South American in Miami

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  • Clandestino Pub

    758 Washington Ave., Miami Beach South Beach

    305-397-8946

    Beer & tapas make a great pair. Just ask the regulars at this unassuming spot. As far as brew options, they've got somewhere in the neighborhood of 80 bottles of beer on the wall -- plus drafts, wine and cocktails to boot. Pair your fave fermented option with tapas, including quesadillas, tacos, nachos and hot dogs cooked in beer. It's a pleasing alternative to the usual South Beach scene.
    18 articles
  • Aromas del Peru

    1930 Ponce De Leon Blvd., Cora Gables Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-476-5885

  • Aromas del Perú

    5757 SW Eighth St. Westchester/West Miami

    786-347-0506

    Craving some great ceviche? Then stop by Aromas del Perú. This rustic 43-seat restaurant in Kendall has several varieties: fish, octopus, shrimp, and mixed. The original fish ceviche is expertly prepared, particularly the spicy version. Chicharrón de pescado is also excellent: lightly battered corvina, perfectly crisp on the outside and delicately moist on the inside, served with lime-seasoned onion sauce. If you prefer chicken, try the aji de gallina, shredded chicken covered in a creamy sauce and served with potato and rice. Aromas also has several beef dishes, including Peruvian favorite lomo saltado. If you're lucky, they'll have suspiro de lúcuma available when you pass by. This exquisite dessert combines tropical lúcuma fruit with condensed milk for a rich, very sweet treat.
  • Barytono Cafe

    2020 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood

    954-239-8237

    2 events
  • Bolivar Restaurant Bar

    841 Washington Ave., Miami Beach South Beach

    305-305-0801

    5 articles
  • Brasileiro

    801 Brickell Bay Dr. Downtown/Overtown

    786-502-3829

    6 articles
  • Brisa Bistro

    1601 Biscayne Blvd. Midtown/Wynwood/Design District

    305-714-3680

    This huge multilevel restaurant looks more like a corporate convention's dining facility than a bistro. But when the upper tier is filled with packed buffet tables on Sunday, the lack of intimacy pales in comparison to the phenomenal deal: The $29.95 all-you-can-eat brunch for two even includes all-you-can-drink bubbly. At nonbrunch times, it's best to stick to simple preparations, but some of these are superior, such as lunch's moist (and gigantic) Super Grouper sandwich or, for dinner, a plentiful Spanish antipasto platter that shines with high-quality raw ingredients.
    1 article
  • Budare Bistro

    1830 SW Third Ave. Brickell

    786-250-8078

    2 articles
  • Caballo Viejo Restaurant

    7921 Bird Rd. Westchester/West Miami

    305-264-8772

    Awarded by New Times for having the Best Arepas in 2009, this small, nondescript eatery is situated in a small strip mall. You'd never guess the goodies that await you inside. The place is loaded with indigenous crafts and trinkets, and the staff is friendly and helpful to newbies - someone will gladly explain any menu item you don't understand. Due to its size, Caballo Viejo isn't an ideal place for large groups, but it's an awesome place to dine with a few friends. Popular dishes include hallaca sola, a Venezuelan stew wrapped in a cornmeal pancake ($7.50), and hallaca con ensalada de gallina, an hallaca sola served with chicken salad ($9.50). If you're in the mood for something meaty, try the pabellon criollo ($10.95), shredded meat, white rice, black beans, and fried sweet plantains, or parrilla caballo viejo ($20.95), which includes grilled sirloin steak, pork chops, sausage, and blood sausage. Of course, the ever-so-popular arepitas blancas o mixtas ($2.95), mini cornmeal patties plain or stuffed, are a must-have - we did award name them Best Arepas, after all...
    1 article
  • Chifa Chinese Restaurant

    12590 N. Kendall Dr., Kendall South Dade

    305-271-3823

    Peruvian-Cantonese is exotica anywhere, and especially in this strip-mall setting. But the accommodating Chifa puts it all together. Asparagus (made of egg-drop, chicken, and asparagus) and fuchifu (egg-drop, chicken liver, and vegetables) soups are rich ways to begin. Lots of deep-fried appetizers, too -- pigeon, shrimp roll with almonds, and crab claws. Get duck prepared a dozen different ways, including Peking, taipa (a golden-brown sauce), or sweet-and-sour. Inka Kola and Peruvian beers to wash it all down. Lunch and dinner.
    3 articles
  • Driftwood Room

    1825 Collins Ave., Miami Beach South Beach

    305-503-5700

    The roasted eggplant dip at Driftwood Room, the new restaurant at the revamped Nautilus South Beach Hotel, arrives packed inside a charred zucchini. Diners have two options: Plunge the accompanying pita slices into the tangy eggplant, or cut right into the zucchini and enjoy two tasty vegetables in one bite, sans bread. Such was the intention of the eatery's executive chef, Alexandra "Alex" Guarnaschelli, who willingly admits she has a hard time eating just one piece of pita. The Iron Chef's goal at her second eatery (the first being Butter in Manhattan) is to highlight Florida's natural bounty of ingredients while ensuring the cuisine is in harmony with the hotel's beachy, Mediterranean vibe. Refreshingly, Driftwood Room does have the least celebrity vibe of the many restaurants helmed by TV-famous chefs in Miami Beach. The prices are also reasonable considering its location. However, if Guarnaschelli wants this spot to be truly embraced by locals, there's much work to be done. A good starting point would be less concentration on fussy cooking methods and de-emphasizing the use of lemon and vinegar — a recurring issue in many dishes.
    15 articles
  • El Chalan

    7971 Bird Rd. Westchester/West Miami

    305-266-0212

    Few diners can resist this casual, traditional Peruvian eatery's jalea mixta, a platter of lightly battered fried seafood and yuca garnished with a crunchy chili-and-lime-marinated onion-and-pepper topping that beautifully balances the dish's grease component. One order is a meal for two, but if four split it as a starter, they could sample some of the other classics that make Peruvian cuisine one of the world's most diverse. Cau cau (tripe and potato stew in smooth yellow ají amarillo sauce), an ancient Incan dish, might be for the adventuresome, but El Chalan's cau cau de mariscos, a house special substituting shellfish for the offal, is accessible to all.
    1 article
  • El Pollon Grill

    13762 N. Kendall Dr. West Kendall

    305-388-9959

    Although the menu boasts a variety of Peruvian dishes, the star at El Pollon Grill is the chicken. Prepared rotisserie-style, it's juicy and tender with a crisp brown skin. Order it with a side of French fries and salsa huancaína or ají. The first is a creamy cheese sauce usually served on sliced baked potatoes, and the second is a purée of spicy peppers. Both rival ketchup as a perfect dip, at least that's what any native will tell you. While you're there, pick up some South American candies or one of El Pollon's many desserts, such as arroz con leche, crema volteada (flan), or picarones (deep-fried dough served with a special syrup). You can even order an Inca Kola to complete the authentic Peruvian-grill experience. Read more about El Pollon Grill.
    1 article
  • Francesco Restaurant

    325 Alcazar Ave. Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-446-1600

    This northern outpost of two-decades-old Peruvian restaurant El Francesco, renowned as one of Lima's top seafood spots, fills a niche -- change "niche" to "humongous hole" -- left gaping by Miami's other Peruvian eateries, tasty though the food at some of these luncheonette-looking places may be. Namely it's upscale. The food's a dress-up version of usual Miami Peruvian fare, too, dramatically magnifying all the characteristic-of-the-country Asian and European fusion elements that make most chefs feel Peru's cuisine is the most interesting in Latin America. A must is the ceviche or tiradito (ceviche sans onion) sampler, a choice of fish or shellfish with all four of Francesco's sauces: traditional citrus marinade, garnished with Peruvian corn; mild aji amarillo, Peru's distinctive yellow pepper; slightly hotter, complex rocoto; and a creamy house vinaigrette. Otherwise, avoid all dishes described as "gratin" and diners can be sure of a uniquely enjoyable meal.Read our full review.
    4 articles
  • GKB Wynwood

    218 NW 25th St. Midtown/Wynwood/Design District

    786-477-5151

    Peruvian restaurant GK Bistronomie is a play on the words "bistro" and "gastronomy." Chef/partner Rafael Perez previously owned four restaurants in Ecuador, one of which, Zazu, in Quito, earned a place among the top 300 restaurants in the world by Relais & Châteaux. Perez describes GKB's menu as globally influenced Peruvian cuisine. One highlight is the anticuchos ($14). Generous pieces of perfectly cooked Black Angus skirt steak are placed on a bed of creamy huancaína sauce — a Peruvian blend of cheese, ají amarillo pepper, saltines, milk, and garlic. The deliciously spicy huancaína comes spooned over boiled potatoes and flecked with a chimichurri sauce and cilantro. It's a comforting yet dynamic dish that delivers with each bite. The anticuchos are an example of Perez's less nuanced and more familiar dishes and suggest the chef does best when he shows some restraint and concentrates on quality ingredients.
    9 articles
  • Graziano's

    394 Giralda Ave. Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-774-3599

    At this comfortable and inviting Argentine steak house, nothing succeeds like excess, as in enormous portions of hugely flavorful, precisely cooked beef that cost a fraction of what they would at your typical American-style meatery. An encyclopedic wine list and suave, professional service add to the enjoyment of meats cooked on the grill or the turntablelike asador, whether a long slab of immensely flavorful skirt steak or a mixed grill of deeply savory sausages, sweetbreads, short ribs, and flap meat (like hangar steak). Finish with balcarce, a sexy sort of Argentine tiramisu with sponge cake, dulce de leche, coconut, and more.
    4 articles
  • Graziano's

    5993 W. 16th Ave. Hialeah

    305-819-7461

  • Jattö

    223 NW 23rd St. Midtown/Wynwood/Design District

    305-982-8960

    Henry Hané's Jattö is one of the most interesting restaurants in Wynwood. The restaurant cites the cuisines of Peru, Colombia, and Spain as influences, but Hané and chef Aleric "AJ" Constantin have constructed a menu that offers comfort food like suckling pig BBQ tips and patatas bravas with a chef-driven touch. The cocktail menu is as interesting, with plays on favorites like a rum negroni with a banana vermouth wash. The best way to dine is at the patio bar, grazing on multiple dishes and cocktails while taking in a balmy Miami evening.
    1 article
  • KokoRiko

    8322 S. Dixie Highway, South Miami Coral Gables/S. Miami

    305-669-4944

    KokoRiko ain't McDonald's, Pizza Hut, or Starbucks. It is, more or less, a Colombian KFC. The space is brightly lit, and the small, simple menu offers family meals. Choices include quarter-chicken platters (fried or rotisserie white or dark meat or chicken tenders) with a side of white rice and one of many sides (ranging from chili, guacamole, and yuca to French fries) for $4.99 to $5.99; one sandwich (fried or grilled chicken in a wrap or on a hoagie for $4.99); and three salads (caesar, garden, or the Koko, which appears to be nothing but sprouts). Despite its mundane look, though, the food is fresh and surprisingly tasty for the price. Which might be why KokoRiko has been Colombia's largest fast-food chain since 1969. Someday it might be the largest in Miami.
    1 article
  • La Granja

    13822 SW 56th St., West Dade West Kendall

    305-383-5055

    No animal has suffered more abuse at the hands of corporate and incompetent amateur cooks than the chicken. La Granja, though, gives this wildly popular, often-abused bird the respect it's due, carefully roasting it until the skin turns bronze and crispy and the meat tender and juicy. The Kendall outpost of this chain of Peruvian-style fast food eateries also does equally flavorful grilled steak and pork, sliced thin and served with a choice of two sides, and as many as you can handle of the wickedly delicious salsas on display at twin salsa bars. Consider getting your meal to go, as a pair of blaring TVs and prison yard-bright lights make dining in somewhat less than restful.
    2 articles
  • La Mar by Gastón Acurio

    500 Brickell Key Dr. Brickell

    305-913-8358

    Peruvian culinary ambassador Gastón Acurio’s Miami outpost at the chic Mandarin Oriental on Brickell Key merges the humble cevicherías of Lima with the elegance of fine dining and the bold flavors of Nikkei cuisine. Orchestrated by Acurio protégé Diego Oka, who has honed his career at restaurants around the globe, the menu elevates Peruvian classics — such as the cold casseroles known as causas and the grilled, skewered meats (anticuchos) — to heights of refinement that make even the most squeamish first-timers swoon.
    63 articles
  • La Moon Restaurant

    97 SW Eighth St. Little Havana

    305-860-6209

    It's 3 o'clock Saturday morning, and you've been out drinking around Brickell. There's a good chance you'll be among the other hungry partygoers who flood this small restaurant for a hangover-curing, Colombian-style fast-food fix. But fast food at 3 a.m. is not the only reason people flock here. Weekdays at lunchtime, the humble spot is packed with execs and others in search of homey Colombian dishes. If you dare, try the SuperMoon perro — a hot dog topped with six sauces, crushed potato chips, and a quail egg — which was featured on the Travel Channel's Man vs. Food. The Moon burger and chicken burger are good choices too. For reasonably priced Colombian fare that tastes home-cooked, La Moon fits the bill.Read more.
    10 articles
  • La Patagonia Argentina

    4802 NW 7th St. Doral

    305-443-1668

    Discreetly tucked away in a Miami strip mall, La Patagonia Argentina offers great Argentine fare and top service at reasonable prices. Popular dishes include entraña ($15.95), a grilled skirt steak served with mixed greens; pollo Santa Cruz ($11.95), chicken stuffed with spinach in a creamy mozzarella sauce served with butter-herb potatoes; and ravioles de espinaca ($10.75), spinach and mushroom ravioli tossed in a Gorgonzola cream sauce. The restaurant treats customers well. Owners Hector Verdun and Carlos Castiglia, longtime friends from Argentina, often serve the food, which comes out quickly. The décor is classy and clean: Pictures of Argentina line the walls of an amber-colored room, where tables are laid out neatly. La Patagonia Argentina is a favorite among local businessmen, so reserve ahead for lunch.
    1 article
  • Las Delicias Peruanas

    196 NW 36th St. Midtown/Wynwood/Design District

    305-576-7756

    Foodies the world over are well aware that, quite often, no-frills = best food. Such is the case with Las Delicias Peruanas. Set in Wynwood with a nondescript gray exterior, this little spot serves up some of Miami's best Peruvian cuisine and seafood favorites. From ceviches of fish, shrimp, octopus, mixed shellfish and more to papas a la huancaina (potatoes with cheese sauce) and the roasted corn nuggets that make every Peruvian meal - the delicious eats will soon make you forget your sparse surroundings.
    2 articles
  • Latin American Cafeteria

    9608 SW 72nd St., Kendale Lakes East Kendall/Pinecrest

    305-448-6809

    Housed in an old Arby's with a huge U-shape counter, this is the chain's original outlet, and here it perfectly combines quantity and quality. Your choices are varied no matter if you're sitting at the counter, the outside dining area, or just picking up something at the ventanita. Hams hang overhead, waiting to become part of the restaurant's standard Cuban sandwich: pork, Swiss cheese, ham, and pickle. At $4.50 it's more than a mouthful. A breaded steak so big it hangs over the platter? It's here. An assortment of sandwiches alongside full meals of fish, beef, and chicken prepared numerous ways? Here. The staff is made up of seasoned pros; if you're a regular, they'll start your order the minute they see you walk in. And the place is known for pouring thick, creamy milkshakes in flavors ranging from vanilla to mamey.
    5 articles
  • Lo de Lea

    7001 Biscayne Blvd. Miami Shores/Biscayne Park

    305-456-3218

    There are more than a few impressive Argentinian options in Miami, but not all are run with friendly service, local delivery and reasonable prices, and you've got yourself a winner. We haven't even mentioned their mouthwatering, meaty menu, featuring items like grilled half-chicken with mash and escarole, crispy salmon with bok choy or orecchiette with broccoli rabe, chili, and Argentine sausage. There are even vegetarian friendly-options for the herbivorous set. So when you can't make it all the way to Argentina, visiting Lo de Lea on Biscayne is the next best thing.
    2 articles
  • Loba

    7420 Biscayne Blvd. Miami Shores/Biscayne Park

    786-536-6692

    Literary accents can be seen (and read) all over the place at Loba. For instance, a vegetarian entrée featuring farro piccolo, succotash, radishes, squash blossoms, eggs, and zucchini is cleverly called "Orwell’s Dystopia." And checks are delivered inside novels. Such quirky touches give the 50-seat eatery a distinct vibe, and the Latin- and Southern-influenced cuisine has a voice of its own too. Loba's burger is a hefty main for one person. Nestled into a sliced house bun is a patty made with premium beef and brisket from Larry Kline Wholesale Meats in Deerfield Beach, along with bacon, a fried egg, Havarti cheese, and onion marmalade. Though messy, the beef is incredibly juicy, and the gooey egg is a welcome addition.Read our full review.
    9 articles
  • Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann

    3201 Collins Ave., Miami Beach Mid/North Beach

    786-655-5610

    Within the luxurious confines of the Faena Hotel, orange flames lick a multifunctional grill designed and built in Texas. Oak and charcoal fuel the plancha, parrilla, and smoker. It's also the source of scalding ash for rescoldo, a process in which vegetables are gently roasted in the fire's refuse. There's also an open pit where cooks string up whole chickens that bob to and fro. It's a method that Argentina's favorite cocinero, Francis Mallmann, often deploys while cooking in remote parts of Argentina or Uruguay's rolling hills. But there's no such rustic outdoor fire pit at Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann. Instead, hulking steaks, whole chickens, and blistering cast-iron pans bearing charred vegetables whip around a crimson-and-cheetah-print room. And despite the fashionable scene, the food is superbly simple. Meat comes adorned with little more than a punch of chimichurri; sides receive only a splash of olive oil. Simpler is often better, and in this case, it's stunning. Insider tip: Be sure to visit on the weekends, when the cooks break out rope and steel to tie heaps of beef, chicken, and vegetables that are then slow-roasted on a roaring fire. Who knows? You might just find Argentine poet/gaucho/chef Mallmann, complete with a beret and a glass of Malbec, working the flame.
    15 articles
  • Los Perros

    13313 SW 42nd St. West Kendall

    305-229-9906

    This Colombian hole in the wall knows that in the middle of the night, when the alcohol has run dry or the munchies kick in, people don't mind paying South Beach prices for a hot dog, potatoes, and a Coke, even if they are in West Dade. That's not to say Los Perros doesn't earn its loot. It really is one helluva a hot dog. A superperro, as they are called, comes with the works, plus some Colombian condiments that bring new meaning to the word "ingenuity." Pineapples on a footlong — who'da thunk it? They also serve salchipapas, which are fried potatoes and sausage covered in pink sauce (ketchup and mayonnaise), but what really drives the locals to this tiny place in an obscure shopping center is the music and the flat-panel TVs that are always blaring good beats and hot bods.
    1 article
  • Los Perros

    8410 W. Flagler St. Westchester/West Miami

    305-953-6845

    2 articles
  • Los Perros Aqui

    10855 SW 72nd St. East Kendall/Pinecrest

    305-630-9063

    After a night of drunken debauchery at your club of choice, greasy eats are the only thing standing between you and an epic hangover. So give your bod something to soak up the booze, and bite into a dog at Los Perros Aqui. This Colombian fast food joint serves up high-piled hot dogs, hefty burgers, arepas and other Latin eats that'll give you at least a little bit of your mojo back. You'll be blown away at how much these hot dogs can hold. From the perro reforzado (shredded chicken, ham, cheese, guacamole, turnip pickles $5.35) to the perro americano (cabbage, sauerkraut, scallions, potato chips and salsas $6.35) - putting one away is a challenge worthy of any sloppy glutton. Or, go for the completa burger (8 oz beef, shredded chicken, lettuce, tomato, pickled turnip and sauces). Pair it with some papas fritas ($2.85) and you've got hangover prevention at its best. Did we mention they deliver?
    1 article
  • Macita's Restaurant & Bakery

    18503 S. Dixie Highway Cutler Bay/Palmetto Bay

    305-259-0404

    While flashier Colombian eateries abound -- especially the fast-food style joints keeping drunks happily munching on hot dogs -- the truly authentic, homey spots are hard to find. That's why Colombians and fans of Latin cuisine in general make the trek south to Macita's, on the southern end of South Dixie Highway in Cutler Bay. The days start early here: 7:30 a.m. every day except Sunday, when the place opens at 8 a.m. For the first few hours, it functions mostly as a take-out bakery and a spot for a quick, dirt-cheap breakfast. A $3.59 special served until 11:30 a.m., for example, gives you two eggs fried or scrambled, with bacon, sausage, coffee, and Cuban toast with jam (okay, that's the one inauthentic nod to its non-Colombian clientele). Still, for those missing their home country's eye-openers, there are more homestyle dishes here as well, like calentado with blood sausage ($5.25) or a Colombian-style pork tamal ($5). Dinner fare is heartier, but no less casual -- silverware is plastic and set down in a baggie, and waitresses are sweet, but sometimes unhurried. Never mind that, though, because you can likely afford to savor multiple courses. Standout starters include Colombian-style fried potatoes ($3) and arepas, stacks of sweet corn tortillas sandwiched with house-made white cheese ($1.75). For mains, choose from mountainous portions of protein, including a Colombian sampler platter ($9.45), a mixed grill ($17.99), or a whole fried snapper ($15.99). Those all come with white rice, your choice of fried or sweet plantains, and a choice of beans or salad. Pick the beans, though, which are pink and simmered with potatoes, peppers, and mystery spices that draw fans back to Macita's over and over.
    1 article