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Lima Food Capital: A Ceviche, Market & Pisco Itinerary

Lima is South America's culinary capital, and the best way to understand it is with a fork in hand. Spend a day grazing on ceviche in Barranco, cooking causa and pisco sours with a local chef, and prowling the market stalls of Surquillo. Here is how to eat your way through Lima, with the top-rated food tours and classes to book.

At a glance

  1. 1Ceviche food tour in Barranco
  2. 2Hands-on Peruvian cooking class
  3. 3Surquillo market walk
  4. 4Pisco sour tasting to finish

Morning: ceviche and a Barranco food tour

Start where Lima's food scene sparkles — the seafront district of Barranco. A guided food tour walks you between cevicherías, anticucho grills and old eateries for eight or more tastings, from tiger's-milk ceviche to causa and picarones. Local guides explain why Lima's cold Humboldt current makes its raw fish so good. Tours run from around $45 and fill up, so book a day or two ahead.

Midday: a hands-on cooking class

Trade tasting for cooking with a Peruvian class in Miraflores or Barranco. Most start with a market visit for aji peppers and limes, then you prepare a full ceviche, a layered causa and — the highlight — your own frothy pisco sour, shaker and all. Classes run roughly 3 hours from about $50, include everything you make for lunch, and cap group sizes, so reserving in advance is essential.

Afternoon: Surquillo market and pisco

Round off the day at Surquillo, the working market where the city's top chefs shop. A guided market walk introduces exotic Amazonian fruits, dozens of potato varieties and street snacks you would never find alone. Many tours end with a proper pisco tasting — comparing quebranta, acholado and mosto verde — or a sundowner pisco sour on a Miraflores terrace, the perfect close to a food-focused day in Lima.

Lima food capital — FAQ

Why is Lima called the food capital of South America?
Lima blends Indigenous, Spanish, Japanese, Chinese and African influences into dishes like ceviche, causa and lomo saltado, and it's home to several of the world's 50 best restaurants. A food tour or cooking class is the easiest way to taste that mix in a single day.
How much do Lima food tours and cooking classes cost?
Guided food tours typically start from around $45 per person, while hands-on cooking classes with a market visit and pisco sour run from about $50. Both usually include all tastings or the meal you prepare, and most offer free cancellation.
Where are the best neighbourhoods for food in Lima?
Barranco and Miraflores are the hubs for ceviche, tasting menus and cooking classes, while Surquillo market is the go-to for guided market walks. Most tours meet in these districts, so basing yourself nearby keeps everything walkable.