
On a residential stretch of Miraflores, Anticuchos Grimanesa has built a reputation around a single ingredient and the charcoal smoke that transforms it. Ranked 45th in the 2025 Opinionated About Dining South America list, this is street food refined to a serious address — where anticuchos, Peru's grilled beef heart skewers, are the reason Lima's food community keeps returning.

Charcoal, Heart, and the Street Food That Defines Lima
Smoke reaches you before the menu does. On Calle Ignacio Merino in Miraflores, the charcoal grill at Anticuchos Grimanesa operates with the kind of directness that most of Lima's formal dining rooms have spent decades trying to approximate. This is a counter-argument to the tasting-menu era: a place where one ingredient, cooked over live fire, makes the entire editorial case.
Anticuchos — beef heart skewers marinated in aji panca, cumin, and vinegar, then charred over glowing coals — are among the most honest expressions of Lima's culinary history. The dish has pre-Columbian roots, refined over centuries by Afro-Peruvian cooks who transformed offal into a staple sold on street corners across the city. That tradition is what Grimanesa Vargaz works within, not around.
Where This Fits in Lima's Dining Structure
Lima's restaurant conversation tends to orbit its modernist tier , Central, Astrid & Gastón, and their peers have defined Peru's international profile for two decades. But a different current runs underneath: the creole and street-food specialists whose credibility comes not from altitude cooking or Amazonian sourcing, but from mastery of a single preparation executed at high volume without compromise.
Anticuchos Grimanesa sits in that second tier , and is increasingly recognised as one of its most significant addresses. Its 2025 ranking at number 45 on the Opinionated About Dining South America list places it in a peer set that includes some of the continent's most technically sophisticated restaurants, which is notable precisely because its format makes no concession to that sophistication. The 4.1 rating across 1,811 Google reviews confirms that the audience is broad , this is not a critics-only conversation.
For context on how Lima's traditional cooking registers against its modernist counterpart, Isolina Taberna Peruana occupies a comparable position in the creole-restaurant space, and Panchita draws a similar audience for its charcoal-grill focus. The three together sketch a tradition that predates Lima's fine-dining boom and will likely outlast it.
The Ingredient at the Centre
The editorial angle assigned to this venue , corn, masa, and foundational Andean ingredients , finds its analogue here in the chile. Aji panca, the dried Peruvian pepper that gives anticuchos their deep, brick-red marinade, is as structurally important to this dish as nixtamalized corn is to Mexican street food. It is not a seasoning; it is the flavour architecture. Without it, you have grilled offal. With it, you have anticuchos.
The marinade's composition , aji panca alongside cumin, garlic, and vinegar , reflects the layered cultural history of Lima's Afro-Peruvian cooking tradition. Spanish colonial ingredients (vinegar, cumin) combined with indigenous Andean chiles and techniques produce something that cannot be cleanly attributed to a single culinary origin. That complexity is the point, and it is why anticuchos have survived centuries of Lima's food culture shifting around them.
Grill itself is the other variable. Charcoal temperature, skewer position, and resting time determine whether the heart stays tender at its centre or crosses into tough territory. The margin is narrow, which is why the dish rewards specialists rather than generalists.
Miraflores as a Setting
Miraflores address places this in a neighbourhood associated with Lima's international dining scene , La Mar Cebicheria and Costanera 700 both operate nearby , but Ignacio Merino 466 reads more like a local institution than a tourist-facing address. The clientele reflects that: neighbourhood regulars alongside visitors who have done the research.
Miraflores sits within easy reach of Lima's other districts of interest. Those building a longer itinerary around Peru's food culture might cross-reference our Lima experiences guide or extend the trip to include Mil in Cusco or Cirqa in Arequipa, both of which approach Andean ingredients from a formal cooking perspective that contrasts usefully with what Grimanesa does on the grill.
Planning the Visit
Practical details for Anticuchos Grimanesa are sparse in available records , hours, booking method, and price range are not confirmed in current data. The address is Calle Ignacio Merino 466, Miraflores 15074, Lima. Given the 1,811 Google reviews and the OAD ranking, peak-hour queues should be anticipated, particularly on weekend evenings. Arriving early or at off-peak lunch hours is the practical approach for those without a confirmed booking. For accommodation and bar context in the same visit window, our Lima hotels guide and our Lima bars guide cover the surrounding options.
Visitors tracking Peruvian cooking outside Peru will find useful reference points at Causa in Washington D.C. and ITAMAE in Miami, both of which work within the same culinary tradition at considerable distance from its source. The comparison is instructive: what travels well (ceviche technique, aji-based marinades) and what does not (the specific charcoal smoke, the offal freshness, the street-food format) tells you something about why the Miraflores original retains its pull. For the full Lima restaurant context, see our Lima restaurants guide, and for those exploring Peru's wine and spirits scene, our Lima wineries guide covers the pisco producers and urban wine bars that pair logistically with a meal here.
Elsewhere in Peru's broader dining map, Cosme in San Isidro, Delfin Amazon Cruises in Iquitos, and Delfin I dining room in Nauta extend the country's food geography in directions that could not be further from a Miraflores charcoal grill , which is precisely the value of anchoring a Peru itinerary at both ends of that range.
FAQ
What is the signature dish at Anticuchos Grimanesa?
The house focus is anticuchos , grilled beef heart skewers marinated in aji panca, cumin, garlic, and vinegar, cooked over charcoal. This is the dish that built the restaurant's reputation in Lima and that earns its 2025 Opinionated About Dining South America ranking at number 45. Grimanesa Vargaz has been associated with this preparation for years, and it remains the primary reason the address draws both locals and informed visitors. Other items may appear on the menu, but anticuchos are the reference point for understanding what this kitchen does and why it carries the recognition it does.
In Context: Similar Options
A quick snapshot of similar venues for side-by-side context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anticuchos Grimanesa | Peruvian | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in South America Ranked #45 (2025) | This venue | |
| Astrid & Gastón | Modern Peruvian | World's 50 Best | Modern Peruvian | |
| Kjolle | Modern Peruvian | World's 50 Best | Modern Peruvian | |
| Mérito | Venezuelan/Fusion | World's 50 Best | Venezuelan/Fusion | |
| Mayta | Peruvian Modern | World's 50 Best | Peruvian Modern | |
| Isolina Taberna Peruana | Peruvian | Peruvian |
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Access the Concierge