A journey through flavours
Peru
The first spoonful of tangy ceviche hits like the ocean itself – bright, bracing, alive. In Peru, food is never just food; it’s a story of land and people, of ancient roots and bold reinvention. From Lima’s world-class restaurants to highland markets where potatoes come in a rainbow of colours, every bite is a discovery. To eat in Peru is to taste history, geography, and imagination, all at once – and yes, you’ll want seconds.
Lima, more than a gateway
Lima, more than a gateway
Most visitors arrive in Peru’s capital with plans to move on fast, but to rush through is to miss one of the world’s great food stages. In Miraflores, waves crash against cliffs while cevicherías serve fish so fresh it bites back. In bohemian Barranco, colonial mansions hide avant-garde tasting rooms. At Central or Maido, menus unfold like edible maps. Yet Lima’s real heartbeat? Markets where vendors pile corn high in every shade, and fruits with names you’ll stumble over, but happily savor anyway.
Tastes that travel
Tastes that travel
To dine in Peru is to travel. A single tasting menu might begin with sea urchin foam, climb to quinoa stews warmed by ají amarillo, then plunge into jungle cacao. Chefs like Virgilio Martínez and Pía León are modern-day cartographers, sketching ecosystems onto plates. At Maido, Japanese finesse collides with Peruvian fire – proof that opposites don’t just attract, they set the table on fire (in the best way).
An invitation to connect
The true heart of Peruvian cuisine beats strongest in the family kitchen. Imagine yourself in the Sacred Valley, learning to layer a perfect causa rellena beside a local grandmother, using her recipe passed down through generations. Picture discovering the secrets of the ají amarillo, the golden chili that blesses so many dishes with its sunshine hue. These moments transcend cooking. They are authentic connections – to stories of migration, resilience, and profound pride. Here, every flavour carries a memory, and every dish you share is an invitation to belong.
From Sacred Valley to Machu Picchu
Beyond the flavours lie landscapes almost too dramatic to believe. The Urubamba Valley softens your climb into altitude with ruins, rivers and salt terraces glowing pink. Nights at Sol y Luna come with garden views and the warmest Andean hospitality, plus the feel-good factor of supporting local schools. And then: Machu Picchu. Take the Vistadome train (think Glacier Express with llamas), then a bus zigzags you up. You might have seen pictures. Even the crowd. But nothing prepares you for stepping through the Sun Gate on a misty sunrise. The lost city greets you not as a ruin, but as something alive.
A toast to discovery
A toast to discovery
No journey through Peru is complete without a final toast. The Pisco Sour is more than a cocktail – it’s Peru’s spirit in a glass. This frothy, elegant mix of pisco, sharp lime and silky egg white balances sweetness and bite with effortless charm. It’s the perfect finale to a journey that stirs every sense and captures the country’s generous soul. And, as any Peruvian will tell you, one is rarely enough.
By: Enzo Marraffino November 2025
If you spot the compass logo on an article, you’ll know it’s one of our handpicked Inspirations. Explore this year’s Inspirations on our special map or if you’d like to know more, please contact us directly.