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On the streets of Santiago.
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The 38 Essential Santiago Restaurants

Fresh ceviche from the lengthy Chilean coastline, lamb grilled Patagonian style in a fine dining tasting menu, avocado-loaded completos at the Chilean hot dog’s birthplace, and more of Santiago’s best meals

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On the streets of Santiago.
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Chile’s transition to democracy in 1990 opened the door for tourism into the country and unleashed a surge of wine exports out of it. Lured by enthusiastic tourism campaigns, the first waves of visitors to Santiago encountered a rich Creole cuisine and seafood traditions influenced by the Mapuche and other Indigenous groups. Dishes like cazuela Chilena (meat and vegetable stew), curanto (seafood cooked in a pit oven), and porotos con rienda (a stew of beans, pasta, and chorizo) are based on staple ingredients like corn, potatoes, beans, and merquén (dried, smoked aji peppers). But the country also quickly became famous for its hearty snacks and street food, like chorrillanas (loaded fries), completos (hot dogs), and juicy sandwiches spackled with mayonnaise.

Inspired by culinary revolutions throughout South America, daring, young chefs are redefining the Chilean capital again. Restaurants like Boragó, Ambrosia, and Pulperia Santa Elvira have transformed Santiago into a city for world-class dining. Tasting menus combine modern techniques with classic dishes, highlight the coastline’s bountiful seafood, and refocus on indigenous ingredients used by Native peoples. Santiago’s ways of eating and cooking are evolving like never before.

Whether you’re interested in Santiago’s bistronomy movement, a platter of sublime shellfish from Chile’s lengthy coastline, or an enduring sanguchería (traditional sandwich outpost), you’d be hard-pressed to find a more exciting food city in the Southern Hemisphere.

Bill Esparza is a James Beard Award-winning writer, author of LA Mexicano, and onscreen food television personality covering food in United States and Latin America.

Hillary Eaton is a food & travel writer living between Auckland and Los Angeles. Her work has been featured in Food & Wine, WSJ, Bon Appetit, Los Angeles Times, VICE, Travel + Leisure, and more.

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Eater maps are curated by editors and aim to reflect a diversity of neighborhoods, cuisines, and prices. Learn more about our editorial process.

Chef José Luis Calfucura and chef Iván Zambra identify as chef Mapuche and chef de Tongoy respectively, representing a pair of Indigenous cultures; they work together at Amaia in Maipú, which features a tranquil white dining room and country-style patio. From the Tongoy side of the menu, try the tártaro de jaiba (crab in a lemon dressing), while dishes from the Mapuche include charwua poñy (grilled fish with potatoes) and ensaladilla (tomato, onion, and cilantro salad dressed with olive oil). Try the picoteo Mapuche, which comes with katutos (broken wheat), muñoquin (legume bread), beans, and french fries, or go for the peucayal charwita, a fish fried in creamy puffed wheat that’s served alongside ceviche. Calfucura’s Chaltu, a Mapuche seafood restaurant, is on the second floor of the same strip mall.

A range of dishes on a red and gray runner.
A full spread at Amaia.
Amaia

El Grandioso Caballo De Palo

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For over a century, the Anaya family has run this restaurant, where customers sing along to Chilean folk songs and feast on regional dishes surrounded by storied walls overrun with a beautiful jumble of folklore, old photos, and old-timey knickknacks. There’s no menu — just a dozen or so dishes that vary from day to day; you might find porotos con rienda (a stew of beans, pasta, and chorizo), costillar (pork ribs with potatoes and salad); or cazuela de chancho y chuchoca (a pork, potato, and cornmeal stew that warms the spirit). Sit at the communal tables and toast tablemates with a lorito (three-quarter pitcher) of chicha dulce (fermented grape drink) from Pupuya.

El Hoyo Restaurant

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From humble origins selling food and drinks to the workers of Santiago’s nearby central station in the early 20th century, family-owned El Hoyo has grown over the generations into one of the city’s most beloved restaurants. Santiaguinos stop by El Hoyo when they want a taste of porky, rustic comfort, whether that means the famous arrollado (boiled garlic and spice marinated pork loin wrapped in pork skin) or pernil (irresistibly tender pork hock). Grab a seat and sip on a terremoto while you wait; El Hoyo is one of several restaurants that’s credited with creating the iconic cocktail.

A one-story building exterior with shingled roof, white textured wall, large arched windows covered with heavy bars and two ends of barrels adorning either side of an entrance
Outside El Hoyo Restaurant
El Hoyo/Facebook

Parrilladas Libres Buenos Aires

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A recent trend in Santiago is the proliferation of tenedor libres, buffets that offer a wide range of cuisines including Peruvian, Italian, Korean, and deftly grilled meats from Chile’s neighbor to the east. The latest venture from restaurateur Ricardo Reyes de la Fuente offers all-you-can-eat bife ancho (rib-eye roast), asado de tira (short ribs), vacio (flank steak), Argentine sausages, and more for under $25. Select your meat and round out your plate with salads, chimichurri, rice, pastas, and french fries at this family-friendly crowd pleaser in Barrio Yungay.

Ana María Restaurante

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When Santiaguinos want traditional Chilean fare done well they head to Ana María, a picada turning out the sort of dishes that are mostly only found in Chilean homes cooked by Chilean grandparents. From the bright yellow interior to photographs of Ana Maria herself with notable guests and other memorabilia tacked to the walls, the experience is steeped in kitsch. Thankfully, it’s the charming kind that makes your meal of pickled rabbit, plateada al horno (a Chilean preparation of brisket), stewed quail, or pillowy Chilean sea urchin all the more enjoyable.

Cafeteria La Huerfana

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Take a break inside the historic Palacio Pereira, a 19th-century neoclassical mansion, where this joint venture by actress Dominique Beaumont and art historian Amira Osorio serves organic coffee. The coffee shop sources fine beans from small producers in Peru, Colombia, Brazil, and Honduras for espressos, macchiatos, cortados, and various filtration methods. Sip your choice with medialunas and alfajores. Or stay for a La Huérfana sandwich, a vegan take on a chacarero made with creamy mushrooms, green beans, and tomatoes on a ciabatta roll.

Confitería Torres

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You’ll find a number of confiterías selling coffee, tea, pastries, and sandwiches around Santiago, but for a taste of the old world, locals head to Confiteria Torres, the city’s oldest restaurant, founded in 1867. With white tablecloths, mahogany walls, lace curtains, and dapper waiters, Confiteria Torres will transport you to the Santiago of old. Head there for a simple lunch of classic Chilean fare or one of the best afternoon teas in the city, and be sure to check out the pictures of the famous regulars hung along the walls. Look closely and you’ll notice many of them are former presidents. One such former president, Barros Luco, even got a steak and cheese sandwich named after him for his loyal patronage — ask for the Presidente Barros to give it a try.

La Piojera

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From the old men playing Chilean drinking songs on the accordion to the walls covered in peeling murals, day-drinkers’ signatures, and drunken messages, La Piojera is an experience all its own. The lively watering hole is the city’s original dive, famous for one drink: the terremoto. Translating to “the earthquake,” this classic celebration cocktail, made with pineapple ice cream, sweet white wine, and fernet, is basically the Chilean version of a pina colada — and too many terremotos is just as likely to land you with a hangover. Sop up the sugary booze with a plate of the classic Chilean drunk food chorrillana (egg-, steak-, and cheese-covered fries) and you’ll at least stand a chance.

Customers gather at a bar inside an airy space with thin wood support beams strung with colorful streamers and tables full of people nearby.
The crowd at La Piojera.
Jack Zalium/Flickr

El Portal Ex Bahamondes

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Often credited as the birthplace of the completo Italiano, or Chilean hot dog, this Plaza de Armas diner was opened in 1935 by Eduardo Bahamondes Muñoz, who brought the hot dog from the United States to Chile. Served in a lengthy, house-made bun, a Viennese sausage is dressed in the colors of the Italian flag in the form of chopped tomatoes, creamy avocado, and the locale’s proprietary potato mayonnaise. There are other tempting bites in the restaurant’s display case too, including slices of pizza churrasco completa: tomato and green olive pizza topped with steak, tomatoes, creamy avocado, and of course, mayonnaise.

Sarita Colonia Restaurant

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This wonderfully kitschy restaurant and bar centered around a picture of the patron saint of misfits, Sarita Colonia, is all about taking Chilean flavors and having fun with them in unexpected ways. Dishes that showcase a hybrid of flavors and techniques from Peru, Asia, and America, like the mac and jaiba, a play on the Chilean crab pie pastel de jaiba, and a fresh scallop take on oysters Rockefeller, are what make dining at Sarita Colonia so fun and surprising.

Panaderia 'La Superior'

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Barrio Franklin’s century-old bakery produces artisanal pan marraqueta, hallullas, and pan lengua from an antique clay oven that owner Cecilia Morales ignites each day at 4:30 a.m. Head to the bakery early and grab a seat at one of the few tables to earn a freshly baked, crusty marraqueta (a quartet of rolls often used for breakfasts and sandwiches) with a pan of eggs and ham. Among the other treats, try the Berliner doughnuts filled with pastry cream or dulce de leche, or go for the savory sopaipillas: fried dough eaten with pebre (chopped aji pepper, onion, and tomato).  

Chipe Libre - República Independiente del Pisco

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In Santiago, the debate over who makes the best pisco sour can get very real. But most agree there’s no better place to sample the South American brandy than at Chipe Libre in Lastarria. Home to the country’s largest collection of pisco, the geographically organized north-to-south flight is a great way to educate yourself on the subtleties and regional differences of the country’s favorite spirit. Grab a seat in the outdoor garden and nibble on some octopus and tuna ceviche in between sips for the full Chipe Libre experience.

A low angle shot looking up at an airy bar topped with a large skylight. The space also includes a caged pendant light in the center of the photo, tiled flooring, a few tables, tall backlit shelves and a bartender at work.
The bar at Chipe Libre.
Chipe Libre/Facebook

Bocanáriz

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The young and the cool swarm Santiago’s original wine bar, located in the lively central barrio of Lastarria. The stylish space is home to 400 different Chilean wines (more than 40 of which come by the glass) and a creative menu of small plates broken up into tasting notes such as iodized, citrus, and herbaceous to match the wines. (Swing by the group’s second outpost, La Mision, for their famously extensive collection of some of Latin America’s best examples of grape diversity and winemaking style from Uruguay, Peru, Bolivia and beyond.)

Customers sit at tables inside a cozy bar, with pendant lights, rows of bottles along the bar and high on a back wall, and dark tiled flooring.
Inside Bocanáriz.
Bocanariz/Facebook

José Ramón 277: Chopería & Sanguchería

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Sanguchería history runs deep in Santiago, but with a new wave of young chefs embracing the cuisine, the classics are getting redefined in new and exciting ways. Among the best to tackle the cuisine and make it its own is José Ramon 277 in barrio Lastarria. Inside this casual sanguchería, you’ll find the young and cool sipping on pints pulled from 12 taps of Chilean craft beers while they pick at pichanga (cubed pork snout with pickled cauliflower, carrot, and olives) and wait for their food. The restaurant’s take on the lengua sandwich is a local favorite, but the plateada (brisket) is worth just as much attention. The mechada (slow-cooked beef) sandwich may seem typical, but the surprising addition of a sweet corn pastel de choclo, mixed with olives, caramelized onions, and fried egg, makes it stand out.

From above, a meat board resting on a wooden table beneath a bowl of stew dotted with seafood and veggies and topped with a large pepper resting across the rim, beside a loaf of bread streaked with sauce and cut into slices.
A stew and sandwich at José Ramón.
José Ramón 277

Sanguchería La Pica De Jaime

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Among the many tempting picadas (affordable traditional eateries) at the Persa Bio Bio flea market, one sandwich reigns supreme, Jaime Rubilar Flores’s mouthwatering lomito. Heaping piles of thinly sliced juicy pork loin are cooked on a flattop grill and loosely set on a pan marraqueta roll. But that’s just the beginning. Add a whole lot of seasoned mayonnaise and tomato, or make it a chacarero by adding a fistful of green beans. Or go for an extra rich lomito Italiano, mounted with fresh slices of tomato and palta (creamy avocado). And remember that in Chile, mayonnaise is a primary ingredient, not an optional condiment.

Pulperia Santa Elvira

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Inside a century-old home, where the walls are covered with a busy mix of general store supplies, pastels, floral designs, and kitsch, chef Javier Avilés Lira takes a modern approach to a beloved institution. The pulpería delivers a passionate play on the seasons, offering four entradas, four fondos (main dishes), and a pair of desserts. Dishes offer dramatic flavors of the Chilean coast, like cream of clam and cuttlefish animated by drops of chive and aji merquén oils, or a mix of clams and Chilean abalone under a dark green canopy of pureed avocado, crisp sea beans, and pickled cucumbers. Finish with mushroom ice cream sweetened with fermented honey over mote suflado, a crispy, puffy version of popular Chilean husked wheat.

A dish presented in a large shell that resembles mounds of grass with tiny cacti.
An artful seafood dish.
Pulperia Santa Elvira

El Palacio de la Chorrillana

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Chile’s own version of loaded fries, la chorrillana, is said to have originated in Valparaíso during the ’70s as an affordable, filling bar snack. Inside this cozy, brick pub, patrons can choose from 11 different chorrillanas, including the classic Bellavista combo of fries layered in carne mechada (shredded beef), onions, cheddar cheese sauce, and chopped bacon. There are a pair of vegetarian options and the Santo Domingo layered with seafood. All the hearty renditions are perfect excuses for another round of schops (beers on tap), Chilean wines, or chicha (fermented grape drink).  

Parrilladas El Llano

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Choose from a variety of parrilladas (mixed grilled items) at this Barrio Franklin institution, which has remained a favorite steakhouse among Santiaguinos for more than 60 years. A polished stainless steel brasier delivers the parrillada tradicional: a heaping mound of costillas de cerdo (pork ribs), bife de lomo (tenderloin), pork chops, longanizas, prietas (blood sausages), ubre (udder), potito (intestines), and chunchules (chitterlings). The quality meats come with crispy potatoes, salad, hot bread, and pebre, a mixture of chopped aji pepper, onion, and tomato for dressing at the table.

Restaurant Peumayen

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Serving the ancestral food of the Mapuche and Aymara Indigenous peoples of Chile, Peumayen showcases ingredients and cooking techniques that even most Chileans are no longer familiar with. Surrounded by traditional woven tapestries and Native religious icons, diners dig into plates of horse meat cooked on hot stones, crispy tentacles of fried seaweed, araucaria araucana (the nuts of the monkey puzzle tree), and alpaca.

From above, a meat board with several cuts of cooked steak streaked with grill marks, mixed in with hunks of cooked vegetables and herbs for garnish.
Grilled meat.
Peumayen/Facebook

Chiloe En Tu Mesa

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The flavors of Isla Grande de Chiloé in southern Chile are on the table at Juan Cataldo and Sandra Chávez’s charmer, set in a family-friendly tavern in Barrio Italia. At their previous location in Barrio Yungay, the couple became known for their specialty: pulmay, a Chiloé-style soup enriched by pork ribs, longaniza, potatoes, chicken, clams, and two types of Chilean mussels. The daily chalkboard menu of southern dishes features items like caldillo de mariscos (shellfish soup), a creamy pastel de jaiba (crab pie), and fried empanadas de cochayuyo (a stew of Chilean seaweed). 

A pot of shellfish and pork ribs, presented in a bowl wrapped with a net.
Pulmay.
Chiloe En Tu Mesa

Bar Liguria

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A colorful facade, red- and white-checkered tablecloths, and paintings covering every inch of available wall space make Bar Liguria an endearing space for traditional Chilean comfort food with a side of bohemian vibes. Sopaipillas (classic deep-fried breads made with pumpkin) served with fresh pebre (traditional Chilean salsa) are a great way to start the meal before moving on to traditional dishes like ossobuco stewed in black beer or pastel de choclo chilote, a classic sweet corn and beef pie.

A close-up on a plate of steak topped with peas, carrots and other roasted vegetables in a thick sauce that pools in the plate.
Ossobuco at Liguria.
Liguria/Facebook

Bahía Pilolcura

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Since 2004, seafood lovers have frequented this divvy Providencia seafood spot for paila marina (light seafood stew), fresh oysters, sea urchin, and pastel de centolla (Chilean king crab pie), all enjoyed with Chilean wines and ice-cold Austral beer. The cramped dining room feels like a cafeteria onboard a submarine, decorated with white-tiled floors and an ocean-blue ceiling. Don’t miss the made-to-order deep-fried empanadas filled with shrimp and cheese, crab, oyster, or locos (Chilean abalone).

Cora Bistró

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Billed as new Chilean cuisine, chef Manuel Balmaceda’s contemporary bistro was part of an exciting wave of new dining when it opened in the Providencia neighborhood in 2022. Raw chochas (shellfish) and erizo (sea urchin) mix in a simply gorgeous dish of bright contrasts with cilantro granita, aji verde, and sea beans in a mild citrus sauce. The chopped Chilean abalone, dressed with spicy radish and abalone mayonnaise, dazzles on exquisite ceramic plates with finely diced asparagus, avocado, and chives. Another visually stunning plate is the cured, cold-smoked albacore tuna belly, arranged in a ring around a creamy seaweed, dill, and roasted aji verde beurre blanc with tapioca chips. The short menu is paired with top Chilean wines.

Ambrosia Bistro

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Partners in life and in business, chef Carolina Bazán and sommelier Rosario Onetto placed an open kitchen at the center of Ambrosia, which attracts locals on a budget with its minimalist lighting, rotating menu that invites spontaneity, and Chilean natural wines. Their brand of bold yet approachable haute cuisine is clear in the langoustines sauteed in bisque or the fish tartare mixed with powerful sea squirts and topped with leche de tigre granita. The menu might also feature pasta vongole, a katsu sandwich, or Chilean abalone with a reduction of its own stock and pesto. Anything goes at this destination for fine dining at a modest price.

A spread of red tartare topped with colorful fixings.
Tomato tartare.
Ambrosia Bistro

Yum Cha

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Chef Nicolás Tapia put in time cooking at some of the world’s top kitchens — including Quintonil (Mexico City), Lasai (Rio de Janeiro), and Taubenkobel (Austria) — before opening his own restaurant, which has become the most sought after reservation in Santiago. With only 20 seats spread over five tables, Tapia offers tea-driven cuisine: 10 courses steeped in Asian flavors paired with distinctive teas from around the world. Tasting menus can include barbecued medusa fish in a marinade of sake-spiked ponzu, fried seafood rice made with local catch, or wok-fried caracol trumulco (Chilean sea snail) with broad beans, mint, and pomelo. In a country where tea is like a religion, Tapia’s menu might be the most Chilean dining experience to be had.

It’s not always easy to find a restaurant open on a Sunday in Santiago. Due to a law that requires workers to have at least two Sundays off per month, many restaurants choose to just close on Sundays altogether — but not Baco. A favorite of local chefs for its wonderfully executed French fare made with market produce, the restaurant also has an extensive selection of Chilean wines by the glass, from the small producers to the heavy-hitters.

From above, slices of chicken in the center of a plate surrounded by slices of tomato, corn, peppers, lemon, and sauces.
A dish at Baco.
Baco/Facebook

Chef Sergio Barroso, an alum of El Bulli and Santiago’s own Restaurante 040, opened his modern seafood restaurant inside the 45 by Director hotel. The elegant, contemporary dining room is decked with flared columns and accented by lime green chairs. The first Leed-accredited zero-waste restaurant in Latin America, Olam serves dishes like llauna de chipirones (rice with squid) in a pan with dots of black garlic, while items like fideuà, served with rock lobster from the Juan Fernández Islands, show off Barroso’s Spanish roots. Check out the confit artichokes stuffed with wagyu osso buco and the tomato-ginger gazpacho with strips of cured great pompano.

Boragó

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When Boragó first opened in 2006, fine dining in Chile almost exclusively meant European cuisine. But after cutting his teeth at Spain’s two-Michelin-starred Mugaritz, chef Rodolfo Guzmán returned to Santiago to open the city’s haute venue dedicated to Chilean cuisine. Dinner at Boragó comes in a tasting menu of beautifully minimalist dishes, like fresh, sweet shrimp with foraged maqui berries or tender lamb cooked in the Patagonian al asador style. Boragó is a regular of the Latin America’s 50 Best Restaurants list.

Food resembling a rock topped with a twig, a dusting of snow and leaves, and bright berries, all sitting on a coarse wooden plank
A dish at Boragó
Bogaro/Facebook

La Calma

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The most exciting contemporary Chilean seafood restaurant is now under the helm of chef Ignacio Ovalle (formerly of Origen Bistro and Ópera), who serves plates of fresh fish and shellfish over white tablecloths. Indulgences such as poached Patagonian king crab seasoned with olive oil, chopped sea beans, and lemon peel, or grilled pink cusk eel in garlic butter litter the enticing menu. But the star of the show is the namesake La Calma, a loaded seafood platter that offers a deep dive into Chilean waters with oysters, a variety of clams, assorted sea snails like limpets, local fish, scallops, and sea urchin.

Karai by Mitsuharu

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The inarguable king of Nikkei cuisine, Mitsuharu Tsumura of Lima’s Maido (a regular in the top 10 of the World’s 50 Best Restaurants list) came to Santiago with the ultra-chic Karai. Located in the swanky W hotel, this modern lunch and dinner haunt serves a mixture of the classic dishes that gained Tsumaru his fame. Try Maido’s grilled octopus in spicy anticucho sauce and ultra-bright ceviche, as well as Karai originals like crispy fish chicharrón in a picante stew of aji amarillo that’s a reimagined Peruvian classic.

A long bar and dining area, with high top seats at the bar, high ceilings, retro ‘70s colorful decorations and geometric patterning.
Inside Karai by Mitsuharu.
W Santiago

The Santiago location of South America’s collection of upscale Osaka restaurants is one of the best places to try Japanese Peruvian Nikkei cuisine outside of Chile’s northern neighbor. Thanks to the exceptional seafood coming from Chile’s diverse 2,600-mile coastline and the incredible talent in the kitchen, Osaka is one of the hardest tables to score in the city.

A bowl of chunks of various seafood in a broth, in front of other similar dishes blurred, on a dark countertop.
Mixed seafood with butter, togarashi, and lime at Osaka.
Osaka/Facebook

Donde La Nona

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Some of the best empanadas in town are baked in a converted, olive-green utility shed outside a home in Villa Macul. Since September 2020, Donde La Nonita has served a menu of over 20 different trapezoidal empanadas, mottled with light brown blisters and generously filled with surf and turf. Start with an empanada de pino, a juicy, uniform blend of ground beef, hard eggs, chopped onion, and olives that match the house paint. Then try the mariscos (mixed seafood), pollo crema (chicken with cream and cheese), jaiba queso (crab and cheese), or the signature La Nonita, a union of pork loin, cheese, and caramelized onions. 

Demencia Restobar

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Get your ticket to chef Benjamin Nast’s modern Chilean restaurant, set under a carnival-esque big top where delicious “madness” is served on a plate and fire breathers, aerialists, and magicians entertain dinner guests. Start with a platter of local oysters inspired by Thai, Mexican, and Japanese flavors, paired with one of Fabian Reyes’s breathtaking cocktails like the Demasiao’, a highball of Chambord, ginger syrup, ginger beer, and pomelo juice. The small plates menu includes fish tiradito in ponzu, Tacos Dementes (cold, Nobu-esque tacos of citrus-cured Chilean rockfish with avocado cream in a crunchy wafer tortilla), and arroz de langostinos (grilled langoustines over a weave of red rice and caramelized socarrat). It’s also a great place to grab a burger and a glass of Casas del Bosque pinot noir.

Las Lanzas

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Historically a place where Chilean artists and intellectuals would gather for a tertulia (salon) to talk about the issues of the day, Las Lanzas has slowly become a Plaza Ñuñoa institution. Las Lanzas offers simple fuente de soda (the Chilean version of diner) food. It’s the perfect spot to enjoy a cold Quimbra and Chilean mechada (slow-cooked beef) sandwich or sánguche of fried hake in one of the true local spots of the area — all on the cheap.

A sandwich stuffed with sliced beef, sautéed onions, tomato, and sauce on thick bread.
A stuffed sandwich at Las Lanzas.
Las Lanzas/Facebook

Siete Negronis

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From a bar that glows in Campari red, esteemed bartenders Matías Peredo, Fernando Costa, Matías Supan, and Rodrigo Otaiza offer the promised seven Negronis, but those are just a gateway to their ingenious menu of cocktails highlighting the flavors of South America. There are also Italian recipes with Chilean twists like risotto croquettes, carpaccios, and tortellini with carne mechada (Chilean pot roast). Besides the beloved Florentine cocktail, mezcal margaritas, Speyside highballs, and Blue Hawaiians are mixed with a kind of reverence and sophistication that makes this a top bar in Santiago.

La Picantería Santiago

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La Picanteria, the Peruvian export from acclaimed chef Héctor Solís, specializes in fresh fish sourced from the coasts of Chile, Peru, and Japan, with an ample showing of Santiago-specific dishes alongside the Peruvian staples. Choose from the open display of fresh fish and crustaceans kept center stage over ice, then pick your preparation from the chalkboard. While filets and other smaller dishes are available, the best way to experience La Picanteria is to order the whole fish in multiple preparations, from the unparalleled ceviche made from the belly to the crispy fried head drenched in a rich garlicky sauce. Top it off with an extra-large pisco sour for one of the best seafood experiences in the city. 

A plate of ceviche from La Picantería.
Ceviche.
La Picantería

99 Restaurante

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The bistronomy trend is largely responsible for Santiago’s recent status as an up-and-coming food city, and 99 is the beating heart of the movement and where the city’s chefs go to geek out. The technique-driven, minimalist operation focuses on foraged and well-sourced local Chilean ingredients in a chill, bistro-like environment. Helmed by Kurt Schmidt (who trained at Noma and Boragó), dinner comes in six or nine courses that rotate daily, sometimes including the signature Mushroom Textures.

A chunk of cooked meat dusted with glittery sauce on a plate beside other avant-garde ingredients blurred in the background
One of the many courses in a meal at 99 Restaurante
99/Facebook

Ambrosia

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When chef Carolina Bazán returned to Santiago after working in Gregory Marchand’s acclaimed Parisian bistro Frenchie, she created one of Santiago’s best French-inflected menus. The modern yet homey space, filled with plants, books, and knickknacks, is the perfect backdrop to Bazán’s market-driven riffs on French cuisine, which include pappardelle in lamb ragu and fall-off-the-bone duck confit with sweet potato puree. Ask for a table in the lush green courtyard under the crisscross of hanging bistro lights to get the full effect.

An outdoor patio overrun with plants, including a large plant wall and vines draped from above, with a few patio chairs and a library-like interior visible through large windows.
The patio at Ambrosia.
Ambrosia/Facebook

Amaia

Chef José Luis Calfucura and chef Iván Zambra identify as chef Mapuche and chef de Tongoy respectively, representing a pair of Indigenous cultures; they work together at Amaia in Maipú, which features a tranquil white dining room and country-style patio. From the Tongoy side of the menu, try the tártaro de jaiba (crab in a lemon dressing), while dishes from the Mapuche include charwua poñy (grilled fish with potatoes) and ensaladilla (tomato, onion, and cilantro salad dressed with olive oil). Try the picoteo Mapuche, which comes with katutos (broken wheat), muñoquin (legume bread), beans, and french fries, or go for the peucayal charwita, a fish fried in creamy puffed wheat that’s served alongside ceviche. Calfucura’s Chaltu, a Mapuche seafood restaurant, is on the second floor of the same strip mall.

A range of dishes on a red and gray runner.
A full spread at Amaia.
Amaia

El Grandioso Caballo De Palo

For over a century, the Anaya family has run this restaurant, where customers sing along to Chilean folk songs and feast on regional dishes surrounded by storied walls overrun with a beautiful jumble of folklore, old photos, and old-timey knickknacks. There’s no menu — just a dozen or so dishes that vary from day to day; you might find porotos con rienda (a stew of beans, pasta, and chorizo), costillar (pork ribs with potatoes and salad); or cazuela de chancho y chuchoca (a pork, potato, and cornmeal stew that warms the spirit). Sit at the communal tables and toast tablemates with a lorito (three-quarter pitcher) of chicha dulce (fermented grape drink) from Pupuya.

El Hoyo Restaurant

From humble origins selling food and drinks to the workers of Santiago’s nearby central station in the early 20th century, family-owned El Hoyo has grown over the generations into one of the city’s most beloved restaurants. Santiaguinos stop by El Hoyo when they want a taste of porky, rustic comfort, whether that means the famous arrollado (boiled garlic and spice marinated pork loin wrapped in pork skin) or pernil (irresistibly tender pork hock). Grab a seat and sip on a terremoto while you wait; El Hoyo is one of several restaurants that’s credited with creating the iconic cocktail.

A one-story building exterior with shingled roof, white textured wall, large arched windows covered with heavy bars and two ends of barrels adorning either side of an entrance
Outside El Hoyo Restaurant
El Hoyo/Facebook

Parrilladas Libres Buenos Aires

A recent trend in Santiago is the proliferation of tenedor libres, buffets that offer a wide range of cuisines including Peruvian, Italian, Korean, and deftly grilled meats from Chile’s neighbor to the east. The latest venture from restaurateur Ricardo Reyes de la Fuente offers all-you-can-eat bife ancho (rib-eye roast), asado de tira (short ribs), vacio (flank steak), Argentine sausages, and more for under $25. Select your meat and round out your plate with salads, chimichurri, rice, pastas, and french fries at this family-friendly crowd pleaser in Barrio Yungay.

Ana María Restaurante

When Santiaguinos want traditional Chilean fare done well they head to Ana María, a picada turning out the sort of dishes that are mostly only found in Chilean homes cooked by Chilean grandparents. From the bright yellow interior to photographs of Ana Maria herself with notable guests and other memorabilia tacked to the walls, the experience is steeped in kitsch. Thankfully, it’s the charming kind that makes your meal of pickled rabbit, plateada al horno (a Chilean preparation of brisket), stewed quail, or pillowy Chilean sea urchin all the more enjoyable.

Cafeteria La Huerfana

Take a break inside the historic Palacio Pereira, a 19th-century neoclassical mansion, where this joint venture by actress Dominique Beaumont and art historian Amira Osorio serves organic coffee. The coffee shop sources fine beans from small producers in Peru, Colombia, Brazil, and Honduras for espressos, macchiatos, cortados, and various filtration methods. Sip your choice with medialunas and alfajores. Or stay for a La Huérfana sandwich, a vegan take on a chacarero made with creamy mushrooms, green beans, and tomatoes on a ciabatta roll.

Confitería Torres

You’ll find a number of confiterías selling coffee, tea, pastries, and sandwiches around Santiago, but for a taste of the old world, locals head to Confiteria Torres, the city’s oldest restaurant, founded in 1867. With white tablecloths, mahogany walls, lace curtains, and dapper waiters, Confiteria Torres will transport you to the Santiago of old. Head there for a simple lunch of classic Chilean fare or one of the best afternoon teas in the city, and be sure to check out the pictures of the famous regulars hung along the walls. Look closely and you’ll notice many of them are former presidents. One such former president, Barros Luco, even got a steak and cheese sandwich named after him for his loyal patronage — ask for the Presidente Barros to give it a try.

La Piojera

From the old men playing Chilean drinking songs on the accordion to the walls covered in peeling murals, day-drinkers’ signatures, and drunken messages, La Piojera is an experience all its own. The lively watering hole is the city’s original dive, famous for one drink: the terremoto. Translating to “the earthquake,” this classic celebration cocktail, made with pineapple ice cream, sweet white wine, and fernet, is basically the Chilean version of a pina colada — and too many terremotos is just as likely to land you with a hangover. Sop up the sugary booze with a plate of the classic Chilean drunk food chorrillana (egg-, steak-, and cheese-covered fries) and you’ll at least stand a chance.

Customers gather at a bar inside an airy space with thin wood support beams strung with colorful streamers and tables full of people nearby.
The crowd at La Piojera.
Jack Zalium/Flickr

El Portal Ex Bahamondes

Often credited as the birthplace of the completo Italiano, or Chilean hot dog, this Plaza de Armas diner was opened in 1935 by Eduardo Bahamondes Muñoz, who brought the hot dog from the United States to Chile. Served in a lengthy, house-made bun, a Viennese sausage is dressed in the colors of the Italian flag in the form of chopped tomatoes, creamy avocado, and the locale’s proprietary potato mayonnaise. There are other tempting bites in the restaurant’s display case too, including slices of pizza churrasco completa: tomato and green olive pizza topped with steak, tomatoes, creamy avocado, and of course, mayonnaise.

Sarita Colonia Restaurant

This wonderfully kitschy restaurant and bar centered around a picture of the patron saint of misfits, Sarita Colonia, is all about taking Chilean flavors and having fun with them in unexpected ways. Dishes that showcase a hybrid of flavors and techniques from Peru, Asia, and America, like the mac and jaiba, a play on the Chilean crab pie pastel de jaiba, and a fresh scallop take on oysters Rockefeller, are what make dining at Sarita Colonia so fun and surprising.

Panaderia 'La Superior'

Barrio Franklin’s century-old bakery produces artisanal pan marraqueta, hallullas, and pan lengua from an antique clay oven that owner Cecilia Morales ignites each day at 4:30 a.m. Head to the bakery early and grab a seat at one of the few tables to earn a freshly baked, crusty marraqueta (a quartet of rolls often used for breakfasts and sandwiches) with a pan of eggs and ham. Among the other treats, try the Berliner doughnuts filled with pastry cream or dulce de leche, or go for the savory sopaipillas: fried dough eaten with pebre (chopped aji pepper, onion, and tomato).  

Chipe Libre - República Independiente del Pisco

In Santiago, the debate over who makes the best pisco sour can get very real. But most agree there’s no better place to sample the South American brandy than at Chipe Libre in Lastarria. Home to the country’s largest collection of pisco, the geographically organized north-to-south flight is a great way to educate yourself on the subtleties and regional differences of the country’s favorite spirit. Grab a seat in the outdoor garden and nibble on some octopus and tuna ceviche in between sips for the full Chipe Libre experience.

A low angle shot looking up at an airy bar topped with a large skylight. The space also includes a caged pendant light in the center of the photo, tiled flooring, a few tables, tall backlit shelves and a bartender at work.
The bar at Chipe Libre.
Chipe Libre/Facebook

Bocanáriz

The young and the cool swarm Santiago’s original wine bar, located in the lively central barrio of Lastarria. The stylish space is home to 400 different Chilean wines (more than 40 of which come by the glass) and a creative menu of small plates broken up into tasting notes such as iodized, citrus, and herbaceous to match the wines. (Swing by the group’s second outpost, La Mision, for their famously extensive collection of some of Latin America’s best examples of grape diversity and winemaking style from Uruguay, Peru, Bolivia and beyond.)

Customers sit at tables inside a cozy bar, with pendant lights, rows of bottles along the bar and high on a back wall, and dark tiled flooring.
Inside Bocanáriz.
Bocanariz/Facebook

José Ramón 277: Chopería & Sanguchería

Sanguchería history runs deep in Santiago, but with a new wave of young chefs embracing the cuisine, the classics are getting redefined in new and exciting ways. Among the best to tackle the cuisine and make it its own is José Ramon 277 in barrio Lastarria. Inside this casual sanguchería, you’ll find the young and cool sipping on pints pulled from 12 taps of Chilean craft beers while they pick at pichanga (cubed pork snout with pickled cauliflower, carrot, and olives) and wait for their food. The restaurant’s take on the lengua sandwich is a local favorite, but the plateada (brisket) is worth just as much attention. The mechada (slow-cooked beef) sandwich may seem typical, but the surprising addition of a sweet corn pastel de choclo, mixed with olives, caramelized onions, and fried egg, makes it stand out.

From above, a meat board resting on a wooden table beneath a bowl of stew dotted with seafood and veggies and topped with a large pepper resting across the rim, beside a loaf of bread streaked with sauce and cut into slices.
A stew and sandwich at José Ramón.
José Ramón 277

Sanguchería La Pica De Jaime

Among the many tempting picadas (affordable traditional eateries) at the Persa Bio Bio flea market, one sandwich reigns supreme, Jaime Rubilar Flores’s mouthwatering lomito. Heaping piles of thinly sliced juicy pork loin are cooked on a flattop grill and loosely set on a pan marraqueta roll. But that’s just the beginning. Add a whole lot of seasoned mayonnaise and tomato, or make it a chacarero by adding a fistful of green beans. Or go for an extra rich lomito Italiano, mounted with fresh slices of tomato and palta (creamy avocado). And remember that in Chile, mayonnaise is a primary ingredient, not an optional condiment.

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Pulperia Santa Elvira

Inside a century-old home, where the walls are covered with a busy mix of general store supplies, pastels, floral designs, and kitsch, chef Javier Avilés Lira takes a modern approach to a beloved institution. The pulpería delivers a passionate play on the seasons, offering four entradas, four fondos (main dishes), and a pair of desserts. Dishes offer dramatic flavors of the Chilean coast, like cream of clam and cuttlefish animated by drops of chive and aji merquén oils, or a mix of clams and Chilean abalone under a dark green canopy of pureed avocado, crisp sea beans, and pickled cucumbers. Finish with mushroom ice cream sweetened with fermented honey over mote suflado, a crispy, puffy version of popular Chilean husked wheat.

A dish presented in a large shell that resembles mounds of grass with tiny cacti.
An artful seafood dish.
Pulperia Santa Elvira

El Palacio de la Chorrillana

Chile’s own version of loaded fries, la chorrillana, is said to have originated in Valparaíso during the ’70s as an affordable, filling bar snack. Inside this cozy, brick pub, patrons can choose from 11 different chorrillanas, including the classic Bellavista combo of fries layered in carne mechada (shredded beef), onions, cheddar cheese sauce, and chopped bacon. There are a pair of vegetarian options and the Santo Domingo layered with seafood. All the hearty renditions are perfect excuses for another round of schops (beers on tap), Chilean wines, or chicha (fermented grape drink).  

Parrilladas El Llano

Choose from a variety of parrilladas (mixed grilled items) at this Barrio Franklin institution, which has remained a favorite steakhouse among Santiaguinos for more than 60 years. A polished stainless steel brasier delivers the parrillada tradicional: a heaping mound of costillas de cerdo (pork ribs), bife de lomo (tenderloin), pork chops, longanizas, prietas (blood sausages), ubre (udder), potito (intestines), and chunchules (chitterlings). The quality meats come with crispy potatoes, salad, hot bread, and pebre, a mixture of chopped aji pepper, onion, and tomato for dressing at the table.

Restaurant Peumayen

Serving the ancestral food of the Mapuche and Aymara Indigenous peoples of Chile, Peumayen showcases ingredients and cooking techniques that even most Chileans are no longer familiar with. Surrounded by traditional woven tapestries and Native religious icons, diners dig into plates of horse meat cooked on hot stones, crispy tentacles of fried seaweed, araucaria araucana (the nuts of the monkey puzzle tree), and alpaca.

From above, a meat board with several cuts of cooked steak streaked with grill marks, mixed in with hunks of cooked vegetables and herbs for garnish.
Grilled meat.
Peumayen/Facebook

Chiloe En Tu Mesa

The flavors of Isla Grande de Chiloé in southern Chile are on the table at Juan Cataldo and Sandra Chávez’s charmer, set in a family-friendly tavern in Barrio Italia. At their previous location in Barrio Yungay, the couple became known for their specialty: pulmay, a Chiloé-style soup enriched by pork ribs, longaniza, potatoes, chicken, clams, and two types of Chilean mussels. The daily chalkboard menu of southern dishes features items like caldillo de mariscos (shellfish soup), a creamy pastel de jaiba (crab pie), and fried empanadas de cochayuyo (a stew of Chilean seaweed). 

A pot of shellfish and pork ribs, presented in a bowl wrapped with a net.
Pulmay.
Chiloe En Tu Mesa

Bar Liguria

A colorful facade, red- and white-checkered tablecloths, and paintings covering every inch of available wall space make Bar Liguria an endearing space for traditional Chilean comfort food with a side of bohemian vibes. Sopaipillas (classic deep-fried breads made with pumpkin) served with fresh pebre (traditional Chilean salsa) are a great way to start the meal before moving on to traditional dishes like ossobuco stewed in black beer or pastel de choclo chilote, a classic sweet corn and beef pie.

A close-up on a plate of steak topped with peas, carrots and other roasted vegetables in a thick sauce that pools in the plate.
Ossobuco at Liguria.
Liguria/Facebook

Bahía Pilolcura

Since 2004, seafood lovers have frequented this divvy Providencia seafood spot for paila marina (light seafood stew), fresh oysters, sea urchin, and pastel de centolla (Chilean king crab pie), all enjoyed with Chilean wines and ice-cold Austral beer. The cramped dining room feels like a cafeteria onboard a submarine, decorated with white-tiled floors and an ocean-blue ceiling. Don’t miss the made-to-order deep-fried empanadas filled with shrimp and cheese, crab, oyster, or locos (Chilean abalone).

Cora Bistró

Billed as new Chilean cuisine, chef Manuel Balmaceda’s contemporary bistro was part of an exciting wave of new dining when it opened in the Providencia neighborhood in 2022. Raw chochas (shellfish) and erizo (sea urchin) mix in a simply gorgeous dish of bright contrasts with cilantro granita, aji verde, and sea beans in a mild citrus sauce. The chopped Chilean abalone, dressed with spicy radish and abalone mayonnaise, dazzles on exquisite ceramic plates with finely diced asparagus, avocado, and chives. Another visually stunning plate is the cured, cold-smoked albacore tuna belly, arranged in a ring around a creamy seaweed, dill, and roasted aji verde beurre blanc with tapioca chips. The short menu is paired with top Chilean wines.

Ambrosia Bistro

Partners in life and in business, chef Carolina Bazán and sommelier Rosario Onetto placed an open kitchen at the center of Ambrosia, which attracts locals on a budget with its minimalist lighting, rotating menu that invites spontaneity, and Chilean natural wines. Their brand of bold yet approachable haute cuisine is clear in the langoustines sauteed in bisque or the fish tartare mixed with powerful sea squirts and topped with leche de tigre granita. The menu might also feature pasta vongole, a katsu sandwich, or Chilean abalone with a reduction of its own stock and pesto. Anything goes at this destination for fine dining at a modest price.

A spread of red tartare topped with colorful fixings.
Tomato tartare.
Ambrosia Bistro

Yum Cha

Chef Nicolás Tapia put in time cooking at some of the world’s top kitchens — including Quintonil (Mexico City), Lasai (Rio de Janeiro), and Taubenkobel (Austria) — before opening his own restaurant, which has become the most sought after reservation in Santiago. With only 20 seats spread over five tables, Tapia offers tea-driven cuisine: 10 courses steeped in Asian flavors paired with distinctive teas from around the world. Tasting menus can include barbecued medusa fish in a marinade of sake-spiked ponzu, fried seafood rice made with local catch, or wok-fried caracol trumulco (Chilean sea snail) with broad beans, mint, and pomelo. In a country where tea is like a religion, Tapia’s menu might be the most Chilean dining experience to be had.

Baco

It’s not always easy to find a restaurant open on a Sunday in Santiago. Due to a law that requires workers to have at least two Sundays off per month, many restaurants choose to just close on Sundays altogether — but not Baco. A favorite of local chefs for its wonderfully executed French fare made with market produce, the restaurant also has an extensive selection of Chilean wines by the glass, from the small producers to the heavy-hitters.

From above, slices of chicken in the center of a plate surrounded by slices of tomato, corn, peppers, lemon, and sauces.
A dish at Baco.
Baco/Facebook

Olam

Chef Sergio Barroso, an alum of El Bulli and Santiago’s own Restaurante 040, opened his modern seafood restaurant inside the 45 by Director hotel. The elegant, contemporary dining room is decked with flared columns and accented by lime green chairs. The first Leed-accredited zero-waste restaurant in Latin America, Olam serves dishes like llauna de chipirones (rice with squid) in a pan with dots of black garlic, while items like fideuà, served with rock lobster from the Juan Fernández Islands, show off Barroso’s Spanish roots. Check out the confit artichokes stuffed with wagyu osso buco and the tomato-ginger gazpacho with strips of cured great pompano.

Boragó

When Boragó first opened in 2006, fine dining in Chile almost exclusively meant European cuisine. But after cutting his teeth at Spain’s two-Michelin-starred Mugaritz, chef Rodolfo Guzmán returned to Santiago to open the city’s haute venue dedicated to Chilean cuisine. Dinner at Boragó comes in a tasting menu of beautifully minimalist dishes, like fresh, sweet shrimp with foraged maqui berries or tender lamb cooked in the Patagonian al asador style. Boragó is a regular of the Latin America’s 50 Best Restaurants list.

Food resembling a rock topped with a twig, a dusting of snow and leaves, and bright berries, all sitting on a coarse wooden plank
A dish at Boragó
Bogaro/Facebook

La Calma

The most exciting contemporary Chilean seafood restaurant is now under the helm of chef Ignacio Ovalle (formerly of Origen Bistro and Ópera), who serves plates of fresh fish and shellfish over white tablecloths. Indulgences such as poached Patagonian king crab seasoned with olive oil, chopped sea beans, and lemon peel, or grilled pink cusk eel in garlic butter litter the enticing menu. But the star of the show is the namesake La Calma, a loaded seafood platter that offers a deep dive into Chilean waters with oysters, a variety of clams, assorted sea snails like limpets, local fish, scallops, and sea urchin.

Karai by Mitsuharu

The inarguable king of Nikkei cuisine, Mitsuharu Tsumura of Lima’s Maido (a regular in the top 10 of the World’s 50 Best Restaurants list) came to Santiago with the ultra-chic Karai. Located in the swanky W hotel, this modern lunch and dinner haunt serves a mixture of the classic dishes that gained Tsumaru his fame. Try Maido’s grilled octopus in spicy anticucho sauce and ultra-bright ceviche, as well as Karai originals like crispy fish chicharrón in a picante stew of aji amarillo that’s a reimagined Peruvian classic.

A long bar and dining area, with high top seats at the bar, high ceilings, retro ‘70s colorful decorations and geometric patterning.
Inside Karai by Mitsuharu.
W Santiago

Osaka

The Santiago location of South America’s collection of upscale Osaka restaurants is one of the best places to try Japanese Peruvian Nikkei cuisine outside of Chile’s northern neighbor. Thanks to the exceptional seafood coming from Chile’s diverse 2,600-mile coastline and the incredible talent in the kitchen, Osaka is one of the hardest tables to score in the city.

A bowl of chunks of various seafood in a broth, in front of other similar dishes blurred, on a dark countertop.
Mixed seafood with butter, togarashi, and lime at Osaka.
Osaka/Facebook

Donde La Nona

Some of the best empanadas in town are baked in a converted, olive-green utility shed outside a home in Villa Macul. Since September 2020, Donde La Nonita has served a menu of over 20 different trapezoidal empanadas, mottled with light brown blisters and generously filled with surf and turf. Start with an empanada de pino, a juicy, uniform blend of ground beef, hard eggs, chopped onion, and olives that match the house paint. Then try the mariscos (mixed seafood), pollo crema (chicken with cream and cheese), jaiba queso (crab and cheese), or the signature La Nonita, a union of pork loin, cheese, and caramelized onions. 

Demencia Restobar

Get your ticket to chef Benjamin Nast’s modern Chilean restaurant, set under a carnival-esque big top where delicious “madness” is served on a plate and fire breathers, aerialists, and magicians entertain dinner guests. Start with a platter of local oysters inspired by Thai, Mexican, and Japanese flavors, paired with one of Fabian Reyes’s breathtaking cocktails like the Demasiao’, a highball of Chambord, ginger syrup, ginger beer, and pomelo juice. The small plates menu includes fish tiradito in ponzu, Tacos Dementes (cold, Nobu-esque tacos of citrus-cured Chilean rockfish with avocado cream in a crunchy wafer tortilla), and arroz de langostinos (grilled langoustines over a weave of red rice and caramelized socarrat). It’s also a great place to grab a burger and a glass of Casas del Bosque pinot noir.

Las Lanzas

Historically a place where Chilean artists and intellectuals would gather for a tertulia (salon) to talk about the issues of the day, Las Lanzas has slowly become a Plaza Ñuñoa institution. Las Lanzas offers simple fuente de soda (the Chilean version of diner) food. It’s the perfect spot to enjoy a cold Quimbra and Chilean mechada (slow-cooked beef) sandwich or sánguche of fried hake in one of the true local spots of the area — all on the cheap.

A sandwich stuffed with sliced beef, sautéed onions, tomato, and sauce on thick bread.
A stuffed sandwich at Las Lanzas.
Las Lanzas/Facebook

Siete Negronis

From a bar that glows in Campari red, esteemed bartenders Matías Peredo, Fernando Costa, Matías Supan, and Rodrigo Otaiza offer the promised seven Negronis, but those are just a gateway to their ingenious menu of cocktails highlighting the flavors of South America. There are also Italian recipes with Chilean twists like risotto croquettes, carpaccios, and tortellini with carne mechada (Chilean pot roast). Besides the beloved Florentine cocktail, mezcal margaritas, Speyside highballs, and Blue Hawaiians are mixed with a kind of reverence and sophistication that makes this a top bar in Santiago.

La Picantería Santiago

La Picanteria, the Peruvian export from acclaimed chef Héctor Solís, specializes in fresh fish sourced from the coasts of Chile, Peru, and Japan, with an ample showing of Santiago-specific dishes alongside the Peruvian staples. Choose from the open display of fresh fish and crustaceans kept center stage over ice, then pick your preparation from the chalkboard. While filets and other smaller dishes are available, the best way to experience La Picanteria is to order the whole fish in multiple preparations, from the unparalleled ceviche made from the belly to the crispy fried head drenched in a rich garlicky sauce. Top it off with an extra-large pisco sour for one of the best seafood experiences in the city. 

A plate of ceviche from La Picantería.
Ceviche.
La Picantería

99 Restaurante

The bistronomy trend is largely responsible for Santiago’s recent status as an up-and-coming food city, and 99 is the beating heart of the movement and where the city’s chefs go to geek out. The technique-driven, minimalist operation focuses on foraged and well-sourced local Chilean ingredients in a chill, bistro-like environment. Helmed by Kurt Schmidt (who trained at Noma and Boragó), dinner comes in six or nine courses that rotate daily, sometimes including the signature Mushroom Textures.

A chunk of cooked meat dusted with glittery sauce on a plate beside other avant-garde ingredients blurred in the background
One of the many courses in a meal at 99 Restaurante
99/Facebook

Ambrosia

When chef Carolina Bazán returned to Santiago after working in Gregory Marchand’s acclaimed Parisian bistro Frenchie, she created one of Santiago’s best French-inflected menus. The modern yet homey space, filled with plants, books, and knickknacks, is the perfect backdrop to Bazán’s market-driven riffs on French cuisine, which include pappardelle in lamb ragu and fall-off-the-bone duck confit with sweet potato puree. Ask for a table in the lush green courtyard under the crisscross of hanging bistro lights to get the full effect.

An outdoor patio overrun with plants, including a large plant wall and vines draped from above, with a few patio chairs and a library-like interior visible through large windows.
The patio at Ambrosia.
Ambrosia/Facebook

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