4 Best Restaurants in Centro Histórico, Mexico City

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

Café de Tacuba

$$$ | Centro Histórico Fodor's Choice

An essential, if touristy, breakfast, lunch, dinner, or snack stop downtown, this Mexican classic opened in 1912 in a section of an old convent. At the entrance to the main dining room are huge 18th-century oil paintings depicting the invention of mole poblano, a complex sauce featuring a variety of chiles and chocolate that was created by the nuns in the Santa Rosa Convent in Puebla. A student group dressed in medieval capes and hats usually serenades diners Wednesday through Sunday afternoon.

Limosneros

$$$ | Centro Histórico Fodor's Choice
With its dramatic volcanic-stone walls and sisal-rope ceiling, this upscale restaurant offers adventurously modern reinterpretations of pre-Hispanic Mexican cuisine. Start your meal with made-to-order tableside salsa (it's best with chapulines) and a sampling of several smaller dishes—like rabbit carnitas and beef tongue tamales—before graduating to a bigger plate of crawfish with a Yucatán relleno negro stew or octopus grilled with black onions, peas, and cherry tomatoes.
Ignacio Allende 3, Mexico City, 06010, Mexico
55-5521–5576
Known For
  • Interesting cocktails using Mexican spirits
  • Emphasis on authentically indigenous Mexican ingredients
  • Creative taco menu de dégustation
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Danubio

$$$ | Centro Histórico
Prior to opening as a Basque-style seafood restaurant in the mid-1930s, Danubio was, as its name suggests, a German bar. Today, the place veritably reeks of old-world charm, with its formal service, pressed table linens, and a bar of whole fish for diners to choose from. Still popular with politicians, the menu features crawfish, baby eels imported from northern Spain, and power lunch specials like lobster thermidor imported from a bygone era.
Uruguay 3, Mexico City, 06000, Mexico
55-5512–0912
Known For
  • Long history of traditional fine dining
  • Seafood power lunches
  • Business friendly clientele

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Recommended Fodor's Video

La Casa de las Sirenas

$$$ | Centro Histórico

The oldest portions of this 16th-century mansion were built using stones torn down from the Templo Mayor, which lies just feet away. At lunchtime, you may want to reserve a table on the atmospheric second-floor terrace overlooking the Zócalo, cathedral, and national palace, or simply stop at the ground floor patio for a drink in the shade of the towering cathedral across the street. The menu is a mishmash of international (Cornish game hen) and Mexican (cilantro soup).

República de Guatemala 32, Mexico City, 06000, Mexico
55-5704–3273
Known For
  • Nice craft beer and mezcal selection
  • Mix of international and Mexican cuisine
  • Outdoor seating
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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