9 Best Restaurants in Benito Juárez, Mexico City

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

Charcutería Hinojosa y Baguetería

$$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice

This charming, European-style charcuterie is one of few in the city. With a couple of outdoor seats and a bar where you can watch all the action, sandwiches are served on fluffy or crunchy baguettes and feature smoked cheeses and sausages. The friendly service is immediate and knowledgeable. Enjoy your sandwich with a Mexican craft beer or glass of wine.

Fonda Margarita

$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice

Everyone from postclubbing revelers to early morning workers to ardent foodies (the late Anthony Bourdain was a big fan) wait in line for a chance to feast on the hearty guisados served in this legendary breakfast joint. Come with a big appetite, and try a few specialties, such as refritos huevos (eggs whipped with refried beans), chilaquiles with salsa verde, and eggs stewed with longaniza sausage. Many of the best dishes sell out well before Fonda Margarita closes at 11:30 am, and there's usually a line by 8, so try to get here early.

Adolfo Prieto 1364B, Mexico City, 03100, Mexico
55-5559–6358
Known For
  • Stick-to-your-ribs breakfast fare
  • No-frills dining room with communal seating
  • Early closure at noon so get here early
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch or dinner

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Las Tlayudas

$$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice

Quick and reliably good, Las Tlayudas is a small sidewalk eatery specializing in Oaxacan cuisine. Come here for the tlayudas, of course—massive tortillas covered with beans, cheese, and meat. And don't miss a glass of mezcal or botana Oaxaqueña to wash down some chapulines (grasshoppers).

Recommended Fodor's Video

Los Chamorros de Tlacoquemécatl

$$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice
A bustling restaurant with no frills, but plenty of flavor, Los Chamorros is dark, hot, and popular. In business since 1974, the restaurant offers an array of Mexican specialties that take diners on a gastronomic voyage into Mexico’s countryside.
Calle Tlacoquemécatl 177, Mexico City, Mexico
55-5575–1235
Known For
  • Chamorro (juicy, butter-soft pork knuckle)
  • Huazontles (native herbs) battered and stuffed with cheese and doused in pasilla chile sauce
  • Hearty soups like sopa de haba (lima bean soup)
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Piloncillo y Cascabel

$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice
On a verdant corner in Narvarte, this neatly decorated space has plenty of room and a quickly rotating lunch crowd. Known for its lines down the block, diners come for an updated take on traditional Mexican cuisine and reasonable prices. The outdoor seating is nice in this leafy neighborhood.

Té Cuento

$ | Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice
Looking out on vibrant Parque Tlacoqueméctal, this cozy, bright teahouse and eatery is run by an Argentine journalist and specializes in dozens of teas and infusions. It also doubles as a cultural space in the evenings, offering workshops on topics such as film and literature.

La Divina Culpa

$ | Benito Juárez
This perpetually packed sidewalk diner offers the quintessential quick bite experience in Mexico City. Serving breakfast and lunch, it’s popular for the daily comida corrida (three-course meal); tables turn over fast.
Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas 514, Mexico City, Mexico
55-5605–3019
Known For
  • Mole enchiladas stuffed with chicken
  • Lunch deals including a three-course option
  • Exceedingly delicious pozole (a Mexican soup made with hominy and pork)
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Pan de Nube

$ | Benito Juárez
There is always something in the oven at Pan de Nube, a quiet nook near the lovely Parque Mariscal Sucre. Daily breakfast and brunch specials range from house-made granola and yogurt to quiches and Spanish tortillas. Get something to go and wander the streets of this lovely neighborhood, or if there’s space, enjoy a beverage and a lemon and lavender cookie in the bakery itself.

Village Café

$ | Benito Juárez

Facing Parque Hundido with a view of nothing but trees (okay, and some parked cars and an EcoBici stand), Village Café is a great place to unwind and take in a bit of tranquillity in one of the busier parts of the city. Massive windows open to the sidewalk, where diners take their time on sandwiches, coffees, and pastries. An antique magazine stand occupies the center of the café, providing ample reading material. The dark, green tub chairs are inviting, as is the shaded atmosphere.