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São Paulo, Brazil

Ama.zo - Pátio Higienópolis

CuisinePeruvian
LocationSão Paulo, Brazil
Michelin
We're Smart World

Holding consecutive Michelin Plates for 2024 and 2025, Ama.zo at Pátio Higienópolis brings Peruvian cooking to one of São Paulo's most established shopping and dining addresses. Chef Enrique Paredes centres his menu on bold, vegetable-forward flavours rooted in Peru's regional traditions, priced at the accessible mid-range that makes the Higienópolis outpost a reliable weekday destination as well as a weekend draw.

Ama.zo - Pátio Higienópolis restaurant in São Paulo, Brazil
About

Peru's Sweet and Savoury Register, Planted in Higienópolis

Higienópolis occupies a particular position in São Paulo's dining geography: wide tree-lined streets, early-twentieth-century apartment buildings, and a neighbourhood that has historically attracted a more residential, less scene-driven crowd than Vila Madalena or Itaim Bibi. The open-air terrace at Pátio Higienópolis sits within that context, making Ama.zo something of an anomaly among mall-adjacent restaurants. Rather than the expected franchise safe-play, the address carries a Peruvian kitchen with two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a track record that has built word-of-mouth across both its São Paulo locations.

Peruvian cuisine has earned serious attention in South American capitals over the past two decades, and São Paulo has become one of its more receptive homes. The city's appetite for acid-forward, layered flavour profiles — built from ají amarillo, huacatay, and the fermented depth of chicha — maps naturally onto a dining culture already comfortable with complexity. Ama.zo arrives at this intersection with a kitchen led by Chef Enrique Paredes, whose approach places vegetables at the centre of the plate rather than as accompaniment, a structural choice that shifts the cooking closer to the Peruvian highland tradition than the ceviche-bar format many diners expect.

The Sweet Architecture of Peruvian Cooking

Dessert in Peruvian culinary tradition is rarely an afterthought. The country's colonial and indigenous food history produced a confectionery culture of some depth: picarones (fried dough rings soaked in chancaca syrup), suspiro limeño (a caramel custard with port-meringue topping), and arroz con leche that diverges meaningfully from its pan-Latin counterparts through the use of cinnamon and clove ratios particular to Lima. These are not fusion novelties , they are codified preparations with centuries of repetition behind them.

In São Paulo's broader dessert conversation, which tends to favour French patisserie technique or the Brazilian classics of brigadeiro and bolo de rolo, a kitchen committed to the Peruvian sweet register occupies a distinct space. The discipline of making chancaca syrup correctly , dark, unrefined, faintly smoky , or calibrating the texture of a suspiro so the meringue doesn't collapse into the cream base requires the same attention as the savoury courses. At Ama.zo, the vegetable-forward philosophy that defines the main courses carries through to a dessert sensibility rooted in restraint and recognisable ingredients rather than technical showmanship.

That editorial angle matters because it positions the restaurant not as a novelty addition to the São Paulo Peruvian scene, but as a kitchen taking the full breadth of the cuisine seriously, from the opening ceviche to the closing dulce.

Where Ama.zo Sits in São Paulo's Competitive Picture

São Paulo's fine dining tier clusters heavily around tasting-menu formats at the $$$ and $$$$ price brackets. [D.O.M.](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/dom-so-paulo-restaurant), [Evvai](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/evvai-so-paulo-restaurant), and [Tuju](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/tuju-so-paulo-restaurant) all operate at the $$$$ level with reservation windows that can stretch months ahead. [Maní](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/man-so-paulo-restaurant) sits at $$$ with a similarly competitive booking pattern. Ama.zo prices at $$, which in São Paulo's context positions it as the kind of Michelin-recognised address a diner can return to regularly without treating it as a special-occasion spend.

That price point also places it alongside A Casa do Porco in the mid-range Michelin tier , restaurants where the recognition comes from cooking quality rather than ceremony. The 4.6 Google rating across 559 reviews reinforces a consistency argument: this is not a restaurant coasting on a single strong season.

The existence of a second São Paulo location , [Ama.zo - Cozinha Peruana](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/amazo-cozinha-peruana-so-paulo-restaurant) , is worth noting as a practical signal. A kitchen that expands within the same city is making a bet on repeatable execution, not just a single-location reputation. Both carry Michelin recognition, which suggests the standard travels.

For those planning a broader São Paulo food itinerary, [our full São Paulo restaurants guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/sao-paulo) maps the full competitive set across price tiers and neighbourhood zones. Separately, [our full São Paulo hotels guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/sao-paulo), [bars guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/sao-paulo), [wineries guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/sao-paulo), and [experiences guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/experiences/sao-paulo) cover the surrounding infrastructure for a multi-day visit.

Peruvian Cooking Beyond São Paulo

The Peruvian dining format has found serious footholds in several international cities. [Causa in Washington, D.C.](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/causa-washington-dc-restaurant) and [ITAMAE in Miami](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/itamae) represent the North American end of the diaspora, each interpreting the cuisine through a different local lens. Within Brazil, the picture is more varied: [Lasai in Rio de Janeiro](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/lasai-rio-de-janeiro-restaurant) occupies the creative Brazilian fine dining space, while addresses like [Manga in Salvador](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/manga-salvador-restaurant), [Mina in Campos do Jordão](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/mina-campos-do-jordo-restaurant), [Orixás | North Restaurant in Itacaré](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/orixs-north-restaurant-itacar-restaurant), and [Primrose in Gramado](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/primrose-gramado-restaurant) show how Brazil's regional dining scene has developed independent of the São Paulo axis. [Castelo Saint Andrews in Gramado](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/castelo-saint-andrews-gramado-vale-do-bosque-restaurant) adds another data point on how the south's hospitality infrastructure differs from the urban centres.

Against that backdrop, Ama.zo's position in São Paulo reflects a city comfortable absorbing serious international cooking at accessible price points , a dynamic less common in Brazil's smaller dining markets.

Planning Your Visit

Ama.zo at Pátio Higienópolis sits within the shopping complex at Av. Higienópolis, 618, in the Higienópolis neighbourhood. The terrace position means the experience shifts noticeably depending on the time of day: lunch in the open-air section carries a different pace than an evening visit when the surrounding neighbourhood quiets down. The $$ pricing and 4.6 rating across a substantial review base suggest this is a kitchen worth booking rather than walking in on, particularly at peak weekend lunch slots. With no phone or website listed in current records, the most reliable booking approach is via the Pátio Higienópolis mall directory or on-site.

Given the two-location footprint, diners choosing between the Higienópolis address and [Ama.zo - Cozinha Peruana](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/amazo-cozinha-peruana-so-paulo-restaurant) should factor in neighbourhood preference as much as menu differences , both carry the same Michelin recognition and the same kitchen philosophy.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I order at Ama.zo - Pátio Higienópolis?

The kitchen's emphasis on vegetables as the central element of the plate rather than a supporting role is the clearest editorial signal about where to focus. Peruvian cuisine structures its flavour around ají-based sauces, citrus-cured proteins, and layered spice combinations that reward ordering across multiple courses. The Michelin Plate recognition for both 2024 and 2025 points to consistent execution across the menu rather than a single standout dish. For the dessert side, the Peruvian tradition offers preparations , suspiro limeño, picarones , that differ enough from São Paulo's dominant sweet formats to make them worth exploring if available.

How far ahead should I plan for Ama.zo - Pátio Higienópolis?

At a $$ price point with a 4.6 rating from over 559 reviews, the Higienópolis location draws regular neighbourhood traffic alongside destination diners. Weekend lunch slots at Michelin-recognised mid-range restaurants in São Paulo can fill quickly, particularly at outdoor terrace addresses during the cooler months (June through August). Weekday visits generally carry more flexibility. The lack of a published online booking system means confirming availability through the shopping complex directory is the practical first step.

What's the signature at Ama.zo - Pátio Higienópolis?

Chef Enrique Paredes built both Ama.zo locations around a vegetable-centred reading of Peruvian cooking, which is the clearest marker of this kitchen's identity relative to ceviche-led Peruvian restaurants elsewhere in São Paulo. The Michelin Plate for 2025 and 2024 substantiates the approach as one that holds up under scrutiny rather than relying on a single signature preparation. Within the Peruvian canon, that philosophy connects most directly to the highland and market-cooking traditions rather than the coastal cevichería format more familiar to international audiences.

Cuisine and Awards Snapshot

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