Lima
Hugging the Pacific coast, Lima is a fascinating melting pot of indigenous ancestry, colonial heritage, and immigration, and now a must-visit with a compelling culinary scene. While the Peruvian capital is not a classic urban beauty with its overcast skies and ever-clinging garua (mist), the city is full of bursts of colorful architecture and bougainvillea, particularly in the downtown historic center around the Plaza Mayor.
Upscale Miraflores and San Isidro are modern, fashionable, and where many of the city’s best restaurants, boutiques, and art galleries call home. Peppered with flower-filled parks, a centuries-old olive grove, and lush gardens, a constant breeze blows off the ocean which is hundreds of feet below the cliffs on which Lima sits. To the south is hip Barranco, a mix of old and new, with renovated Victorian mansions into boutique hotels, stylish eateries, art galleries, and bars.
Only a day in Lima? We think a few, at the very least.
Ingredients
There’s a reason that the great French chef Auguste Escoffier ranked Peruvian Cuisine third in the world behind French and Chinese food. Spicy, layered, and complex in flavors, the cuisine is highly regional and succulent. Lima’s food culture also runs deep from the most humble huariques, ceviche joints, to some of the best fine dining in the world. It’s also the chance to eat your way through the different regions from the northern province of Trujillo known for duck dishes to the fiery stews and sauces of Arequipa and river prawns. In the middle you can taste pisco, specialty coffee, and visit juice bars with a variety of exotic fruits that will blow your mind.
Things We Love
Japan meets Peru: Nikkei cuisine is the food love child of Japan and Peru. When the Japanese immigrated to Peru in the early 20th century, they embraced their new country’s ingredients by assimilating Peruvian ingredients with Japanese technique. Take the delicate cuisine of Japan with its freshness and mix it up with the spicy punch of Peru. Think sashimi laced with fiery lime and chili sauces, or sushi “sauced” up with Amazonian fruit or even flash-sauteed seafood on top of a traditional maki. Even Nobu got started in Peru, and today, Maido (ranked the best restaurant in the Americas), is the place to taste this exquisite, exciting cuisine.
Chocolate Mecca: Chocolate lovers unite…Peru is cacao Mecca. Currently producing the finest cacao in the world, the terroir of the cacao bean here is simply incredible. While in town, learn about its nuances with a comprehensive tasting of different regions from the Amazonas to San Martin, Pangoa, Ayacucho and Cusco. Bars range from honey-flavored to fruity, earthy, and very dark and there are hundreds to pick from.
Art to Make you Swoon: Peruvian art spans several centuries and mediums from the Moche ceramics (including the erotica collection) at the Larco Museum to modern potters, photographer extraordinaire Mario Testino’s MATE museum, the 16th-century al frescos in the convents and monasteries, and edgy modern art in Barranco. Even curators’ homes showcase handicrafts from all over Peru since there are many time-honored traditions all made by hand.
and the meaningful