
Opinionated About Dining’s respected ranking of South America's finest restaurants, recognized for culinary excellence and innovation.
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Roanne, France
Le Central sits on Roanne's Cours de la République at the €€ price point, carrying a 2025 Michelin Plate and back-to-back Opinionated About Dining number-one rankings for South America — an unusual combination of French address and Latin American critical standing that positions it as one of the more anomalous entries in the region's dining scene. A Google rating of 4.5 across 489 reviews suggests consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.

Moray, Peru
Set among the Inca circular terraces of Moray at 3,500 metres, Mil Centro is one of South America's most seriously regarded restaurants, ranking second on Opinionated About Dining's South America list in 2024 and 2025 after holding the top spot in 2023. Virgilio Martínez's high-altitude kitchen anchors its menu in Andean biodiversity, drawing on ingredients from the surrounding Sacred Valley with the same intellectual rigour as his Lima flagship, Central.

Santiago, Chile
Boragó has held a place in the World's 50 Best Restaurants every year since 2015, and its tasting menu, Endémica, remains one of South America's most rigorous expressions of native-ingredient cooking. Chef Rodolfo Guzmán works with over 200 foragers and small producers across Chile, drawing from coastlines, high-altitude terrain, and a biodynamic orchard to build a menu rooted in Mapuche food culture.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Don Julio holds a Michelin star and a top-ten World's 50 Best ranking, placing it at the apex of Buenos Aires' parrilla tradition. Booking two months ahead is standard; walk-in queues form close to opening time. The wine cellar runs to 60,000 bottles, and the beef — Aberdeen Angus and Hereford, dry-aged in-house — is sourced from the restaurant's own regenerative farm outside the city.

Lima, Peru
Kjolle sits in Barranco's Casa Tupac, where Pía León — named World's Best Female Chef and the chef behind Central's rise — runs a tasting menu built entirely from Peru's ingredient treasury. Ranked #16 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 and #5 in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025, the restaurant applies months of research to each ingredient without obscuring what it is. Open Tuesday through Saturday for lunch and dinner.

Lima, Peru
In Barranco, Lima's most creatively charged neighbourhood, Mérito has built a serious reputation by threading Venezuelan culinary memory through Peruvian ingredients and technique. Ranked #55 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 and #6 in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025, the two-floor restaurant on Jr. 28 de Julio draws both local regulars and informed international visitors. The chef's counter remains the most coveted seat in the house.

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Lasai holds two Michelin stars, a place on The World's 50 Best Restaurants list, and the title of Best Restaurant in Brazil 2024. Chef Rafa Costa e Silva's 15-course tasting menu, fed by two private gardens, runs just 10 guests around a single L-shaped counter in Humaitá. This is Rio's most decorated modern restaurant, and one of the most precisely considered dining formats in South America.

La Paz, Bolivia
Ranked among South America's top ten restaurants by Opinionated About Dining every year from 2023 to 2025, Gustu operates from Calacoto as both a working restaurant and a training ground for young Bolivian cooks. Every ingredient on the menu comes from within Bolivia's borders, making the kitchen a direct argument for what Bolivian produce can achieve at the highest tier of contemporary South American dining.

Lima, Peru
Set inside the 17th-century Casa Moreyra hacienda in San Isidro, Astrid & Gastón has held a place in the World's 50 Best Restaurants every year from 2011 to 2018, peaking at #14 in 2013 and 2015. Under chef Jorge Muñoz Castro, the restaurant runs a tasting format built around Peruvian biodiversity, with vegetables as a recurring editorial thread. Ranked #9 in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025.

Lima, Peru
La Picanteria in Surquillo operates as a daytime-only seafood house, anchored in the ceviche and causa traditions that define Lima's coastal cooking. Ranked #10 on the Opinionated About Dining South America list in 2024 and holding a 4.6 Google rating across more than 2,700 reviews, it represents a different register to Lima's tasting-menu circuit — direct, ingredient-driven, and rooted in the market rhythms of its neighbourhood.

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Two-Michelin-starred Oteque reigns as South America's best restaurant, where chef Alberto Landgraf's eight-course seafood tasting menu transforms Brazilian coastal ingredients into culinary art within an intimate Botafogo setting ranked 12th globally.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Chila revolutionized Buenos Aires fine dining through Chef Soledad Nardelli's pioneering New Argentine Cuisine, transforming local ingredients into haute cuisine masterpieces within a minimalist Puerto Madero space overlooking the Rio de la Plata. Though closed, this Relais & Châteaux restaurant remains a defining influence on Argentina's culinary landscape.

São Paulo, Brazil
A Casa do Porco sits at the intersection of democratic pricing and serious culinary ambition in downtown São Paulo. Chef Jefferson Rueda's whole-animal pork programme has earned a World's 50 Best ranking (#83 in 2025, previously as high as #7 in 2022) and a Michelin Bib Gourmand, placing this República address in a different competitive tier from the tasting-menu circuit that surrounds it.

Lima, Peru
Named The World's Best Restaurant 2025 by the 50 Best organisation, Maido occupies a specific position in Lima's dining scene: the city's clearest expression of Nikkei cuisine, where Japanese technique meets Peruvian ingredient with precision and seasonal intent. Chef Mitsuharu Tsumura has built a decade-and-a-half of credential around this intersection, earning consecutive top-ten rankings and a loyal international following from a Miraflores address on Calle San Martín.

Lima, Peru
Ranked #41 on The World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024, Mayta has been among Lima's most consistent modern Peruvian addresses since relocating and relaunching in 2018. Chef Jaime Pesaque structures the menu around Peru's regional biodiversity, from Amazonian fish to Andean algae, across a nine-course tasting format and a parallel plant-based programme that earned a fifth radish in the We're Smart Green Guide.

São Paulo, Brazil
Mocotó occupies a different tier from São Paulo's tasting-menu circuit: Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised and ranked 17th in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025, it serves northeastern Brazilian cooking in Vila Medeiros at prices that put it firmly within reach of daily dining. The loyal crowd returns for a reason that has little to do with occasion and everything to do with consistency.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Argentina's only two-Michelin-starred restaurant occupies a quietly tucked passage in Recoleta, where Gonzalo Aramburu's 18-course tasting menu reframes the country's ingredients through rigorous technique. Ranked in La Liste's global top 100 and a member of Relais & Châteaux, it represents the furthest point on Buenos Aires's fine-dining spectrum — and the clearest argument that Argentine cuisine extends well beyond the grill.

Bogota, Colombia
Among Bogotá's most globally recognised modern Colombian restaurants, El Chato has held a position inside the World's 50 Best since 2023 — reaching #25 in 2024 — while keeping the format deliberately relaxed. Chef Álvaro Clavijo applies European technique to native Colombian ingredients, producing a menu that reads as a producer ledger as much as a dining list. Reservations are taken for lunch and dinner Tuesday through Sunday, with Sunday service closing at 4 pm.

São Paulo, Brazil
Maní holds a Michelin star and a 95-point La Liste score while occupying a distinct position in São Paulo's creative dining scene: technically precise Brazilian cooking that draws on Amazonian ingredients without losing sight of European technique. Chef Helena Rizzo's menu places vegetables and native produce at its structural centre, earning the restaurant a decade of international recognition including a 2014 peak of #36 on the World's 50 Best list.

Cartagena, Colombia
Located in Getsemaní, Cartagena's most culturally layered neighbourhood, Celele translates years of field research along Colombia's Caribbean coast into a focused a la carte menu. Ranked #21 in South America by Opinionated About Dining (2025) and holder of a Sustainable Restaurant Award, it works with ingredients from wild harvests and Indigenous food traditions that most Colombian restaurants have never touched.

Ostuni, Italy
Cielo occupies the rooftop of La Sommità hotel in Ostuni's whitewashed hilltop quarter, holding a Michelin Plate and consecutive Opinionated About Dining recognition across both its North and South American ranking lists. Chef Juan Manuel Barrientos Valencia works with Puglian ingredients reframed through a modern lens, with dining options spanning a terrace aperitif at dusk to a full tasting menu beneath vaulted ceilings. Price range sits at €€€€.

Lima, Peru
Isolina Taberna Peruana in Barranco brings traditional Peruvian home cooking to a serious dining context, with consistent recognition from La Liste and Opinionated About Dining since 2023. Chef José del Castillo draws on the deep pantry of Lima's mercado culture to produce dishes rooted in generational technique. Open seven days a week, it occupies a distinct position among Lima's mid-to-upper tier restaurants as a counterpoint to the city's modernist wave.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
A Buenos Aires bodegón transformed into a fully-fledged restaurant in 2019, El Preferido de Palermo runs classic Spanish and Italian-inspired dishes through the same operational rigour as its sibling, the celebrated steakhouse Don Julio. Ranked 25th in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025 and recognised with a Michelin Plate, it operates in a different price bracket from its stablemate but holds its own on produce quality and craft.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Mishiguene sits at the intersection of Argentina's Jewish immigrant heritage and contemporary Buenos Aires cooking, translating Ashkenazi, Sephardic, and Israeli traditions through modern technique. Chef Tomás Kalika holds a 2025 Michelin Plate and ranks 26th on Opinionated About Dining's South America list. Dinner runs nightly from 7 pm at Lafinur 3368 in Palermo.

Montevideo, Uruguay
Parador la Huella defines barefoot luxury dining in Montevideo, where Chef Vanessa González's fire-grilled seafood mastery meets Atlantic beachfront views in Uruguay's most celebrated coastal restaurant, recognized as the country's best by Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants.

Lima, Peru
Fiesta Lima brings four decades of northern Peruvian culinary mastery to Miraflores, where Chef Héctor Solís transforms Chiclayo traditions into refined dining experiences featuring signature Arroz con Pato, exceptional ceviche, and rare loche squash preparations unavailable elsewhere in the capital.

Lima, Peru
Rafael occupies an art-deco mansion on Calle San Martín in Miraflores, where chef Rafael Osterling has spent decades threading Peruvian ingredients through Italian and Japanese technique. Ranked on Opinionated About Dining's South America list consistently since 2023 and awarded 90 points by La Liste in 2025, it holds a steady position in Lima's upper tier of cosmopolitan modern Peruvian dining.

Quito, Ecuador
Ranked 61st on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list in both 2024 and 2025, Nuema is where Quito's contemporary dining conversation is most seriously happening. Chefs Alejandro Chamorro and Pía Salazar run a seasonally driven tasting menu that maps Ecuador's biodiversity through angular plating, bold colour, and layered flavour. Open Tuesday through Saturday for lunch and dinner, closed Sunday and Monday.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
At Thames 2317 in Palermo, La Carniceria puts Argentine meat culture under a scrutinising, ingredient-first lens. Ranked #31 on the 2025 Opinionated About Dining list for South America and recognised with a Michelin Plate in 2024, it occupies the accessible end of Buenos Aires's serious grill scene — a $$ price point that earns consistent 4.3-star recognition across more than 3,000 Google reviews.

Bogota, Colombia
Leo has held a place in the World's 50 Best Restaurants every year since 2019, peaking at #43 in 2023 and sitting at #76 in 2025. Chef Leonor Espinosa's seasonal tasting menu moves through Colombia's ecosystems — Amazon, Caribbean, Pacific coast — using indigenous ingredients that rarely appear on any menu outside their region of origin. It is the most externally validated address in Bogotá's modern Colombian dining scene.

São Paulo, Brazil
Fasano anchors São Paulo's fine-dining establishment in Cerqueira César, where contemporary Italian cooking has drawn the same loyalists for decades. Ranked #33 in South America by Opinionated About Dining (2025) and recognised by Michelin and La Liste, this is a room where the regulars know the rhythm as well as the menu. Dinner service runs nightly from 7 pm, with Sunday lunch the week's most considered sitting.

Curitiba, Brazil
Opened in 2011 as the first woman-led tasting menu restaurant in Brazil, Manu has grown into one of South America's most referenced addresses for plant-forward, seasonally driven cooking. Ranked 34th in the Opinionated About Dining top restaurants in South America (2025), the 20-seat format in Curitiba's Batel district serves a tasting menu built around local sourcing and over 60% plant-based ingredients.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
El Baqueno has held a position inside the Opinionated About Dining Top 35 in South America every year from 2023 to 2025, placing chef Fernando Rivarola among the continent's most consistently recognized practitioners of modern Argentinian cooking. The restaurant operates from a setting on Cerro San Bernardo in Salta, grounding its work in the northwest's distinct larder rather than Buenos Aires convention.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
La Brigada in San Telmo has held a consistent position on Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in South America list since 2023, reaching as high as #19 in 2024. The restaurant represents the traditional end of Buenos Aires steakhouse culture, where the asado ritual takes precedence over reinvention. It operates Tuesday through Sunday for both lunch and dinner service, closed on Mondays.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Inside the Four Seasons Buenos Aires on Posadas, Elena positions itself at the intersection of open-fire Argentine grilling and internationally informed technique. Executive Chef Juan Gaffuri's dry-aged beef programme, 200-label wine list focused on Mendoza and Patagonia, and a 2025 Michelin Plate make it one of the more seriously argued cases for modern Argentine cooking in the city.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
La Cabrera has held a position inside Opinionated About Dining's South America rankings every year since at least 2023, placing as high as #27 in that cycle. Located on Cabrera Street in Palermo, Buenos Aires, the parrilla draws both locals and international visitors with a format built around fire-driven beef cookery and a wine list weighted toward Argentine varietals. It operates daily across both lunch and dinner services.

Lima, Peru
OSSO Carniceria operates at the intersection of butcher shop and restaurant in San Isidro, where Chef Renzo Garibaldi has built a programme around dry-aged cuts and wood-fired cooking that Opinionated About Dining has ranked among South America's top restaurants in 2023, 2024, and 2025. The format is meat-forward and intentional: produce quality, butchery craft, and fire are the three load-bearing elements.

São Paulo, Brazil
Evvai holds two Michelin stars and a place in the World's 50 Best at number 95, making it one of São Paulo's most decorated restaurants. Chef Luiz Filipe Souza's single tasting menu, Oriundi, channels the Brazilian-Italian migrant tradition through technically precise cooking and local ingredients. Pinheiros, Tuesday through Saturday evenings, with Saturday lunch service also available.

Lima, Peru
On a residential stretch of Miraflores, Anticuchos Grimanesa has built a reputation around a single ingredient and the charcoal smoke that transforms it. Ranked 45th in the 2025 Opinionated About Dining South America list, this is street food refined to a serious address — where anticuchos, Peru's grilled beef heart skewers, are the reason Lima's food community keeps returning.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Gran Dabbang operates without reservations in Palermo, serving sharing plates that draw on Indian, Thai, and Arab techniques applied to Argentine ingredients. Ranked #46 on Opinionated About Dining's South America list in 2025, it occupies a specific niche in Buenos Aires dining: technically grounded, globally informed, and built around a format that rewards early arrivals and repeat visits.

Mendoza, Argentina
Set inside a 19th-century bodega in Godoy Cruz, 1884 Francis Mallmann is the Mendoza address most directly associated with Argentina's open-fire cooking tradition. Ranked among the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2002 and 2003, and holding a Michelin Plate in 2024 and 2025, the restaurant operates Tuesday through Saturday for dinner only, placing it squarely in the top tier of the city's fine-dining circuit.

São Paulo, Brazil
Tordesilhas has held its place in Jardins for decades as one of São Paulo's most rigorous addresses for traditional Brazilian regional cooking. Chef Mara Salas draws from the country's full culinary geography, with preparations rooted in technique rather than trend. A Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient in both 2024 and 2025, and ranked 49th in the OAD South America list for 2025, it delivers serious cooking at a price point that undercuts most of its peers.

Lima, Peru
In San Isidro's quieter residential stretch, El Pan de la Chola has become a reference point for bread-led café dining in Lima. Ranked 51st in Opinionated About Dining's 2025 South America list, the bakery under chef Pamela Davila operates around a sustainability-first sourcing philosophy that shapes everything from the loaves to the juice program. It sits in a different register from Lima's tasting-menu circuit, but earns its place on the same serious dining map.

Bogotá, Colombia
Harry Sasson has anchored Bogotá's upper tier of Colombian dining for decades, earning consecutive Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in South America rankings and a La Liste 2025 placement. The restaurant occupies a generous space in the Zona Rosa corridor and delivers a menu rooted in Colombian ingredients interpreted with international technique. Open seven days a week, it draws both long-standing regulars and first-time visitors to the city.

Cartagena, Colombia
Andres Carne de Res in Cartagena's historic centre occupies a different register than the city's refined tasting-menu circuit. Ranked 47th in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2024 and climbing to 53rd in 2025, it draws a local-heavy crowd with Colombian cooking rooted in the country's carnivorous traditions. The address on Calle de la Serrezuela puts it within reach of the walled city's main dining corridor.

São Paulo, Brazil
Fogo de Chão São Paulo elevates Brazil's sacred churrasco tradition into theatrical fine dining, where skilled gauchos present fire-roasted premium cuts tableside in an authentic rodízio experience. With five elegant locations and Michelin recognition, this premium churrascaria transforms ancient gaucho heritage into contemporary luxury dining.

Lima, Peru
La Lucha Sangucheria Criolla has built its reputation around Peru's sandwich tradition rather than its tasting-menu circuit, holding an Opinionated About Dining Top 56 ranking in South America (2025) alongside a 4.5 Google rating from over 8,500 reviews. Located on Av Diagonal in Miraflores, it positions the sanguche as a serious culinary category in a city more often discussed through its fine-dining lens.

Lima, Peru
Maras in Lima presents modern Peruvian cuisine with regional flair. Must-try dishes include Crispy Baby Octopus, Nikkei Tuna Tiradito, and Arapaima with mashed cassava and banana. The restaurant pairs seasonal plates with an expansive wine program — 205 selections and an inventory of 460 bottles — guided by Head Sommelier Julián Oliva. Located inside The Westin Lima Hotel & Convention Center, Maras offers a focused tasting menu and à la carte choices that highlight coastal seafood, Amazonian produce, and Andean roots. Recognized with Tripadvisor's Travellers' Choice 2025, the dining room delivers attentive, knowledgeable service and a warm, inviting atmosphere ideal for celebratory dinners and business meals. Reserve via SevenRooms.

São Paulo, Brazil
São Paulo's most decorated sushi counter, Jun Sakamoto has held a Michelin star continuously since 2024 and sits among the top 60 restaurants in South America by Opinionated About Dining. Operating from a quiet address on Rua Lisboa in Pinheiros, the restaurant runs Tuesday through Saturday from 7 to 11 pm, placing it firmly within the city's evening fine-dining circuit.

São Paulo, Brazil
A Michelin Bib Gourmand recipient in 2024 and 2025, Corrutela sits in the mid-price tier of Vila Madalena's serious dining scene, ranked #56 and #61 in OAD's South America list across those same years. Chef César Costa runs a seasonal Brazilian kitchen where the menu shifts with market supply rather than calendar convenience. Open Wednesday through Sunday for lunch and dinner, with an accessible price point that makes it one of the more compelling entries in São Paulo's ingredient-led cooking movement.

Mendoza, Argentina
Siete Fuegos sits on Ruta Provincial 94 in the Valle de Uco, where Francis Mallmann's open-fire cooking meets Argentina's most serious wine country. Ranked 57th in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2024, the restaurant draws on ancient fire techniques — seven distinct methods — applied to produce from the surrounding foothills. Lunch and dinner service run daily, making it one of the region's more accessible destination restaurants.

Cusco, Peru
Chicha por Gaston Acurio sits on Cusco's Plaza Regocijo and applies Acurio's Peruvian revivalist approach to Andean ingredients and regional cooking traditions. Ranked in Opinionated About Dining's Top 65 South American restaurants in 2025, it draws a broad crowd — tourists, Lima visitors, and locals — and delivers accessible but carefully considered Peruvian food at mid-range prices for the city.

São Paulo, Brazil
Ranked #53 in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2024 and #65 in 2025, Arturito is a Jardim Paulista address where chef Paola Carosella's Latin American cooking draws on ingredient provenance as its organising principle. With a Google rating of 4.4 across nearly 5,000 reviews, it occupies a tier of São Paulo dining that sits between high-concept tasting menus and neighbourhood warmth — serious cooking without the formality ceiling.

São Paulo, Brazil
Komah brings Korean cooking to Barra Funda with enough rigour to earn back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025, and a place in Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in South America both years. Chef Paulo Shin works at the $$-tier price point, making this one of São Paulo's more accessible entries into serious Korean food. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 across more than 3,000 submissions.

São Paulo, Brazil
Among São Paulo's high-end Japanese addresses, Shin Zushi in Paraíso occupies a specific tier: a four-price-range counter recognised by both La Liste and the Michelin Guide, positioning it alongside the city's most serious Japanese dining options. Chef Edson Yamashita operates within a tradition that São Paulo, with its deep Japanese-Brazilian community, has developed more fully than almost any other city outside Japan.

Quito, Ecuador
Ranked #74 on the 2025 Opinionated About Dining list for South America, URKO sits in Quito's La Floresta neighbourhood and holds a 4.7 Google rating across more than 700 reviews. Chef Danile Maldonado works within a format rooted in Ecuadorian produce and technique. For the city's contemporary dining scene, it represents one of the more consistent arguments for what local ingredients can do at a serious level.
Find out on Pearl and keep score across every place in 2025 OAD Top Restaurants in South America Ranked.
Overview
This edition ranks 56 restaurants across 10 South American countries based on OAD's 2025 evaluation. Le Central in Roanne, France holds the top position, followed by Peru's Mil Centro and Chile's Boragó. Lima dominates with four entries in the top ten, including Kjolle, Mérito, Astrid & Gastón, and La Picanteria. The list represents a complete turnover from the previous edition, with all 56 venues appearing as new entrants.
The 2025 OAD ranking for South America features 56 restaurants distributed across 17 cities in 10 countries. This edition marks a complete reset from the previous year—all 115 venues from the prior ranking dropped out, replaced entirely by new entrants. Peru claims the strongest presence in the top tier, with Lima alone placing four restaurants in the top ten. The geographic spread extends beyond traditional dining capitals: Bolivia's Gustu in La Paz ranks eighth, while Brazil's Lasai in Rio de Janeiro takes seventh. The list includes both high-altitude dining (Mil Centro in Moray) and major metropolitan establishments (Don Julio in Buenos Aires at fourth). Chile and Argentina each secure one top-ten position with Boragó and Don Julio respectively.
The 2025 OAD ranking for South America underwent a complete overhaul. Every single restaurant from the previous edition dropped out, replaced by 56 entirely new entries spanning 10 countries and 17 cities. Le Central from Roanne, France sits at number one—an unusual placement in a South American ranking. Peru dominates the top ten with four Lima restaurants: Kjolle (5th), Mérito (6th), Astrid & Gastón (9th), and La Picanteria (11th). Chile's Boragó and Argentina's Don Julio round out the podium at third and fourth respectively.
This edition represents a structural departure from OAD's previous South American rankings. The complete turnover—zero venues retained from 115 previously ranked—suggests either a methodology change or a fundamental shift in evaluation criteria. The inclusion of Le Central, a French restaurant in Roanne, at the top position raises questions about the list's geographic scope and criteria.
Lima emerges as the continental leader with four top-ten placements, reinforcing Peru's established reputation in fine dining. The city's representation spans different dining approaches: Kjolle and Mérito appear in consecutive positions at fifth and sixth, while Astrid & Gastón and La Picanteria claim ninth and eleventh. Beyond Peru, the geographic distribution spreads across altitude and climate zones—from Mil Centro's high-altitude location in Moray to coastal capitals like Santiago and Buenos Aires.
The 56-restaurant count covers 17 cities across 10 countries, indicating a broader reach than many continental rankings. Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, and Argentina each secured top-ten positions, suggesting the list values geographic diversity alongside dining quality. The complete replacement of venues makes year-over-year performance tracking impossible, but establishes a new baseline for future editions.