The Top 39 Places to Eat and Drink Near ME Cabo by Meliá
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Rank 2. Don Manuel's
Modern Mexican
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Four Star
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · Mexico's Best Hotel Restaurant
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Rank 3. Los Tres Gallos
Mexican
A sprawling downtown corner spot built around a sun-flooded courtyard of brick and stone, where pink-stuccoed walls and a rooftop terrace frame the evening crowd. Los Tres Gallos trades in generous portions of chile rellenos and mole, though its pozole—vivid with roasted chiles, studded with pork, and meant for sharing—is the reason to return.
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Rank 5. Metate
Mexican
Down a dirt road beyond Cabo's hotel corridor, Metate unfolds across a stone patio strung with lights, its open kitchen and bar built for wood-fire cooking. Blue corn tacos arrive with squid-ink-battered fish, pickled cabbage, and the kind of casual precision that suggests the kitchen takes its antojitos seriously. The place trades spectacle for shade and honest grilled meats.
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Rank 12. Manta
Contemporary Mexican
Inside the Cape Hotel overlooking Land's End, Enrique Olvera's dining room marries contemporary Mexican cuisine with bold Peruvian and Japanese accents—ceviche yields to sweet potato in almond mole, fried chicken to fish tacos in tempura batter. The kitchen's confidence in heat and technique suggests a chef more interested in the interplay of flavors than in restraint.
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Rank 13. Manta - The Cape, A Thompson Hotel
Contemporary Peruvian
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Rank 14. Mezcal
Modern Mexican
On the Montage's terrace overlooking the Pacific, Mezcal constructs a menu from Mexican regional markets and a wine list drawn entirely from within the country. Squash blossoms with black bean purée, lamb birria crowned with cilantro foam, and prickly pear sorbet served in its own skin demonstrate cooking that honors its sources without performance.
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Rank 16. Comal
Contemporary Mexican
A dramatic walkway lined with swings leads to this open-air dining room at Chileno Bay Resort, where views of the water meet a contemporary Mexican menu that roams the country's regions and beyond. The octopus kastakan—thin coins tossed with crispy pork and skin, served on warm plantain tortillas—announces a kitchen unafraid of textural play and regional depth.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Recommended
- MB100 2024 · Mexico's Best 100 Restaurants
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
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The terrace at this oceanfront dining room in the Grand Velas hotel overlooks a koi pond, a serene perch for watching the Baja coast while the kitchen pursues ambitious flavor work: bluefin tuna with uni and ginger, spiny lobster under basil. The tasting menus are global in reach and unafraid of risk, which means the cooking lands brilliantly more often than not.
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Rank 19. Al Pairo at Solaz
Contemporary Mexican
Inside the Solaz resort, a contemporary kitchen mines Baja's seafood and regional ingredients with uncommon ambition for hotel dining. A towering bluefin tuna tostada arrives crowned with fried pork belly and smoky salsa macha; octopus and wagyu steak show equal command. Churros with dark chocolate ice cream and tequila cream, paired with composed cocktails, complete the picture.
- World Culinary Awards 2025 · Nominee · Latin America's Best Fine Dining Hotel Restaurant
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
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Rank 20. Arbol
Indian
At Las Ventanas al Paraiso, Arbol unfolds across a patio where lantern-lit branches cast amber shadows on stone and blond wood. The kitchen moves fluently between Indian foundations—a Punjabi fish masala arrives in cashew-enriched tomato sauce, paired with tandoor naan—and charcoal-grilled meats and seafood, each plate as assured as it is generous.
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Rank 21. Agua - One&Only Palmilla
Coastal Mexican
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Rank 24. CARBÓNCABRÓN
Contemporary
In a deliberately darkened room lined with mesquite wood, Chef Poncho Cadena executes refined live-fire cooking across vegetables, seafood, and nose-to-tail meats meant for sharing. Dishes like charcoal-battered onion petals with habanero aïoli and tail-on shrimp atop pork belly demonstrate technique that turns smoke and flame into something surprisingly delicate.
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Rank 26. Lumbre
Mexican
Just off the art walk in San José del Cabo, Lumbre is a contemporary space where chef César Pita works live fire into Mexican cooking with global reach—grilled bread arrives with bone marrow butter and hibiscus salt; a reimagined chile relleno cradles scallop chorizo and cheese; pork belly swims in recaudo negro. Creativity and craft converge in a room that feels both polished and genuinely warm.
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Rank 27. Flora's Field Kitchen
Contemporary
An organic farm turned restaurant sprawls beneath mango trees in Ánimas Bajas, where the Greenes grow vegetables, raise chickens, and bake bread in-house. Neapolitan flatbreads and wood-fired pork chops anchor a menu of unfussy farm cooking, though the real draw is the generosity—of portions, of homemade ice cream, of a family operating with genuine conviction about what they serve.
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Rank 28. OMAKAI
Japanese
Omakai merges Japanese precision with Mexican minimalism, sourcing local fish for omakase that builds from traditional nigiri to intricate preparations. Flawless gyoza and seared salmon with truffle sauce precede a delicate finale of vanilla ice cream on coffee jelly.
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Rank 29. Nao
Mediterranean Cuisine
Whitewashed walls and cobalt accents frame Alex Branch's Mediterranean kitchen in San José del Cabo, where everything from bread to gelato emerges from the house. Roasted beets glistening with pomegranate molasses give way to tortellini ribboned with cacio e pepe and shrimp, while lechón arrives portioned for the table—a chef working without pretension but with considerable skill.
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Rank 30. Rubas Bakery
Mexican Bakery
A 1940s casita in San José del Cabo's Arts District opens onto a papel picado-draped street, where umbrella tables catch the morning light above a counter of conchas and croissants. The kitchen moves easily from coffee and pastry to wood-fired pizza and brunch chilaquiles that marry crisp tortilla chips with morita chile, roasted lamb, and consommé meant for dunking fresh bolillo.
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Rank 31. LIMO Heritage Kitchen
Mexican
Chef Guillermo J. Gómez's open-air kitchen just outside San José del Cabo organizes its menu by the local source—garden, sea, roots, live fire—and executes with particular care: grilled yellowtail jack arrives sashimi-sliced in coconut aguachile, while bread from blue corn chars over flame. The garden setting and unhurried pace frame a philosophy that feels less curated than discovered.
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Rank 32. ACRE
Mexican
Up a dusty road in the Cabo wilderness sits a jungle resort where misters and ceiling fans cool an open-air dining room ringed by flourishing greenery. The cooking fuses casual Mexican with Asian touches—guacamole arrives like still life, ceviche swims in mango and leche de tigre—and it all tastes as considered as it looks.
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Rank 34. Agricole Cocina de Campo
Contemporary
On a stretch of highway between Cabo and Todo Santos, a garden restaurant and farm shop champion the quiet power of restraint. Tomato slices layered with olives and basil pesto, batter-fried fish tacos, shaved ribeye—the menu moves through Mexican and Californian forms with ingredient-first clarity. Cocktails are inventive, the vanilla cake with strawberries and cream a fitting close.
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Rank 36. Tenoch By Paradero Todos Santos
Contemporary Mexican
A dirt road through pepper fields leads to this open-air kitchen in rural Baja California Sur, where the casual setup masks exacting work with local seafood and farm vegetables. Soft-shell crab tacos arrive deceptively simple but complex on the tongue; slow-roasted beef tongue and manchamantel mole show equal restraint and depth. The contemporary Mexican cooking tastes of its place and moment.
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Rank 37. Benno
Mexican
Benno sits on the Baja coast at Hotel San Cristóbal, its patio facing the pool and beach with sunset views that justify the remote location. The cooking is unfussy—ceviche, grilled cheese, roasted chicken—but a catch of the day in mild herb-and-pumpkin-seed mole, and diminutive churros with house dulce de leche, suggest more care than the casual vibe lets on.
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Rank 38. Oystera
Mexican Seafood
A converted sugar mill in Todos Santos centers on an oyster bar where Chef Poncho Cadena commands a seafood-driven Mexican kitchen with contemporary ambition. The half-dozen oysters arrive from Baja waters in three sauces, or fried golden with habanero aïoli—either way, a statement of purpose.
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Rank 39. DŪM
Mexican
A carved wooden sign marks the entrance to this jungle-path oasis in Todos Santos, where Chef Aurélien Legeay and Paulina Noble reset their menu with each lunar cycle. Playful cooking arrives in unexpected combinations—oxtail swimming in red wine reduction, potato ravioli dressed in Dauphinoise cream with smoked mackerel and candy tuile—each plate both cerebral and warm.