12 Best Restaurants in San Rafael and Santa María la Ribera, Mexico City

Background Illustration for Restaurants

We've compiled the best of the best in San Rafael and Santa María la Ribera - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Alebrije

$$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's Choice

Located in a renovated garage, Alebrije is loaded with plants, couches, and tables, good for working or chatting during the day and an ideal date spot in the evening. String lights and antique fixtures provide warm-toned light, dancing off the exposed brick as you eat sandwiches and drink hot chocolate, wine, or beer. Art zines are for sale near the kitchen area.

Camino a Comala

$ | San Rafael Fodor's Choice

Just a block from the busy Avenida Ribera de San Cosme, this quiet and elegantly designed hideaway offers respite from the crowds of nearby Metro San Cosme. Decorated with antiques and smelling of freshly roasted coffee, it’s the kind of place where you can disappear for a quiet afternoon of reading or a nice meal alone or with a travel companion. There are two other Camino a Comala cafés in the city, but this one's the best.

Cantina Salón París

$$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's Choice
A large cantina with a sizeable lunch and dinner crowd, Salon París is an emblematic fixture of the neighborhood. A focused menu features Mexican bar food (think tortas, shrimp soup, and steaks) and varied liquor options (specifically Mexican beer, international rums, tequilas, and digestive liqueurs like Campari and Fernet). Roving musicians will play a song or two for a fee, and if not, the jukebox is always rolling with Mexican classics. There are many televisions, usually featuring soccer games from all over the world.
Jaime Torres Bodet 152, Mexico City, Mexico
55-5541–7319
Known For
  • Chamorro (braised pork shanks) on Thursday
  • Tlacoyos (traditional corn masa stuffed with beans or cheese, cooked on a grill, topped with cheese and salsa)
  • Live music and soccer games on the television

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

El Guapo Grill

$$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's Choice
Mexico City is arguably the capital of all Latin America, and for that reason you’ll see plenty of restaurants from immigrants of the region, especially South America. El Guapo Grill is Argentine to the max, so expect lots of meat and red wine. A little higher end than other eateries in the area, it has a romantic vibe, dark lighting with wooden tables, and just two televisions (for watching soccer, of course). Murals of famous Argentines (including Maradona) line the walls and tango music plays lightly in the background. It’s a great place to sit over a steak and talk, as the Argentines so love to do.
Calle Eligio Ancona 207, Mexico City, Mexico
55-6718–7771
Known For
  • Slightly upscale Argentine steak house
  • Delicious choripan (chorizo sandwich)
  • Authentic jugo de carne
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

Something incorrect in this review?

Esquina Barragán

$$ | San Rafael Fodor's Choice

Black-and-white tiles give this bright space an impeccably clean and welcoming vibe. With its own house mezcal, wines, and beers, it can also be a place to gather for a drink or grab a light dinner. You can sit at the long wood bars facing either the barista zone or the street and the lovely Jardín de Arte, which separates San Rafael from the Colonia Cuautémoc.

Estanquillo El 32

$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's Choice
This is a place where the neighborhood elders gather during the day to eat their tamales and drink their coffee, but where you’ll find mostly young, artist types in the evenings. With a wide variety of Mexican artisanal beers and an impressive stock of unique mezcals as well as Mexican coffee, the space is open to the street, like a former garage, and has a couple very well-behaved house dogs keeping everything in check. Books and zines are available to peruse as you enjoy your meal, which ranges from breakfast to dinner. A patio space full of plants adds to the relaxed ambience.

La Oveja Negra

$$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's Choice

Busy and stylish, this is a popular classic in the Santa María la Ribera neighborhood, located in an older building that has retained its original high ceilings and tile work. Known for having slightly higher prices than usual for the area, it’s also recognized for excellent service, taste, and variety of traditional Mexican dishes, but the star is the barbacoa (slow-roasted sheep meat) and pulque.

Calle Sabino 225, Mexico City, Mexico
55-5643–4781
Known For
  • Plato oveja (goat cheese, chorizo, and chicharrón)
  • Waits on weekends
  • Traditional Mexican cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Thurs.

Something incorrect in this review?

María Ciento 38

$ | Santa María la Ribera Fodor's Choice
Romantic and tucked away, María Ciento 38 is perhaps the most upscale eatery in the neighborhood. The authentic Sicilian cuisine is homemade and prepared fresh daily, which means the limited seats are in high demand and reservations are recommended. Save room for the gelato.

Panadería 220

$ | San Rafael Fodor's Choice
Designed as a walk-up and take-out café, this locale is adored for its divine pastries. Despite its small space, the number of delicious beverages and baked goods they prepare is as impressive as they are delicious. It's really just a small nook, with a wooden countertop and a white tiled wall separating the counter from the kitchen. With this very limited seating, it’s best to take your order to go as you meander this quiet street of San Rafael.

Tacos El Güero

$ | San Rafael Fodor's Choice

Although its name is barely visible on the sun-faded awnings, this neighborhood taquería is busy on most nights. It’s a true local’s spot and its bright lights are visible from the street; you’ll know it from the number of people mostly patiently waiting to place their orders (food is available to go as well).

Manuel María Contreras 59, Mexico City, Mexico
Known For
  • Excellent al pastor tacos
  • Busy crowds and long lines on weekends
  • Other Mexican favorites like suadero tortas and gringas

Something incorrect in this review?

Tencüi

$$ | San Rafael Fodor's Choice

One of the hottest restaurants in the city, this spot serves gourmet touches on Mexican classics with playful inventiveness and traditional ingredients. The base of all plates here, most of which are vegetarian, is mushrooms; even the drinks and the desserts have a fungi element to them. The cuisine is experimental, yet familiar, as mushrooms have an ancient culinary history in Mexico. 

Vendaval Cooperativa

$ | San Rafael Fodor's Choice

An anticapitalist communal space, bakery, and kitchen, this feminist cooperative has been serving handmade goods since 2017, in resistance to unhealthy working situations and overarching franchises without a soul. Their homemade breads use a unique fermentation process, and they also sell sweets, snacks, coffee, and tea. There’s a focus on a nonhierarchical environment, and they regularly promote the work of women and LGBTQ+ artists with book launches, concerts, and craft-making. Beautiful artisanal crafts are also sold here with a focus on fair trade.