Wonderland Café – Santiago

Wonderland Café – Santiago

Wonderland Cafe is a whimsical little café that has earned the top spot for cafés in this neighborhood. Decorated in a quirky fashion with an Alice in Wonderland theme. The coffee is high-quality, prepared by baristas. The food menu is short but full of interesting items. A bit pricey for such a low-profile café.

Millefleur – Santiago

Millefleur – Santiago

Millefleur is a small café cum bistro with a lot of French personality, offering fresh-baked bread and pastries, a range of breakfast items, sandwiches, salads and a few French classic mains like a Beouf Bourguignon and Coque au Vin. The décor is stylish. The menu creative and generally well-executed. Prices are a bit steep but no more than most of the restaurants in that affluent section of Vitacura.

Café Black Mamba – Santiago

Café Black Mamba – Santiago

Café Black Mamba is a specialty coffee spot that doubles as a comfy little restaurant with great sandwiches and salads to compliment they array of craft breads and pastries. With a consumer aggregate rating of 4.7 stars it’s Santiago’s most popular café.

Rubaiyat Steakhouse – Santiago

Rubaiyat Steakhouse – Santiago

Rubaiyat Santiago is the Santiago location of the acclaimed international steakhouse chain, Rubaiyat – Cabañas las Lilas. At Rubaiyat Santiago, you’ll find ribeyes and strip steaks imported from famed beef producers, Cabañas las Lilas in Argentina, and other high-quality cuts imported from Brazil, firewood-grilled to perfection. Top-notch service and slightly contemporary, but warm steakhouse décor make Rubaiyat one of the highest rated steakhouses in Santiago.

Sublime – Santiago

Sublime – Santiago

Sublime, with a wide assortment of traditional sandwiches done in non-traditional ways in a pleasant environment and all at a reasonable price, is one of several new sandwich shops in Vitacura worth a visit. Our favorite? The pork rib-meat (costillar) sandwich with basic toppings.

La Lucha – Santiago

La Lucha – Santiago

La Lucha brings the sandwiches that made Lima’s sangucherías famous to local shopping malls in Santiago. The spicy meat fillings are delicious, but Santiaguinos that prefer mounds of condiments piled on top of their sandwiches may think the sandwiches at La Lucha lack the altitude they desire.

Fuente Alemana – Santiago

Fuente Alemana – Santiago

Fuente Alemana is the one place every Santiaguino will tell you is a “must go” with the city’s best sandwiches. We disagree. Once you strip away the cultural bias, the sandwiches are grossly excessive in size, but short on quality. There is no décor and the service is chaotic and substandard. There are some really good sandwich shops in Santiago. But Fuente Alemana isn’t on that list.

La Cabrera – Santiago

La Cabrera – Santiago

La Cabrera offers high-quality beef and expertly grilled steaks and meat appetizers in an atmosphere designed to mimick an Argentine farmhouse but we find the ambience a bit below the prices. The lack of variety in the menu is another drawback. Good service and execution by the “parilleros” is a compensating factor.

Tanta – Providencia Costanera Centre

Tanta – Providencia Costanera Centre

Although Tanta’s shopping-mall chain-restaurant ambience leaves it a bit soulless, the food and service are consistently good, making it perhaps the best choice in Santiago for a reasonably priced sampling of a host of Peruvian classics.

Sublime – Santiago

Sublime – Vitacura

Sublime, with a wide assortment of traditional sandwiches done in non-traditional ways in a pleasant environment and all at a reasonable price, is one of several new sandwich shops in Vitacura worth a visit. Our favorite? The pork rib-meat (costillar) sandwich with basic toppings.

Senz Sushi & Nikkei – Providencia

Senz Sushi & Nikkei – Providencia

Senz Sushi & Nikkei offers Peru’s variation on Japanese cuisine, Nikkei, in locations in or adjacent to the city’s most prominent shopping malls. The sushi and sashimi are good. Service has always been acceptable, but we’ve seen complaints of slow service in consumer reviews. Prices are bit steep compared to other sushi restaurants in the neighborhood.

La Lucha – Santiago

La Lucha – Providencia

La Lucha brings the sandwiches that made Lima’s sangucherías famous to local shopping malls in Santiago. The spicy meat fillings are delicious, but Santiaguinos that prefer mounds of condiments piled on top of their sandwiches may think the sandwiches at La Lucha lack the altitude they desire.

Fuente Mardoqueo – El Bosque

Fuente Mardoqueo – El Bosque

Fuente Mardoqueo serves up sandwiches that are big. But big isn’t always better. Fuente Mardoqueo is proof of that. The sandwiches are almost indistinguishable from those at competitor Fuente Alemana. One plus is you won’t likely have to arm-wrestle anyone for a seat like you do at the excessively over-hyped Fuente Alemana.

Elkika Ilmenau – Providencia

Elkika Ilmenau is one of a handful of restaurants Santiago that specialize in serving the city’s famed “completo” (a hot dog on steroids) and the four sandwiches that define Chile’s culinary identity, the Churrasco, the Lomito, the Chacarera, and the Barros Luco. This is a good spot for watching soccer matches on the big screen TVs while drinking cheap beer and eating food only drunks could love, which makes the place perfect for 75% of the male population.

Eladio – Providencia

Eladio – Providencia

Eladio. It’s not a restaurant. It’s a tribute to what Chile and Santiago were before McDonald’s and Pizza Hut came to town. It’s the Sunday afternoon sojourn after church in Santiago. Good service and straightforward food that’s familiar keep Santiaguinos coming back week after week. This is family dining in Santiago.

Danés – Vitacura

Danés – Vitacura

Danés is a good, comfortable neighborhood restaurant with better than acceptable service. And although the sandwiches and burgers are bit boring, the hot dogs deserve praise, as do the salads.

Panchita – Santiago

Panchita – Santiago

With a unique well-executed menu, friendly and attentive service and a warm and inviting ambiance that’s equally suited to families, couples and groups, Panchita is the city’s best “non-Nikkei” Peruvian dining experience. But the best, in this case, comes at a cost. Panchita is priced higher than many of the city’s best upscale restaurants.

Goeman – Providencia

For as close to authentic Japanese cuisine as you’ll find in Santiago, served by a friendly and informative crew of waiters in humble and unpretentious surroundings Goeman is the best, if not the only choice in Santiago.

La Sanguchera – Santiago

La Sanguchera – Santiago

La Sanguchera, with locations in or near the food courts of several popular shopping malls, sandwiches with fresh ingredients. Seating is right in the frenetic midst of hundreds of mall guests walking from the escalator to the mall food-court. But the sandwiches are tasty and the service was better than acceptable.

Fuente Alemana – Providencia

Fuente Alemana – Providencia

Fuente Alemana is the one place every Santiaguino will tell you is a “must go” with the city’s best sandwiches. We disagree. Once you strip away the cultural bias, the sandwiches are grossly excessive in size, but short on quality. There is no décor and the service is chaotic and substandard. There are some really good sandwich shops in Santiago. But Fuente Alemana isn’t on that list.

Chipe Libre – Santiago

Chipe Libre – Santiago

Chipe Libre is Santiago’s top gastropub. The specialty of the house is pisco and they serve up more than 80 different varieties from both Chile and Peru. Combine the city’s best pisco sours with a menu of well-executed Peruvian classics and you have winning formula.

Castillo Forestal – Santiago

Castillo Forestal – Santiago

Castillo Forestal serves authentic French cuisine. Rare in Latin America. Minor errors of execution and a somewhat lacking ambience in the main dining area keep Castillo Forestal from living up to its potential. Still, a worth choice, especially at breakfast and lunch.

Goemon – Santiago

Goemon – Santiago

For as close to authentic Japanese cuisine as you’ll find in Santiago, served by a friendly and informative crew of waiters in humble and unpretentious surroundings Goeman is the best, if not the only choice in Santiago.

La Mar – Santiago

La Mar – Santiago

Gastón Acurio’s La Mar is the best restaurant in Buenos Aires to experience a well-rounded dose of Peruvian cuisine with a heavy Nikkei personality. Good service execution of a classic Peruvian menu with all the dishes Acurio made famous.

Ciudad Vieja – Bellavista

At Ciudad Vieja, order the Gran Pilón on pan amasado and you’ll get not one, but two good-sized cheeseburger that are juicy with exotic toppings.

Castillo Forestal – Bellas Artes

Castillo Forestal is the best choice in the city for classic French cuisine in a hybrid-casual ambiance that falls just short of upscale. The expertly executed menu reads like the encyclopedia of French cuisine. Service is commendable and the price are better than reasonable.

Sport Café – Las Condes

Sport Café, an American-style sports-bar that primarily shows Latin American and European soccer games and tennis matches, offers average food and average service.

Hard Rock Cafe – Costanera Center

For a selfie photo next to a guitar signed by Lenny Kravitz that he probably never played, Hard Rock Café is your only choice. For good food there are much better options up the escalator. We tell you why in this less-than-favorable review.

Vegan Bunker – Barrio Italia

Vegan Bunker is a a superb option for vegans and vegetarians. Unique and interesting menu items. Wide array of vegan sandwiches, salads and desserts.

Confitería Torres – Las Condes

Confitería Torres, downtown, transports diners back to the end of the 19th century in a setting where it wouldn’t be uncommon to see President Barros Luco eating his favorite sandwich at the next table. The Las Condes location has a unique French bistro ambience that’s great for lounging and watching passersby. You won’t find a burger on the menu. That’s the beauty of the Confitería Torres!

Brunapoli – Vitacura

Brunapoli is one of only a handful of moderately priced restaurants on Nueva Constanera, Vitacura’s restaurant row. And it’s the only one offering great pizza and pasta in a trendy ambiance with a high-energy vibe.

Original Green Roasters – Providencia

Original Coffee Roasters is a casual gourmet restaurant posing as a specialty coffee-shop. Yes. The coffee’s great and the ambiance pleasant. But it’s the food that’s the real star.

Ritual Coffee Culture – Apoquindo

Ultra-small, paper-cup only specialty café with seating limited to about six tables on the sidewalk on an uncovered terrace. No indoor-seating. No covered seating. Beware of birds overhead. About as good as coffee can be in paper-cup a la Starbucks. My cappuccino was slightly bitter, either bad coffee or over-extracted. Loose, bubbly foam.

Domani Pizzería – Providencia

Domani Pizzeria is the place to go for pizzas that are the real deal in a non-pretentious and high-energy ambiance. Reasonable prices, too.

Domani Pizzería – Santiago

Domani Pizzería – Santiago

Domani Pizzeria is the place to go for pizzas that are the real deal in a non-pretentious and high-energy ambiance. Reasonable prices, too.

Brunapoli – Santiago

Brunapoli – Santiago

Brunapoli is one of only a handful of moderately priced restaurants on Nueva Constanera, Vitacura’s restaurant row. And it’s the only one offering great pizza and pasta in a trendy ambiance with a high-energy vibe.

Confitería Torres – Santiago

Confitería Torres – Santiago

Confitería Torres, downtown, transports diners back to the end of the 19th century in a setting where it wouldn’t be uncommon to see President Barros Luco eating his favorite sandwich at the next table. The Las Condes location has a unique French bistro ambience that’s great for lounging and watching passersby. You won’t find a burger on the menu. That’s the beauty of the Confitería Torres!

Eladio – Providencia

Eladio – Santiago

Eladio. It’s not a restaurant. It’s a tribute to what Chile and Santiago were before McDonald’s and Pizza Hut came to town. It’s the Sunday afternoon sojourn after church in Santiago. Good service and straightforward food that’s familiar keep Santiaguinos coming back week after week. This is family dining in Santiago.

Bar Liguria – Santiago

Bar Liguria – Santiago

Bar Liguria is, was and will always be, the quintessential Santiaguino upscale-cantina. Casual but sophisticated. Traditional but trendy and “in vogue”. Almost always good food and good service by a friendly staff.

Hard Rock Cafe – Santiago

Hard Rock Cafe – Santiago

For a selfie photo next to a guitar signed by Lenny Kravitz that he probably never played, Hard Rock Café is your only choice. For good food there are much better options up the escalator. We tell you why in this less-than-favorable review.

Sport Café – Santiago

Sport Café – Santiago

Sport Café, an American-style sports-bar that primarily shows Latin American and European soccer games and tennis matches, offers average food and average service.

Chilis – Santiago

Chilis – Santiago

Chili’s in Santiago, Chile. Has a nice rhythm doesn’t it? Sounds better than the food tastes. The only thing worse than the food is the service and the competency of the guys in management.

Kunstmann Kneipe – Santiago

Kunstmann Kneipe – Santiago

A clean, modern take on a German kneipe (pub) with an interesting and well-executed menu. Bar food usually loses something in the translation. But not a Kunstmann Kneipe. It’s good beer and good food!

Jeronimo – Santiago

Jeronimo – Santiago

A well executed menu full of international comfort food that takes the diner on a world tour, from Asia to Italy, from Peru to Mexico. Jeronimo is the new in-vogue gastropub, attracting Santiago’s beautiful people. But exorbitant prices and sketchy service leave us wondering why.

Vendetta – Santiago

Vendetta – Santiago

Vendetta is a modern, trendy take on an Italian trattoria offering a short menu of creative and well-executed Italian dishes. Décor, execution of the menu and service were all impressively good on a recent visit.

El Ranchero – Santiago

El Ranchero – Santiago

El Ranchero delivers remarkably authentic Mexican cuisine, without adaptation to please the local palettes, in a pleasant ambience that says “Mexico”. Reasonable prices for big portions, too.

Envy-Taco – Santiago

Envy-Taco – Santiago

Envy-Taco dishes out nothing but tacos from a converted trailer at the Merkado Bilbao. The menu may be limited, but the flavors shout “Mexico”.

Romaria – Santiago

Romaria – Santiago

Great pizza, pasta and salads with super-fresh, high-quality ingredients. Small pleasant décor. Pet friendly. Perhaps the best pizza in town. Very popular, thus very busy. At peak hours expect a wait for table.

Jewel of India – Santiago

Jewel of India – Santiago

Jewel of India is the best choice in Santiago west of Tobalaba for Indian Cuisine, with a well-executed menu full of Indian cuisine classics, with competent service and reasonable prices.

Matsuri – Santiago

Matsuri – Santiago

Matsuri offers a touristy rendition of Japanese cuisine that needs a bit more heart and soul. Not a bad restaurant. Better than most in Santiago. But still way short of being a great dining experience.

Ocean Pacific’s – Santiago

Ocean Pacific’s – Santiago

Ocean Pacific’s is a popular seafood restaurant with three locations in Santiago. The décor is impressive, with lots of rare marine and naval artifacts lining the walls. The food and service are average at best, despite some of the highest prices we’ve seen on a menu in Santiago.

Mestizo – Santiago

Mestizo – Santiago

Notwithstanding the occasional lack of attention at the table by the waiters, a menu with this caliber of ingredients that’s aptly executed in such a memorable ambience makes Mestizo one of the top upscale dining choices in the city.

The Singular – Santiago

The Singular – Santiago

The Singular Restaurant offers an interesting and well-executed menu with a wide range of regionally harvested ingredients. Service is attentive and friendly. Ambiance is a bit austere.

Baco – Santiago

Baco – Santiago

Baco is comfortable and laid back. At the same time, slightly classy. Rides the fence between casual and upscale casual. Offers French country cuisine that’s typically well-executed. Friendly, attentive service. Expansive wine list.

Tea Connection – Santiago

Tea Connection – Santiago

Tea Connection, despite sometimes sketchy service, garners high scores for ambience, food and creativity. Slightly pricey, but not unusually so for a restaurant in El Golf.

Casaluz – Santiago

Casaluz – Santiago

Casaluz, in Barrio Italia, is wearing silk undergarments below a tattered overcoat. It’s the closest thing to gourmet in Barrio Italia. Good food, service and ambience. And good prices, too.

Don Carlos – Santiago

Don Carlos – Santiago

Don Carlos takes locally produced steaks, uses the Argentine names of the cuts of beef on the menu, and calls itself an Argentine steakhouse. The most Argentine thing about this restaurant is the lack of creative salads and side dishes. Everything about the experience is just barely better than average.

Happening – Santiago

Happening – Santiago

Happening is the Santiago steakhouse born in Argentina, bred in Chile, that’s married to a gringa. It’s the perfect mix of here, there, then and now.

Carnal Prime – Santiago

Carnal Prime – Santiago

Carnal Prime, new to Santiago, but who has a proven track record in Lima, offers a unique infra-red grilling method and high-quality imported beef. Good service too. Order a few oysters on the half shell from the raw bar, followed by a thick, juicy ribeye for the consummate dining experience.