Coincidentally, Victor and I just took a long weekend in Mexico City a couple weeks ago; I have been meaning to post on it, but got derailed and then got sick. You are staying in a fabulous location--easy to get to everything. We stayed abt a half-mile further up the same street, closer to Chapultec Park.
We loved our visit to Mexico City (first time) for many reasons, but chiefly the food. We did not have a bad meal, or bad service, for that matter. In the Zona Rosa (not far from your hotel), you should not miss Fonda El Refugio, which is a traditional Mexican place, been there for decades, and offers dishes from throughout Mexico. We went there our first night and did not order very adventurously, but very much enjoyed everything we tasted.
First full day, our concierge, sensing we liked more authentic stuff, sent us to an old diner-ish type place in the historic center, Cafe La Blanca. Zero atmosphere--well no, that's not accurate. It was fabulous atmosphere, in the way that Manny's has a fabulous atmosphere. Here we had chilaquiles for the first time. Now, these are different than the ones I have seen described on lthforum. They are not mixed with eggs. It's chips, sauce, cream, and magic, topped with shredded chicken. Amazing! After this, we had chilaquiles at every opportunity. Always a little different, and always delicious.
But never with eggs.
Spent the day around the historic center, mostly gazing at Diego Rivera murals. Amazing! And highly recommended.
Dinner, we tried Izote, in ritzy Polanco, which was good, but on the whole our most expensive and most forgettable meal. It is owned by a chef who returned to Mexico from the States, and features unusual twists on traditional dishes--basically, it's fusion. And I guess we felt like we didn't need to be in Mexico City to have fusion. Plenty of fusion in Chicago.
Next day (Saturday) we headed to the outlying neighborhood of Coyoacan to visit Frida Kahlo's house (the blue house, if you've seen the movie) and Trotsky's house. Both very much worth seeing. Ate at a Oaxacan cafe along the central square, Los Danzantes. Again, had chilaquiles. Fabulous. And Mexican hot chocolate. We became very very happy.
Then we headed over to San Angel for the Saturday Bazaar. You should not miss this if you are there on a Saturday and you want crafty souvenirs. Very high quality stuff. We had an afternoon pick-me-up at a restaurant in the same building as the bazaar. Appetizer assortment, guacamole. Yummy.
Breakfast, next day, El Cardinale. Now, due to schedule and so forth we didn't make it to the original, which is in the historic center and is probably the best place to go, but for our money, you can't go wrong with the one in the Sheraton opposite Alameda Park. On a Sunday morning, it was full of local folks (not just tourists), which tells you something. And the food was really really good. Victor had the eggs with ant eggs, being adventurous, which he ended up regretting just a bit (ant eggs were bigger than he expected--I guess Mexican ants are larger than ours). I had (again) the chilaquiles! Only regret was that I ordered them with steak, which greatly reduced the number of tortilla chips served (rather than shredded steak on top, analogous to the the typical shredded chicken, it was an actual steak, with chilaquiles on the side). Still, they were delicious. So was the hot chocolate.
Then off to the anthropology museum which was very worthwhile, and dinner was at the Yucatecan restaurant Los Almendros, in Polanco. Lovely atmosphere; really a beautiful place. And delicious food. We had the appetizer sampler AND the dinner sampler, so we got to have lots of tastes. Standouts were the relleno negro, and the pibil pork, and a chicken cutlet dish I can't remember the name of anymore.
Also, I have not harped on this because I am not much of a drinker, but Victor was thrilled with the tequila and the margaritas. These are typically not frozen, and served like shots, rather than like American-style cocktails. I am not a margarita fan, but I did like these margaritas. Everything absolutely fresh. They also do this thing where they serve a shot of tequila with a chaser of cocktail sauce, which Victor found intriguing (well, he found it more intriguing before I told him it was cocktail sauce).
In short, you can't go wrong foodwise in Mexico City, and--depending on your interests (art, shopping, lucha libre)--you are sure to find other things to enjoy there. Even before we left, we were thinking about ways to return, and also to visit other parts of Mexico, whose food and crafts intrigued us.
For timely and interesting information on visiting Mexico City and checking out its restaurants, do a search on the NY Times website; there was a "36 Hours in Mexico City" article a few weeks ago and within the past year or so, Mark Bittman did a restaurant roundup. Also, Rick Bayless had a piece in the Saveur 100 this year, naming Mexico City as something like "best food city in the world." He particularly cited a fresh food market, but unfortunately we did not get a chance to check it out.
Fonda El Refugio
Liverpool 166 Zona Rosa
Mexico City, MX 06600
Tels: 207 2732 525 8128
525 5352 Fax: 207 8802
Cafe La Blanca
5 de Mayo #40
Los Danzantes
Plaza Jardín Centenario no. 12 Col. Villa Coyoacan
C.P. 04000, México D.F.
Phone: 5658-6054 / 5658-6451.
Fax: 5554-2896
E-mail:
[email protected]
Website:
www.losdanzantes.com.mx
El Cardenal
(in the Sheraton Centro Historico)
Av. Juarez 70
Colonia Centro
Mexico City, D.F.
06010
Phone: +52 55 5518 6632 33
Los Almendros in Polanco
Campos Eliseos # 164
5531-6646 / 7307)