekend brunch draws a crowd, as does the tasting menu available in five- or seven-course pairings.

Muelle 3

$ Fodor's Choice

This marina-front restaurant is a hole in the wall that will blow your mind, starting with the six-course menu. The small patio gives a front-row seat to the boardwalk action where locals stroll, sailboats bob, and seagulls squawk at the day’s catch. Reservations are highly recommended, especially since there are just four tables inside. Octopus sashimi, yellowtail tuna, and “Marisquite” (a spin on shrimp cocktail with buttery corn broth) are all as fresh as it gets. The guava mousse looks like whipped cream but tastes like heaven. Note that this cozy eatery on the boardwalk closes at 6:30 pm.

Teniente Azueta 187-B, Ensenada, 22800, Mexico
646-174–0318
Known For
  • Cozy atmosphere
  • Great prices
  • Fresh-as-can-be house ceviche
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations essential

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AILEHPO

$$$

Despite the rebrand---a restaurant on the other side of the world forced them to change their name (it's Ophelia backward)---you'll find this garden escape is still a favorite among the Ensenada foodie crowd. Here a blending of European, American, and Asian cuisines and a handful of dependable flavors and ingredients---fresh fish, tomatoes, chilies, and cilantro---mix with unexpected ingredients like shiitake mushrooms, pork, and ginger glazes. Top sellers include the seared bluefin tuna, the fried wontons, and the grilled pork chops with a balsamic glaze. Daily specials usually come with regional vegetables and rosemary potatoes. A good stop on the way home after a long day touring Valle de Guadalupe's wineries, this spot highlights many of the region's wines.

Carretera Tijuana–Ensenada, Km 103, Ensenada, 22800, Mexico
646-175–8365
Known For
  • Portobello tacos and shrimp ceviche
  • Zen vibe in garden patio
  • Fresh yellowfin tuna
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Recommended Fodor's Video

El Rey Sol

$$$

From its chateaubriand bouquetière to the savory chicken cooked in prune sauce, this classy French restaurant has been family-owned since 1947. Louis XIV–style furnishings and an attentive staff make it both comfortable and elegant. In addition, the restaurant pays tribute to its heritage with family photographs that line the hallways, starting with a portrait of founder Doña Pepita. As the oldest French restaurant in Mexico, it's also considered one of the top of the pack with more than 10 Five Diamond Awards. Impressive preparations of Caesar salad, crepes Suzette, and café flambé create a show at your table. For larger parties, request one of the three private rooms modeled after Paris and the Palace of Versailles. The sidewalk tables are a perfect place to dine and people-watch. The small café in the front sells pastries that are made on the premises.

Av. López Mateos 1000, Ensenada, 22800, Mexico
646-178–1733
Known For
  • French pastries
  • Table-side Caesar salad
  • First-rate service

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Humo & Sal

$$

A trendy offspring of neighboring Sano’s Steakhouse, “Smoke and Salt” focuses on local seafood with a twist; guests of the casual hot spot can also order from the more formal steak house next door. The bar shakes up tequila and mezcal from small-batch labels and all their wines come from Mexico. The oysters with beet and ginger mignonette whet your appetite for tuna carpaccio bathed in oil and lime or agua-chili shrimp on crispy blue-corn tostadas. Salsas and garnishes, such as the watermelon radishes and lemon-serrano vinaigrette, are punchy and fresh atop tuna belly tacos.

Carretera Tijuana–Ensenada, Km 108, Ensenada, 22860, Mexico
646-174–4061
Known For
  • Fresh oysters
  • Tamarind-mezcal margarita
  • Blue-corn tortillas piled with shrimp and scallops

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La Guerrerense

$

This food-cart stall off Ensenada's bustling Calle Primera is the place where locals get a solid helping of the region's seafood. Established in 1960, La Guerrerense has been featured on international shows like Anthony Bourdain's No Reservations. Popularity has led to the opening of a neighboring restaurant by the same name, but it's the original cart that keeps crowds ogling a small army of cooks cracking clams, shucking oysters, and piling the freshest fish onto tostadas. After you choose from the day's catch—shrimp, uni, clams, tuna, cod, lobster, octopus—stand back and wait while your dish is prepared. Once it's ready, make your way through the throng of hungry patrons, and dress your plate from the selection of bottled salsas and condiments on display, which are also for sale. Most-loved is the salsa made with toasted peanuts, oil, garlic, and fresh chilies. Owned by Sabina and Luis Eduardo Oviedo, the spot is a mainstay on the Ensenada food scene, and not to be missed.

Calle Primera at Alvarado, Ensenada, 22800, Mexico
646-206–0445
Known For
  • World's best tostadas
  • Fresh ceviche with mango
  • Homemade salsas
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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Manzanilla

$$$

Two of the most exciting chef-owners in Baja, Benito Molina and Solange Muris, have taken a truly modern approach to Mexican cuisine at Manzanilla, integrating the freshest catches from the local waters—oysters, mussels, abalone, and clams, for instance—and using ingredients like ginger, smoked chilies, fresh herbs, and huitlacoche (corn truffle). The ahi with ginger raspberry vinaigrette melts in your mouth, and the white clam with Gorgonzola is delicious. A local ranch sources their beef, grilled and served on a cutting board with warm tortillas. Next to the port, this hip joint is popular for its pleasant atmosphere and eclectic style of concrete floors and an intricately carved wooden bar from the 1930s brought over from Los Angeles.

Teniente Azueta 139, Ensenada, 22800, Mexico
646-175–7073
Known For
  • Fresh Baja seafood and steak
  • Local beer and wines
  • Grilled quail with wild mushrooms
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Sano's Steak House

$$$

This elegant restaurant, with its white linens, open trusses, and soft candlelight is the best steak house in Baja California. Prepared on mesquite wood, the steak is divine and tender, almost as if it's been marinated in butter (though the chef swears salt and a little love are the secret). Aged for 21 days, the rib eye is the star of the show—juicy, flavorful, and served with a side of asparagus and baked potato. Preempt the experience with local oysters, a Baja beer tasting, and the romaine wedge doused in blue cheese. They also serve homemade pastas, grilled lamb, and hamburgers. The wine list extensive. The chocolate truffle cake will leave you asking, “Did I really just eat that whole thing?”

Carretera Tijuana–Ensenada, Km 108, Ensenada, 22880, Mexico
646-174–4061
Known For
  • Aged rib eye
  • Dishes cooked to perfection
  • Old-school steak house vibe

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