18 Best Restaurants in Condesa, Mexico City

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

Mendl Delicatessen

$$ | La Condesa Fodor's Choice

Fans of authentic Jewish deli fare flock to this rather chic modern deli with sidewalk seating facing toward gracious Parque México. You'll find all the classics here, prepared with care, including potato latkes with apple compote, Reuben sandwiches, smoked whitefish salad, cured lox bagels, and slow-cooker brisket.

Molino El Pujol

$ | La Condesa Fodor's Choice

Legendary chef and Enrique Olvera, a devoted practitioner of making tortillas according to tradition and with only the highest-quality ingredients, opened this hole-in-wall shop and café, in part to expand his world-famous Polanco restaurant to the masses. The short menu is basically an ode to maíz, featuring elote and esquites, enmoladas (chicken mole enchiladas), avocado-hoja santa tacos, chilaquiles con mole, huitlacoche tamales, and other perfectly prepared botanas (for breakfast and lunch). You can even sip a glass of atole (a thick and warm masa-based beverage with Mesoamerican roots). Although this is undoubtedly the least expensive way to sample the cuisine of Enrique Pujol, there's often a wait—arrive early if possible.

General Benjamín Hill 146, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-5271–3515
Known For
  • House-made tortillas, salsas, and mole to go
  • Tamales with creative fillings
  • Cheerful outdoor seating area
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Ojo de Agua

$$ | La Condesa Fodor's Choice
This fast-expanding Mexican chain of health food café-markets has one of its busiest but prettiest locations in Condesa, overlooking one of Avenida Amsterdam's most photographed fountains. Choose from an extensive array of combination juices and smoothies, plus excellent, if somewhat pricey, salads and sandwiches, like roasted turkey with manchego and ginger sauce. There's seating outside, and most days the big windows are open so that nearly every table soaks up the exterior's green vibe. You could also order everything to go and dine while seated on one of the cement benches around the tree-shaded fountain.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Qūentin Café

$ | La Condesa Fodor's Choice

With a more charming setting than the original location in Roma, this buzzy third-wave coffeehouse is set along leafy Avendia Amsterdam and offers comfy seating in its plant-filled interior and on the sidewalk. The baristas are knowledgeable and professional, whether crafting a carajillo (a refreshing cocktail with iced espresso and Licor 43, a fragrant herbal liqueur), a cascara (tea brewed with coffee cherries), or a single-origin pour-over.

Av. Amsterdam 67A, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-7312–6188
Known For
  • Carefully sourced small-batch coffees from around the world
  • Artisanal chocolates and pastries
  • Coffee-based cocktails

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Tacos Hola

$ | La Condesa Fodor's Choice

This simple, tiny taqueria is a favorite standby for tacos guisados, a completely addictive style with stewed and richly seasoned braised meats like higado (beef liver topped with avocado), chicken mole, and a tuna-sardine blend. Hola stands out from the pack for its variety of vegetarian and vegan options, including squash, Swiss chard, nopales, and quelites, a distinctive Mexican herb that's commonly used in soups and stews.

Cafe Escandon

$$ | La Condesa

Part cute vintage store (with clothing, housewares, jewelry, and antique toys) and part café, this homey spot in Escandón is the sort of place you want to linger. The all-day breakfast menu features a number of hearty dishes, including the house dish: poached eggs over ham, bacon, and roast beef with hollandaise sauce; plus, there's a good selection of pastas, sandwiches, and other tasty fare available later in the day. It's also a nice stop for coffee and dessert.

Chiquitito Café

$ | La Condesa

For a refreshing caffeine pick-me-up in the southern reaches of Condesa, pop into this cute and cozy third-wave espresso bar that serves delicious breakfasts and sandwiches, too. Students and freelancers work away on their laptops in the triangular white-brick interior space, while you're more likely to spy friends gabbing at the sidewalk tables. There are a couple of additional locations around town.

Calle Alfonso Reyes 232, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-5211–6123
Known For
  • Tasty baguette and bagel sandwiches
  • Cakes and pastries
  • Artisanal coffee drinks
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Comal Oculto

$ | San Miguel Chapultepec

Tuck into plates of exquisitely prepared, traditional Mexican snacks like tlacoyos, sopes, flautas, and quesadillas with rich sauces and authentic, carefully curated ingredients. Tortillas are hand-made on the tiny restaurant's comal, and there's lovely outdoor seating in a sidewalk space decorated with vertical wooden slats and pretty plants. 

Calle General Gómez Pedraza 37, Mexico City, 11850, Mexico
55-8988--2557
Known For
  • Simple, beautifully designed space
  • Interesting ingredients like braised lamb, wild mushrooms, and pork confit
  • Fresh fruit aguas
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No dinner

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Deli Lou

$ | San Miguel Chapultepec

A cheerful bakery-café near San Miguel Chapultepec's art galleries, Deli Lou serves crusty-baguette sandwiches with distinctive toppings (turkey with olives, goat cheese, Camembert, jamón serrano, and the like), plus freshly baked cakes, brownies, and cookies. There's also a small selection of jams, wines, artisanal juices and teas, and other gourmet goodies, plus a variety of espresso drinks.

Calle Gobernador Gregorio V. Gelati 78, Mexico City, 11850, Mexico
55-4444–6334
Known For
  • Satisfying salads with the same ingredient options as the outstanding baguettes
  • Dark-chocolate brownies
  • Picnic supplies for visiting nearby Bosque de Chapultepec
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner Sat.

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El Farolito

$ | La Condesa

A neighborhood favorite since 1962, this spacious taqueria with a striking black awning and red-and-white color scheme offers up hefty platters of delicious tacos and other classics. Try the costras crujientes, in which the meat is wrapped in fried cheese before being wrapped in a tortilla, or any of the alambres al carbón with bacon, onions, chile poblano, and any number of fillings.

Cerradas Altata 19, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-5515–2380
Known For
  • Open hours well past midnight most evenings
  • Horchata, jamaica, tamarindo, and other juices
  • Churros with cajeta, chocolate, and condensed milk

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El Tizoncito

$ | La Condesa
You shouldn't leave this sprawling, casual place without trying one the tacos al pastor, which come in a variety of styles—long-running El Tizoncito claims to have invented the now iconic dish. This festive spot also serves excellent pozole, tacos choriquesos (grilled chorizo slathered in melted mozzarella), marinated huesitos (ribs) with guacamole, and plenty of other street-food-style options. You'll find several additional branches around the city.
Av. Tamaulipas 122, Mexico City, 06140, Mexico
55-5286–7321
Known For
  • Famous tacos al pastor
  • Open hours until well after midnight
  • Elote (corn) cake for dessert

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Enhorabuena Café

$$ | La Condesa

From morning through early evening, this casual, contemporary café that opens to a quiet, tree-lined street near Parque España welcomes a mix of regulars and tourists with bountiful plates of Mexican and international breakfast dishes, soups, salads, and sandwiches. The menu tends toward healthy and fresh, with mango-granola bowls, toasted ham-and-gruyere brioche sandwiches, green juices, and fine teas and lattes.

Calle Atlixco 13, Mexico City, 06700, Mexico
55-9155–6654
Known For
  • Chilaquiles verdes
  • House-made sodas, juices, and sipping chocolates
  • Relaxing ambience with outdoor seating that's perfect for work or socializing
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Frëims

$$ | La Condesa

Although there's a small indoor dining room, the big draw here is the expansive patio with a retractable glass roof, tall ivy-covered walls, and tables of varying sizes. It's a great place to relax or work on your laptop for a few hours, and there are enough tasty pressed-sandwich (try the Croque Madame), salad, and soup options to make a meal of it. Later in the day, the drinks of choice shift from espresso-related to beer, wine, and cocktails.

Amsterdam 62B, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-9130–8449
Known For
  • Late-night dining
  • Waffles and waffle sandwiches
  • Well-crafted coffee drinks
Restaurant Details
No dinner Mon. and Tues.

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La Buena Birria MX

$ | La Condesa

This unassuming spot beside a gas station near the border of Condesa and Roma has developed a loyal following for its hearty and affordable birrias (meat stews). The signature dish is the birriamen, basically a Mexican-Japanese fusion of flavor packed with tender pork carnitas, onions, cilantro, and spices, but other delicious options include quesabirria tacos oozing with melted cheese, and the restaurant's spin on chilaquiles, birraquiles.

La Guerrerense

$$ | La Condesa

Fans of Baja-style seafood flock to this bustling counter inside the Parián Condesa food hall for fresh, delicious crab tostadas, caracol (sea snail) ceviche, oysters and clams on the half shell, and shrimp and octopus cocktails. Enjoy your food at one of the casual tables, imagining you're at the beach in Ensenada, where the original La Guerrerense (which was much lauded by Anthony Bourdain) is located.

Av. Nuevo León 107, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-8376--5332
Known For
  • Raw shellfish, ceviches, and aguachiles
  • Seafood tacos
  • Variety of delicious house-made salsas
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Malcriado Café

$$ | La Condesa

Open from 8 in the morning until late every evening (it closes a little earlier on Sunday night), this unpretentiously stylish café with a covered sidewalk terrace fits the bill for a wide range of occasions. Early in the day, it's a favorite for well-crafted espresso drinks, shakshuka, and French toast, but as the day continues, patrons drop by for smoked-trout sandwiches, French onion soup, and to share a bottle of from the short but well-chosen wine list. Service can be on the leisurely—though still friendly—side, but for many who favor this spot, that's the point.

Saint

$ | La Condesa

Extraordinarily delicious baked goods and savory breads are dispensed at this cute French-style bakery in the south end of Condesa. Highlights include rich pain au chocolate, doughnuts bursting with strawberry jam, creamy flan, and crunchy cinnamon palmiers. Among the savory options, the flaky sourdough bread is a favorite, but there's also first-rate rye bread and baguettes.

General Benjamín Hill 146--1, Mexico City, 06170, Mexico
55-8848--1224
Known For
  • Well-made espresso drinks
  • Some of the best sourdough bread in the city
  • Chewy chocolate chip cookies

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Taquería El Greco

$ | La Condesa

At this no-frills, old-fashioned take-out taqueria, shaved meat rotates enticingly on a spit before an open flame, practically daring you not to try a plate of the Árabe-style (wrapped in grilled pita bread) tacos al pastor, plus tortas, grilled meats, and a long menu of other short-order snacks. It's a great, cheap Condesa option when you're hungry and on the run.

Av. Michoacán 54, Mexico City, 06100, Mexico
55-3934–0040
Known For
  • Handy location near both Parque México and Parque España
  • Flan and key lime pie
  • Tacos Árabes
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun

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