Machu
Picchu Restaurant
Tel: (506) 222-7384 / 255-2243
Specialty: Exotic seafood dishes from coastal Peru.
Chefs: Owner Fausto Jaime Martínez.
Recommended Dish: Assorted Seafood Platter (serves two),
with a variety of Peruvian delights including Parmesan shrimp,
garlic octopus and marinated sea bass.
Prices: Dinner entrées range from U.S. $4.50 to
$14, including sales and service taxes (23%).
Location: Calle 32 between Ave. 1 and 3 in San José,
125 mts. north of Kentucky Fried Chicken on Paseo Colon.
Directions for Taxi Driver: Calle 32 y Ave. 1 y 3 en San
José, 125 mts. norte de Pollos Kentucky, Paseo Colon.
The food is
deliciously different and the service is exceptionally good at
Machu Picchu, Costa Ricas first - and arguably most popular
- Peruvian restaurant.
The modest-but-dignified
San José restaurant, owned and managed by Peruvian-born
chef Fausto Jaime Martínez, has been satisfying its clients
for decades with authentic seafood dishes from the coastal region
of Peru. Machu Picchu, Costa Rica, is the place to go for unrivaled
Peruvian-style ceviche, marinated chunks of fish or
octopus, seafood chaufa, or seafood rice, pickled
beefheart, pepper chicken, tenderloin stir-fry and stuffed potatoes
smothered in onion sauce.
Most of the
entrées at Machu Picchu are served with potatoes, a Peruvian
staple. No less than 78 varieties of potatoes exist in Peru, explains
Martínez, who imports freeze-dried Peruvian potatoes to
use in his kitchen. After all, the Incas used to freeze-dry potatoes
near the summit of his restaurants namesake
Martínez
also imports some seafood from Peru. Other essential ingredients
in his kitchen include the slightly spicy aji peppers
used in many typical Peruvian dishes, black olives and purple
corn.
When Martínez
bought Machu Picchu more than 13 years ago, it was the only Peruvian
restaurant in town. He purchased it soon after moving to Costa
Rica, from a Peruvian man of Japanese descent, who had started
the restaurant about 20 years earlier. When Martínez acquired
it, the establishment had only seven tables in one small room.
The menu, no doubt reflecting the founders heritage, included
many Japanese specialties as well as a few Peruvian dishes.
Today the
restaurant, still in its original building, has flourished under
Martínezs dedicated and experienced guidance. The
dining area has been expanded to include about two dozen tables
in three different dining rooms. The menu boasts a wide array
of authentic Peruvian-style recipes, ranging from appetizers and
main courses to desserts and mixed drinks.
The restaurant
is a family endeavor, Martínez is quick to point out -
his partner and wife, Mirla Madrid, runs the cash register. He
has owned three restaurants, and originally learned to cook from
his father, who was a chef for the Hilton chain of hotels. Cooking
definitely runs in the family - Martínezs two brothers
also own restaurants in Panama.
The menu at
Machu Picchu includes delicious and exotic appetizers such as
crispy roasted octopus and squid chicharrones and
Pulpo al Olivo, chunks of octopus bathed in virgin
olive oil and fresh parsley, accompanied by a delectable black
olive sauce for dipping. Exquisite!
Or try the
Causa Limeña, mashed potatoes stuffed with spiced shrimp
and smothered with a savory onion sauce; or the Parmesan Shrimp,
baked with cheese in small scallop shells. The restaurants
most popular appetizer, according to Martínez, is the Peruvian-style
Queen Sea Bass Ceviche, made with bite-sized pieces
of fresh sea bass cooked in lime juice and garnished with marinated
onion; served with sweet potato and corn-on-the-cob to put out
the fire of the restaurants famous aji pepper sauce.
Entrées
that must not go unmentioned include the Stuffed Sea Bass, a filet
stuffed with jumbo shrimp and covered with its own sauce. Another
recommended dish, one of the chefs specialties, is the Sea
Bass a lo Macho, prepared with a dressing made of garlic, onion,
and aji pepper with a variety of shellfish, all highlighted with
white wine.
The Seafood
Chaufa is a Peruvian version of Cantonese rice with chunks of
ham, chicken, eggs and seafood. Those looking for a little spice
in their dinner will enjoy the Picante de Camarones, succulent
shrimp prepared in a sauce of onion, cream and mildly spicy yellow
aji pepper, or the Aji de Gallina, spicy slices of tender chicken
prepared with aji, nuts, milk and breadcrumbs.
Dessert-lovers
are in for a treat at Machu Picchu. Standing out from various
other sweet concoctions is the Suspiro Limeño,
a heavenly dessert with sweet whipped cream and caramelized milk
with chopped nuts and a dash of Pisco, a grape-based spirit from
Peru.
The restaurants
Chicha Morada is a refreshing non-alcoholic drink
made with purple corn boiled with pineapple and lemon, cooled
and served with tiny bits of chopped fruit. The purple drink (not
be confused with the traditional alcoholic chicha
made by Costa Ricas indigenous people) contains chunks of
apple, melon and other fruits, and tastes similar to (but far
more complex and intriguing than) lemonade.
The restaurants
famed Peruvian-style alcoholic drink, the Pisco Sour, has almost
become a trademark cocktail at Machu Picchu. Made with Pisco,
lemon juice, egg whites and sugar, blended with ice and served
with aromatic bitters, the drink adds a spark of Peruvian festivity
to your meal. The restaurant also offers a varied selection of
red and white wines from Europe and South America as well as a
variety of mixed drinks and cocktails.
Machu
Picchu is open Monday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
for lunch, and 6-10 p.m. for dinner. Checks are not accepted.
We would like to share some of the comments
we have received from our clients.
We
can assist you in planning your trip in Costa Rica! Please contact
our travel
division on how to customize your vacation to meet your budget
and expectations. We replay with a suggested itinerary and cost
within 24 hours.
Toll-free
from the U.S.:
1-866-211-0533
Telephones:
(506) 280-4041
Fax:
(506) 253-6934
P.O.
Box 11071-1000
San José, Costa Rica
or
SJO 745
P.O. Box 025216
Miami, FL 33102-5216
We
would like to share some of the comments
we have received from our clients.
Contact
us by E-Mail
|
|
|