6 Best Restaurants in Greater Mexico City, Mexico City

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

Los Tolucos

$ | Greater Mexico City Fodor's Choice
Hungry diners come from all over the city to savor bowls of green pozole—a Guerrero specialty—at this casual, old-fashioned Mexican restaurant situated in working-class Algarin (by the Lázaro Cárdenas metro, a short way east of Roma Sur). Piled high with shredded chicken, chicharrón, avocado, and other savory ingredients, this is some of the best pozole around, and there's also a good selection of tacos.

Nico's

$$$ | Greater Mexico City Fodor's Choice

A must-visit for fans of traditional Mexican cuisine who think they've tasted it all, this barely adorned, simply elegant restaurant in a pleasant workaday neighborhood—a 20-minute Uber ride from Polanco—is the domain of chef Gerardo Vázquez Lugo (whose parents opened Nicos in 1957), a stickler for ingredients sourced from small producers and dishes that can seem nuevo but are all rooted in history. The sopa seca de natas—several crepes layered with cream, tomato, and poblano chiles—is a 19th-century recipe from a convent in Guadalajara, and the octopus stewed in its ink with pecans, almonds, and pine nuts is a generations-old recipe from Veracruz. 

Av. Cuitlahuac 3102, Mexico City, 02080, Mexico
55-5396–7090
Known For
  • Beef fillet with caramelized oranges and a Jamaica sauce
  • Extensive artisanal mezcal selection
  • Chiles en nogada (available only in September)
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.--Wed.

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Tetetlán

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Adjacent to a gorgeous 1947 Luis Barragán–designed house (Casa Pedegral), this dramatic space with plexiglass floors that reveal a volcanic-rock landscape beneath is a favorite destination of both foodies and architecture aficionados. The kitchen turns out fancy, organic fare from early morning until late at night, like gently scrambled eggs with escamoles (ant larvae) and salsa verde for breakfast, and artisan pizza or roasted octopus with squid ink, caramelized onions, and a pineapple puree at dinner. This is a great spot for lounging, with a bi-level library stocked with art and architecture books and a beautifully curated art and clothing boutique. Tours of Casa Pedegral can be arranged by appointment. If you're a fan of Barragán architecture, take a stroll around the neighborhood, especially along Avendia de los Fuentes, before or after your meal. You'll pass by a number of Barragán-designed or -influenced homes, mostly hidden behind walls, but these concrete-volcanic rock structures are interesting even just to look at.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Arroyo

$$$
Whether it's truly the largest restaurant in Mexico, as it boasts, this cavernous spectacle on the edge of Tlalpan Centro is undoubtedly enormous and renowned for big family-style platters of pit-cooked lamb barbacoa and other traditional Mexican fare (carnitas, cecina, chicken leg, etc). Opened in 1940, Arroyo is decorated with tiled walls, brick archways, murals, and overhead rows of colorful papales picados. Throughout the day on weekends, there's live music and dancing.

Michoacanissimo

$$ | Greater Mexico City

Renowned for birria, this unfussy restaurant popular with families and locals serves a few kinds of the spicy stew popular in western Mexico states like Michoacán, including surtida (goat and a mix of other meaty bits like ribs, tongue, skin, and such) and the less adventurous but still robustly flavorful maciza (with pork). Expect a crowd—and maybe a wait—on weekends, when there's also sometimes mariachi music. It's on the city's south side, about 1 mile from UNAM (it's a short Uber ride from Universidad metro).

Calle San Valentín 866, Mexico City, 04600, Mexico
55-5421–5576
Known For
  • Michoacán-style birria
  • Micheladas
  • Refreshing paleta (ice-cream bars)
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Restaurante Casa Club de Académico

$$ | Greater Mexico City

It's worth making your way south to Cuidad Universitaria to dine at this distinctive and generally untouristy venue inside the UNAM faculty club, with a terrace that overlooks beautiful gardens and volcanic rocks. Open to the public and especially enjoyable for a late afternoon lunch, the restaurant serves a diverse, affordable menu of globally inspired dishes, such as penne pasta with a puttanesca sauce, panela cheese enchiladas with mole verde, and roasted rosemary chicken with a Chardonnay reduction. A buffet is offered on weekends.

Av. Cd Universitaria 301, Mexico City, 04510, Mexico
55-6381--2691
Known For
  • Live music, cultural programs, and kids' activities on weekend afternoons
  • Lovely, peaceful setting
  • Creative cocktails and mocktails
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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