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Executive ChefJuan Carlos Romero - Daniel Vergara - Daniel Ramirez
LocationMiraflores, Peru
50 Top Pizza

Flama brings Neapolitan pizza tradition to Miraflores with disciplinary-code dough, classic toppings, and fresh pasta alongside a well-assembled cured meats and cocktail selection. The room carries warm wood tones and an elegantly casual character that sits apart from Lima's Peruvian-centric dining scene. Chefs Juan Carlos Romero, Daniel Vergara, and Daniel Ramirez lead the kitchen.

Flama restaurant in Miraflores, Peru
About

Italian Discipline in a Lima Neighbourhood

Miraflores runs on Peruvian cooking. The district's restaurant reputation rests on the country's own produce-driven tradition, from the cevicherías along the Malecón to the tasting-counter format that put Lima on the global dining map. Into that context, Flama operates as a different kind of proposition: an Italian kitchen anchored in Neapolitan pizza-making rules that have nothing to do with Peru's native canon and everything to do with a separate, codified culinary tradition transported intact to C. Coronel Inclán 300.

That specificity matters. Neapolitan pizza is not a category that rewards improvisation. The Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana has maintained a disciplinary code since 1984 governing dough composition, fermentation time, oven temperature, and topping ratios. When a kitchen operates according to those rules, the result is structurally distinct from the broader category of wood-fired pizza: a crust that is light and slightly yielding at its centre, with a raised cornicione that chars in patches without hardening. Flama's dough is prepared to that standard, which places it in a narrow peer set within Lima's Italian dining options.

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The Room Before the Menu

The environment at Flama reads as deliberately considered rather than incidentally assembled. Warm wood tones and natural materials carry through the furnishings, producing an atmosphere that sits between neighbourhood trattoria and something with more formal intention. The overall character is chic without being cold: the kind of room where a long dinner with wine and a cured meat board does not feel out of place, but neither does a more casual midweek visit. Service extends to take-out, which signals a dual-format operation that spans both sit-down and grab-and-go use cases without compromising either.

Lima's dining scene has increasingly split between high-concept tasting formats and more relaxed neighbourhood rooms. Astrid & Gastón in Lima occupies the high-concept end of that spectrum; Flama sits at the opposite pole, where warmth and accessibility are the design brief. That positioning fills a gap in Miraflores's offering, where Italian options tend toward either fast-casual or undifferentiated. An Italian kitchen that takes the Neapolitan tradition seriously enough to observe its technical code represents a more considered choice for the district.

What the Kitchen Covers

Pizza is the anchor, but the menu extends into fresh pasta prepared to classic Italian recipes. This reflects the broader Italian kitchen logic that treats pasta and pizza as parallel traditions rather than competitive ones — both are flour-and-water disciplines that reward technique at the level of dough preparation and timing. The selection of toppings across both categories draws on recognisable Italian reference points: tomato, mozzarella, olive oil, seasonal vegetables, cured meats, and aged cheeses, each used in proportions that allow individual ingredients to register rather than overlap into a single flavour mass.

The cured meats and cheese selection functions as a standalone offering, paired with a well-assembled cocktail list. This format — antipasto-style boards alongside aperitivo-era drinks , reflects Italian dining culture's preference for a slower, more assembled approach to eating that is structurally different from the Peruvian sharing-plate format at places like El Mercado or the seafood-forward cooking at Costanera 700 in Miraflores. Ordering at Flama rewards a slower pace: a cocktail and board to begin, a pasta or pizza as the main register, rather than a rapid sequence of small plates.

Chefs and Kitchen Credentials

The kitchen operates under three chefs: Juan Carlos Romero, Daniel Vergara, and Daniel Ramirez. A three-chef structure at this format level is notable, and typically signals that each brings a distinct area of technical focus to the operation rather than one kitchen lead covering the full programme. In Italian cooking contexts, this kind of distributed authority often reflects specialisation across dough, pasta, and broader kitchen management. The arrangement also provides redundancy in execution, which is relevant for a format where dough preparation requires daily consistency regardless of staffing variables.

For readers comparing Italian options across Lima's dining districts, the three-chef configuration positions Flama closer to a kitchen that takes its craft seriously than to a single-operator informal spot. The distinction is relevant when choosing between options: technical consistency in Neapolitan dough is difficult to maintain without dedicated focus, and the staffing structure at Flama suggests that focus is in place.

Where Flama Fits in Lima's Wider Scene

Lima's reputation rests almost entirely on its Peruvian output. The global attention directed at the city's cooking , whether at the tasting-table format of Mil in Cusco or Cosme in San Isidro , concerns Andean ingredients and coastal techniques. Flama operates outside that conversation entirely, which is both its defining characteristic and its most practical quality for a visitor or resident who has eaten through Miraflores's Peruvian options and wants a different register.

The broader Peru dining circuit has remarkable range beyond Miraflores alone. Cirqa in Arequipa, Mil Centro in Moray, and Killa Wasi in Urubamba each represent regional expressions of Peruvian cooking at different elevations and ingredient vocabularies. Against that backdrop, Flama is an interval: a room that does not attempt to compete with the country's native tradition but instead offers an Italian counter-programme grounded in its own separate canon.

For reference, the kind of technical precision that Flama applies to Neapolitan dough has its parallel in what discipline-led restaurants apply to other traditions at the high end of global dining, whether at Le Bernardin in New York City or the fermentation-focused rigor at Atomix in New York City. The scale is different, but the principle , that a cuisine's internal rules produce better results when followed than when approximated , applies across price tiers.

Planning Your Visit

Flama is located at C. Coronel Inclán 300 in Miraflores, within walking distance of the district's main commercial corridor. The kitchen handles take-out as well as sit-down service, which gives it flexibility that most of Miraflores's more formal options do not offer. Specific hours and booking policies are not confirmed in current data, so checking directly before visiting is advisable, particularly if you are planning around a fixed itinerary. For a fuller picture of where Flama sits among the district's dining options, the full Miraflores restaurants guide maps the range across cuisines and formats. Complement your time in the district with the Miraflores bars guide, the Miraflores hotels guide, the Miraflores wineries guide, and the Miraflores experiences guide for a structured view of what the neighbourhood offers beyond the table. Those planning a broader Peru trip can also reference Delfin Amazon Cruises in Iquitos, Delfin I dining room in Nauta, and Mil Centro in Maras for dining contexts outside the capital.

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