Buenos AiresRestaurants

Café restaurants in Buenos Aires

  1. A

    Confitería Zurich

    Perfect for a midday break, this classic café offers suited waiters, professional service and sidewalk tables that scream for attention on a warm summer day. If you’re peckish there are salads and sandwiches, or just nibble on some dainty croissants while you watch the world go by at the plaza across the way. Things are especially exciting when the weekend feria (street fair) is in full swing.

    reviewed

  2. B

    Tea Connection

    Tea lovers in BA no longer have to settle for plain black leaves anymore. At this attractive corner café are 30 kinds of tea to choose from, including various kinds of black, red, green and infusion teas. The menu even instructs how long to soak the teabag and the ideal temperature. Sandwiches, salads, vegetable tarts and creative rolls all make good snacks, and breakfast is also served.

    reviewed

  3. C

    Natural Deli

    Modern, organic deli offering delicious natural foods. Choose from creative gourmet sandwiches and wraps, fresh salads or vegetarian tarts. You can add echinacea and ginseng to their healthy juices and licuados, and there’s even a small health food store for take-home treats. Also at Gorostiaga 1776, which has a yoga studio.

    reviewed

  4. D

    Meraviglia

    Wonderful new airy and bright vegetarian cafe with small but high-quality menu. Choose granola and yogurt for breakfast, and well-prepared salads, tarts and sandwiches for lunch or late afternoon snack. Everything is freshly made with mostly organic ingredients, and a few healthy products are available for purchase.

    reviewed

  5. E

    Mark’s Deli

    Cool porteños and bagel-craving travelers pretend like they’re in New York at highbrow Mark’s Deli, a Manhattan-style cafe that’s nearly always packed. If you can score a table, the place is great for cappuccino-and-chocolate-chip cookies while you conduct a postmortem on your shopping day.

    reviewed

  6. F

    Oui Oui

    Pain au chocolat and shabby chic, anyone? Yes please. This immensely popular French-style cafe produces the goods – dark coffee, buttery croissants, jars of tangy lemonade – and boasts a cozy rose-colored interior that’s just as charming. Come early to beat the porteña parade.

    reviewed