



Pangea holds a Michelin star and La Liste recognition, placing it at the top of Monterrey's fine dining tier. Chef Guillermo González Beristain applies a contemporary lens to Mexican ingredients and technique, with the kitchen drawing on regional traditions across the country. The restaurant operates Tuesday through Sunday from Valle del Campestre in San Pedro Garza García, with extended weekend hours.

Valle del Campestre is the kind of address that signals intention before you reach the door. This residential district of San Pedro Garza García, the prosperous municipality that sits within greater Monterrey's orbit, has drawn the city's serious dining over the past two decades, and Pangea — at Avenida del Roble 660 — has been its anchor. The neighbourhood is quieter than Monterrey's commercial corridors, the architecture low and considered, and the approach to a meal here carries the weight of that context: this is not a casual proposition.
Monterrey's Fine Dining Position in the National Scene
Mexico's contemporary restaurant conversation has long been centred on the capital. Pujol in Mexico City and Quintonil occupy the tier that attracts international attention, and MeroToro represents the capital's more casual but technically rigorous wing. Outside Mexico City, Oaxaca has developed a distinct fine dining identity rooted in local ingredient sourcing, as demonstrated by Levadura de Olla. Baja California has its own producer-driven register, visible in places like Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe and Olivea Farm to Table in Ensenada. The Yucatán Peninsula operates in its own culinary idiom, with HA' in Playa del Carmen, Arca in Tulum, and Le Chique in Puerto Morelos each drawing on coastal and Maya-inflected traditions. Monterrey and the wider Nuevo León state have historically sat outside this narrative. Pangea is the clearest evidence that this omission is no longer warranted.
The restaurant earned a Michelin star in both 2024 and 2025, placing it within a very small cohort of recognized fine dining in northern Mexico. La Liste, the French ranking that aggregates critical data across multiple review sources, scored it at 76.5 points in 2025 and 77 points in 2026. Opinionated About Dining, a North America-wide ranking with a technically demanding methodology, ranked it 252nd in 2024 and moved it to 226th in 2025. These three systems use different criteria and yet have converged on the same assessment: Pangea sits in the upper tier of serious Mexican restaurants, competing for critical attention with capital and coastal venues rather than with regional peers.
Chef Guillermo González Beristain and the Regiomontano Kitchen
The contemporary Mexican kitchen has developed several regional registers over the past fifteen years. Oaxacan cuisine has drawn international focus through its mole and fermentation traditions. Yucatecan cooking offers the counterpoint of achiote, citrus, and cochinita. Pueblan cuisine, with its mole poblano and chile en nogada, remains the country's most elaborately codified regional form. Baja's farm-to-table movement has borrowed from Californian and Mediterranean frameworks while drawing on the Pacific's extraordinary seafood. The norteño tradition , the cooking of northern Mexico , has a different character: cattle country, wheat tortillas, dried chiles, and the kind of protein-focused directness that does not lend itself easily to the tasting-menu format.
What Chef Guillermo González Beristain has built at Pangea is a contemporary framework that acknowledges the norteño foundation without being constrained by it. The kitchen reads as a genuinely national project: drawing selectively from Mexico's regional diversity while applying European-influenced technique. This is the same intellectual territory that the leading Mexico City restaurants occupy, but executed from a northern base and with the identity questions that come with working outside the capital. The awards data suggest the kitchen has answered those questions credibly. KOLI Cocina de Origen in Monterrey operates in an adjacent register within the same city, and Vernáculo and Cara de Vaca are part of the same San Pedro Garza García dining cluster. González Beristain's tenure at Pangea predates all of them and has shaped the expectation of what a serious Monterrey restaurant should look like.
The Dining Experience
Modern Mexican fine dining has split across a few structural formats. Some restaurants operate strict omakase or tasting-menu-only formats , Le Chique is among the most technically elaborate examples. Others, including Lunario in El Porvenir, blend wine program depth with a more relaxed format. Pangea holds a middle position: the cooking carries genuine technical ambition, but the experience is framed as a complete evening rather than as a prescribed sequence. The wine program is treated as a co-equal element of the meal, not an afterthought, which aligns it with the dining culture of a city that has historically had strong ties to European business travel and a correspondingly developed appetite for wine.
The restaurant earns a 4.7 average across 1,560 Google reviews, which for a price point at the $$$ level is a meaningful signal of consistent execution. At this tier, a sustained rating across a large review sample requires a kitchen that performs reliably across service conditions, not only during photographed occasions. That consistency is itself an editorial point about what Pangea represents in the Monterrey market: it has maintained a reference position not through novelty but through repetition of quality.
Regional Context and the Northern Mexico Argument
The culinary geography of Mexico is more granular than its international reputation suggests. Oaxaca's complexity , with its seven moles, its mezcal, its tlayudas and chapulines , represents one archetype. Yucatán's isolation from central Mexican trade routes produced a cuisine with strong Caribbean and Mayan influences, distinct from anything north of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Puebla's historical role as a colonial crossroads gave it a cuisine with Spanish, indigenous, and even Middle Eastern threads. Baja's proximity to California and its wine region created a hybrid food culture with no parallel elsewhere in the country.
Northern Mexico , Nuevo León, Sonora, Chihuahua, Tamaulipas , has a different relationship to the national culinary narrative. The region's cooking traditions are real and deeply rooted, but they have not received the same external attention. Pangea's Michelin recognition is partly significant for what it says about the north: that a restaurant can operate within this geography, draw on its traditions without being folklorized by them, apply contemporary technique, and reach the same critical threshold as restaurants in Oaxaca City or Mexico City. For a city that has long thought of itself as economically significant but culturally overlooked by the capital, that assessment carries weight beyond the restaurant itself.
Planning a Visit
Pangea operates Monday through Thursday from 1 to 11 pm, Friday and Saturday from 1 pm to midnight, and Sunday from 1 to 6 pm. The extended weekend hours make it viable for an evening booking that runs long, though Sunday's earlier close means lunch-into-afternoon is the practical format for that day. The address at Av. del Roble 660, Valle del Campestre, places it in a part of San Pedro Garza García that is accessible by car and well within the circuits used by visitors staying in the municipality's business and leisure hotels. For those planning a broader visit, our full San Pedro Garza García hotels guide covers the accommodation options in the area. The price range sits at $$$, which in the Monterrey market represents a serious financial commitment but prices below comparable Michelin-starred venues in Mexico City at the $$$$ tier , a meaningful distinction for anyone assembling a multi-restaurant visit.
For context on the wider dining and drinking environment, our full San Pedro Garza García restaurants guide maps the local scene, and our bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide complete the picture for a longer stay.
Frequently Asked Questions
What dish is Pangea famous for?
Pangea's kitchen operates within a contemporary Mexican framework informed by regional traditions across the country, from the norteño base of the north to techniques drawn from Oaxacan, Yucatecan, and Pueblan cooking. Chef Guillermo González Beristain has earned consistent Michelin recognition , a star in both 2024 and 2025 , and the awards record across La Liste and Opinionated About Dining points to a kitchen with broad technical depth rather than a single signature. Specific current menu items and dish details are not available at this time; given the awards trajectory and the restaurant's reference position in Monterrey's fine dining tier, contacting the restaurant directly or reviewing current coverage from named publications is the most reliable way to understand what the kitchen is serving in a given season.
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Access the Concierge