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Latin American & Asian Fusion
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CuisineSouth American
Price£££
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityMedium
Michelin

At 10 Berkeley Square, Amazónico transplants the energy of South America into one of Mayfair's most theatrical dining rooms. Flaming grills, jungle-inspired décor, and live music frame a menu that spans tiraditos to tequeños, with a sushi offshoot under the 'Japazonico' banner. A Michelin Plate holder with a 4.2 Google rating across more than 3,000 reviews, it reads less as a restaurant than as a full evening programme.

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Address
10 Berkeley Square, London W1J 6BR, United Kingdom
Phone
+44 20 7404 5000
Amazónico restaurant in London, United Kingdom
About

Mayfair After Dark: South American Fire in Berkeley Square

Berkeley Square has long been a postcode associated with restrained wealth: private equity offices, auction houses, and the kind of restaurant where the room is expensive and the lighting is low. Amazónico works against that grain. This London restaurant in Mayfair serves Latin American & Asian Fusion, costs about $120 per person, and is known for its lively dining room. The moment you step through the door at number 10, the temperature and volume shift. Overhead, vegetation trails across architectural canopy structures. Below, open grills flame visibly from the kitchen. Live music provides a pulse that turns dinner into something closer to an extended social occasion. In a neighbourhood where the ambient mode is composed, this is deliberately, unapologetically loud.

Where Amazónico Sits in London's South American Scene

London's South American restaurant category has expanded sharply in recent years, but it remains underrepresented relative to the city's enthusiasm for Latin cuisine more broadly. The gap between casual peri-peri chains and serious South American cooking has narrowed somewhat, but venues operating at the mid-to-upper price tier with genuine range across the continent's traditions are still relatively few. Amazónico sits at the upper end of that shorter list, holding a 4.3 rating from 3,697 Google reviewers, a volume that suggests the audience extends well beyond first-time visitors drawn by the décor.

For comparison, London's three-Michelin-starred operations, CORE by Clare Smyth, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Sketch's Lecture Room and Library, and The Ledbury, occupy the ££££ bracket and run predominantly set-menu formats. Amazónico operates at £££, with à la carte ordering, placing it in a different philosophical tier: one where the guest controls pace and composition rather than surrendering the evening to a kitchen's predetermined arc.

The À La Carte Question in This Room

The set menu versus à la carte debate is, at its core, a question about who holds authority over the evening. Tasting menus, dominant at London's highest price tier, represented by Dinner by Heston Blumenthal at ££££ and two Michelin stars, ask the guest to trust the kitchen's sequence and surrender choice. The format rewards discipline and coherence; it is also expensive in ways that sometimes prioritise the kitchen's creative project over the diner's preferences.

Amazónico's à la carte structure fits the room's logic precisely. A South American menu that ranges from tiraditos and tequeños to grilled meats, with a sushi sidebar under the 'Japazonico' banner, requires guest agency. The dishes are designed to circulate, to be ordered in rounds, to fuel conversation over a two-to-three hour sitting rather than to build to a single conceptual crescendo. The economics also differ: at £££, the spend is meaningful but selective, a group can eat well, order broadly, and manage the total rather than commit to a fixed price upfront. That structure suits the party-atmosphere format Amazónico has deliberately cultivated. The room is not designed for silent appreciation. It is designed for groups.

Reading the Menu's Geography

South American cooking, read from the outside, is often flattened into a single category. In practice, it encompasses radically different traditions: the ceviches and tiraditos of Peru's Pacific coast, the dense, smoke-forward grilling cultures of Argentina and Brazil, the corn-dough snack traditions of Venezuela and Colombia, the Japanese-Latin fusion thread that runs through Lima's Nikkei restaurants and has now spread globally. Amazónico's menu draws across these registers rather than fixing on one national cuisine. Tiraditos reference the Peruvian tradition of thinly sliced raw fish dressed in citrus and chilli. Tequeños are Venezuelan cheese-filled pastry fingers, fried to order. The 'Japazonico' sushi menu names the Japanese-South American crossover explicitly rather than obscuring it, an honest move in a city where fusion labelling has become inconsistent.

For readers whose interest in South American cooking extends beyond London, Nuema in Quito represents the tradition at its most technically precise, while Ceviche Bar in Warsaw shows how the format travels to unexpected European cities. Both serve as useful reference points for understanding where Amazónico sits on the spectrum between fine-dining restraint and animated social eating.

The Physical Room as an Argument

The jungle-inspired décor at Amazónico is not ambient theming. It is the central argument of the space: that South American cooking belongs to an environment of sensory density, not minimalist plating on white stone. Flaming grills provide movement and light. Live music provides rhythm. The vegetation overhead creates an enclosure that feels deliberately removed from the Georgian square outside. Restaurants at this price point in London often minimise visual noise to keep attention on the plate; Amazónico does the opposite, treating the environment as an equal contributor to the evening.

That approach has a comparable set, though Amazónico's specific combination of cuisine and spectacle is its own configuration. Venues elsewhere in the London dining circuit that use theatrical environment to anchor a format, Sketch being the most discussed, tend to operate at higher price points with European cuisine. The Amazónico model brings that theatricality to South American cooking at a price tier that remains more accessible than the four-pound-sign bracket.

Planning Your Visit

Amazónico is at 10 Berkeley Square, W1J 6BR, walking distance from Green Park and Bond Street stations. The £££ pricing places it in a tier where a full evening with drinks runs to a substantial per-head cost, though the à la carte format allows more granular control over spend than a fixed tasting menu would. The room runs live music and sustains a party atmosphere through the evening, which means this is not the right venue for quiet business dinners or conversations that require low ambient volume. Groups of four or more will get the most from the format, with enough people around the table to order across the menu's range. For broader London planning, the full London restaurants guide covers the city's dining scene in depth, and the London hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the wider picture.

Signature Dishes
  • Aguachile
  • Ensalada Amazónica
  • Solomillo de Wagyu
  • Pulpo
  • Ceviche de Camaron
  • Pastel de Choclo
Frequently asked questions

Awards and Standing

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Lively
  • Modern
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Business Dinner
  • Group Dining
  • Celebration
  • Special Occasion
  • Private Event
Experience
  • Private Dining
  • Open Kitchen
  • Design Destination
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Sustainable Seafood
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Multi-sensory journey through the Amazon with sophisticated, energetic atmosphere and modern design elements.

Signature Dishes
  • Aguachile
  • Ensalada Amazónica
  • Solomillo de Wagyu
  • Pulpo
  • Ceviche de Camaron
  • Pastel de Choclo