Head-to-Head · Buenos Aires
Aramburu vs Anchoíta
Book Aramburu for Argentina’s only two-star tasting in Recoleta, Anchoíta for Enrique Piñeyro’s wood-grill and charcuterie in Villa Crespo.
The Verdict
Aramburu is the formal one, and the decorated one. Gonzalo Aramburu runs Argentina’s only two-Michelin-star restaurant from a 22-seat room in Recoleta, where a single surprise tasting of around eighteen courses moves through the country’s best produce with real technique. It sits at No.35 on Latin America’s 50 Best Restaurants and runs about 360,000 pesos a head, roughly 250 to 320 US dollars before pairings, with the meal finishing upstairs over coffee and a cocktail. It scores 9 for food, 8 for the room and 7 for value. This is the dressed-up, plan-it-out evening.
Anchoíta is the loud, generous counterpoint. Enrique Piñeyro built it inside a converted Villa Crespo workshop, where an open kitchen and wood grill run the room and the charcuterie is cured in house. There is no tasting menu: the carte is made for sharing, from house salami and river fish to beef cooked to your chosen temperature, paired with one of the city’s most serious natural-wine lists. It carries a place in the Michelin Guide selection and is one of the hardest tables in Buenos Aires to get. It scores 8 for food, 8 for the room and 8 for value.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | Aramburu | Anchoíta |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 9 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 8 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
| Value | 7 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| A landmark tasting dinner | AramburuEighteen courses, two Michelin stars and a 22-seat room make it the country’s big-occasion table. |
| A long, loud dinner with friends | AnchoítaSharing plates off the grill and a natural-wine list built for a table that orders widely and stays late. |
| Charcuterie and wine | AnchoítaThe house-cured salami and a deep Argentine natural-wine cellar are the reason regulars keep the table. |
| Impressing a client | AramburuThe only two-star room in Argentina, intimate and precise, reads as a statement without a word of explanation. |
| Setting your own spend | AnchoítaA la carte lets you eat light or long, where Aramburu commits you to the full tasting price. |
Price and How to Book
The split is fixed tasting versus open carte. Aramburu runs one surprise menu at about 360,000 pesos before pairings, booked ahead for its 22 seats in Recoleta; the full picture is in the Aramburu review. Anchoíta is à la carte and sells its Villa Crespo tables fast, so plan months out, as covered in the Anchoíta review. Both sit in our wider Buenos Aires dining guide.
For the grill side of Anchoíta, weigh it against the best steakhouses worldwide, and for occasion fit line both up with our picks for an anniversary dinner and closing a deal. More match-ups sit on the compare index.