Afternoon –
Barranco’s Rhythm
In the late 1800s, Lima had three seaside resorts: Miraflores, Chorrillos, and Barranco. Only Barranco kept its character.
I personally discovered the depth of Peruvian coffee and cacao thanks to El Cacaotal and Ciclos Café on Colina Street, where Amanda Jo Wildey and Felipe Aliaga curate tastings of coffee, cacao, and wine.
If you manage to secure a table at Virgilio Martínez’s Central, you may embark on a six-hour sensory journey through Peru’s ecosystems.
Yet the story doesn’t end there.
Around Barranco, other chefs in the district are composing their own narratives. Each one offers a different way to taste Peru’s complexity:
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Kjolle by Pía León
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Mérito by Juan Luis Martínez
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Siete by Ricardo Martins
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Isolina by José del Castillo
Evening –
Barranco After Dark
Most of Barranco’s bars occupy 19th-century mansions. Ayahuasca is the architectural landmark, though it can feel touristy. But you might note those addresses praised by locals:
For cocktails in a low-lit vinyl bar, I go to Cordial. They work with Peru’s finest spirits and wines from Bodega Murga. it’s where my friends and I share long tables for birthdays and farewells.
I find the subtle friction of Pedro de Osma street fascinating. While the young LGBTQ+ crowd is all about Culpa, just across the street, Lima's jeunesse dorée gathers at Victoria.
My perennials, however, are La Noche and La Vermut. They are the favorites of local creatives for a cold pilsner or a Negroni.
Lunch –
A Culinary Crossroads in Miraflores
In less than a decade, an old working-class area of Miraflores has been transformed into a culinary hub.
This area gained fame when two major figures of Peruvian cuisine opened their cevicherías here: Gastón Acurio with La Mar and Rafael Osterling with El Mercado.
On La Mar Street you’ll find a full spectrum of Peru’s gastronomic scene:
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Mayta by Jaime Pesaque, praised by international critics for pictural investigation of andean and amazonian biodiversity.
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Awa by Aldo Yaranga, a genuine reinvention of Amazonian ingredients, expressed with artistic flair.
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Peru’s Japanese heritage is also present in the neighborhood. Sutorīto Māketto serves playful Peruvian-Japanese street food, while Kaia offers a sleek, casual take.
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And because the Chinese community has been equally central to Peruvian food, Kion delivers chifa classics in a modern space.

If yesterday you traced Lima’s colonial past, today you go further back when the city was an improbable, man-made oasis where canals transformed the desert into a fertile garden. Many of those ancient waterways still irrigate Lima’s parks and avenues.
Morning –
Temples in the City
In Miraflores, Huaca Pucllana rises like a stepped monolith against the glass and concrete of the modern skyline. Climb its paths.
If you’re looking for a quieter, more private experience, the lesser-visited and self-guided Huaca Mateo Salado in Pueblo Libre, or Huaca Huallamarca in San Isidro are to be considered.
From here, head to Museo Larco in Pueblo Libre. Its collection moves across centuries of Andean art: ceremonial vessels, textiles, and gold pieces designed for the afterlife.
The building itself, a mansion wrapped in bougainvillea, is worth the visit. As if its main collection weren’t enough, the museum hosts an incredibly selection of ceramics exploring how ancient Peruvians understood sexuality.
Ancient
Temples,
New Kitchens
above the Pacific
Second Day in Lima, Peru - A Curated Itinerary
Navigating Peru's Complexity
Our Expert-Guided
Full-Day Discoveries

Part 1
Hispanic Lima
Small-groups of 6
4 hours of shared exploration
Museums, Temples & Art
All entries included
60€ / $65

Part 2
Andean Lima
Small-groups of 6
4 hours of shared exploration
Museums, Temples & Art
All entries included
60€ / $65
