Best Peruvian Restaurants in Lima 2026
By Diego Marín · Published · Updated
The "Diversity of Maize" course at Central arrives third on the Mater tasting menu: five plates of corn from five different altitudes in Peru, each cooked in the technique the kitchen developed for that specific elevation. The dish is the reason Central became the first South American restaurant to win The World's 50 Best #1 in 2023, and it is the cleanest single argument for why Lima's fine dining has overtaken every other Latin American capital. The nine rooms below cover from that S/. 1,200 tasting at Central to the S/. 60 ceviche at Chez Wong. Book the night you want.
Nine Peruvian Restaurants Worth the Flight
Virgilio Martínez opened Central with Pía León in 2009 and moved it to Barranco in 2018. The menu is structured by altitude rather than by season — courses arrive from the coastal Pacific (-20m) up to the high Andes (4,200m) over roughly four hours. The "Diversity of Maize" course at altitude 2,000m is the test dish; five different corn varieties served on a single plate, each cooked in the technique the kitchen developed for that specific elevation. The Mater Iniciativa research lab on the floor above sources ingredients none of Central's competitors can access.
Mitsuharu Tsumura cooked at Tsukiji Tama in Tokyo for five years before returning to Lima and opening Maido in 2009. The Nikkei Experience tasting menu is the most-imitated tasting menu in Latin America — fourteen courses tracing the Japanese-Peruvian migration story, from the 1899 first arrivals to the present generation. The 50-hour braised Amazonian beef rib with house-made ramen is the recurring landmark course; the leche de tigre tiradito with nikkei vinaigrette is the dish that has become the global Nikkei shorthand. Service is the warmest in Miraflores.
Pía León opened Kjolle in 2018 in the same Casa Tupac building as Central, where she had cooked alongside Virgilio Martínez for nearly a decade. The format is deliberately lighter than Central — twelve courses, vegetable-led, with the cushuro (a high-altitude freshwater algae that looks like green pearls) course as the recurring signature. The dining room is one floor above Central, glass-walled, and brighter; lunch is the better booking specifically for the daylight.
Gastón Acurio opened the original Astrid y Gastón in Miraflores in 1994 and relocated the flagship to the 17th-century Casa Moreyra in San Isidro in 2014. The cuy pekinés — guinea pig prepared in the Peking-duck style, with thin pancakes and a hoisin-rocoto sauce — is the test dish, and the kitchen's most-photographed course. Casa Moreyra itself is the booking case: a colonial mansion with five dining spaces, a working kitchen-garden, and an in-house bakery, all open to diners between courses.
Jaime Pesaque cooked at Ferran Adrià's elBulli during the 2008 season and at Daniel Boulud's New York rooms before returning to Lima to open Mayta in 2008. The menu is region-driven rather than altitude-driven (the Central differentiator): coast, sierra, and Amazon represented as distinct sections of the tasting menu. The leche de tigre with high-altitude trout is the most-refined plate of raw fish on this list; the rocoto-cured sea bream is the dish other chefs ask Pesaque about.
Rafael Osterling worked the Italian-Mediterranean side of Lima's fine dining before Mediterranean-Peruvian fusion became a defined register. The room is on Calle San Martín and reads more like a Milanese trattoria than a Peruvian tasting room: white-tablecloth, small tables, a wine list heavy on Italian whites, and a menu that moves between tuna tartare with olive-oil ice cream and pasta with ají-de-gallina sauce without theatrical signposting. The case for booking Rafael is the antidote to the high-concept tasting evening.
José del Castillo opened Isolina in 2014 to serve the criolla home-cooking he grew up on — slow-braised cabrito, arroz con pato simmered with cilantro until the rice turns dark green, and the kind of pasta-with-pesto-from-Genoa that Lima's Italian-Peruvian families still cook on Sundays. Portions are family-sized and built for sharing; the Pisco list is the most-serious in Barranco. Isolina is the booking for the evening after Central — a different and more honest Lima.
Javier Wong has cut every ceviche at this restaurant himself since 1981. Lunch only, six tables, no menu, no reservations after 13:00. The dish is a single flounder broken down at the table and dressed with leche de tigre that Wong assembles to suit the fish that morning. There is no second fish; if you do not want flounder ceviche, you do not eat at Chez Wong. The restaurant is in La Victoria, not on the tourist map, and the cab fare from Miraflores is fifteen minutes.
Pedro Miguel Schiaffino spent fifteen years building supply chains from Lima out to the Amazon basin — a logistical project that nobody else in Peruvian fine dining had attempted at that scale. Amaz is the dining-room expression of that work. The paiche course (a freshwater Amazonian fish that grows to three metres) is the headline; the juanes (banana-leaf-wrapped rice and chicken from the Loreto tradition) are the test dish for diners new to Amazonian cooking. The cocktail programme leans on cocona and camu camu fruit and is the strongest non-pisco bar in Miraflores.
How to Pick the Right Lima Restaurant for Your Trip
If you have only one night in Lima, book Central — three months ahead, lunch or dinner, the Mater tasting. If you have two nights, add Maido. If you have three, add Kjolle. The fourth night belongs to Isolina or Chez Wong, depending on whether you want family-portion criolla or solo-chef ceviche.
Miraflores for hotel-adjacent fine dining and the easiest cab fares (Maido, Mayta, Rafael, Amaz). Barranco for the World's 50 Best flagships (Central and Kjolle, both in Casa Tupac). San Isidro for Astrid y Gastón and the historical/colonial register. La Victoria specifically for Chez Wong; nowhere else, and not after dark.
Lima's coastal cevicherias are lunch-only by tradition (Chez Wong, the classic La Mar locations); the fish is freshest before mid-afternoon. The tasting menus run dinner; Central, Maido, Kjolle, and Astrid y Gastón also serve lunch at the same price, which is the better-value booking for jet-lagged first-timers.
Central (90 days) and Maido (60 days) are the hardest. Kjolle takes 30 days. Astrid y Gastón, Mayta, and Rafael take 7–14 days. Isolina, Amaz, and Chez Wong are walk-in friendly on weekdays.