Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Lima, Peru

    Astrid & Gastón

    1,335Pearl Points

    Historic hacienda, serious tasting menu credentials.

    Astrid & Gastón, Restaurant in Lima

    About Astrid & Gastón

    One of Lima's most credentialed Modern Peruvian restaurants, Astrid & Gastón operates from a 17th-century hacienda in San Isidro and delivers a tasting menu built around Peruvian biodiversity. It ranked 9th in South America in 2025 and peaked at #14 in the World's 50 Best. Book three weeks out minimum for dinner; lunch offers a marginally easier window and better light through the courtyard.

    Should You Book Astrid & Gastón?

    Getting a table here is genuinely difficult. Astrid & Gastón in Lima's San Isidro neighbourhood ranks among South America's most sought-after reservations, and the logistics reflect that: the restaurant is closed Mondays, operates lunch sittings from 1–4 pm and dinner from 7–11 pm Tuesday through Saturday, and Sunday lunch only runs until 4 pm. If you are planning around a special occasion, build in two to three weeks of lead time minimum, and lean toward a weekday lunch slot if availability is your concern. Dinner on weekends disappears fastest. The effort is worth it, but only if you commit to it on the restaurant's terms.

    The Venue

    Astrid & Gastón operates from Casa Moreyra, a 17th-century hacienda in San Isidro that has been reborn as a full-service restaurant complex. The architecture is not incidental to the experience: the stone corridors, garden courtyards, and the layered history of the building shape how a meal here feels, particularly for a celebration or a significant dinner. When you arrive early and step into the open spaces before service fills, the scent of the kitchen travelling through the colonial archways gives the meal a grounding quality that glass-and-steel dining rooms cannot replicate. For a landmark birthday, anniversary, or a business meal that needs genuine atmosphere, the setting delivers without requiring explanation.

    Chef Jorge Muñoz Castro leads the kitchen, continuing the Modern Peruvian direction that made this address significant well before its current form. The restaurant earned 28-course tasting menus built around Peruvian products and a vegetable-forward approach that won it recognition as Peru's Leading Vegetable Restaurant in 2018. That credential is relevant now: if your group includes guests who prioritise produce-led cooking over protein-heavy menus, this is the more considered choice in Lima's high-end tier.

    Awards and Standing

    The credentialing here is real. Astrid & Gastón appeared in the World's 50 Best Restaurants list every year from 2014 to 2018, peaking at number 14 in 2015. Opinionated About Dining ranked it 9th in South America in 2025, up from 13th in 2023, which suggests the kitchen is moving in the right direction post-renovation. La Liste gave it 85 points in its 2026 ranking, and it holds a World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation. Its Google rating sits at 4.6 across more than 7,000 reviews, an unusually high volume for a restaurant of this price tier in Lima. Taken together, this is not a restaurant coasting on a historical reputation — the consistency of recent rankings matters when you are deciding whether to spend a significant evening here.

    Who This Is For

    Book here if: you want a special-occasion dinner inside a genuinely historic building, your group values a tasting menu structure with Peruvian biodiversity as its organising principle, and you are willing to commit to the full experience rather than a quick meal. The hacienda format and the multi-course approach make it a poor fit for a casual midweek dinner or a group with widely varying dietary needs who have not communicated those needs in advance. For something shorter and more flexible, Kjolle in Barranco runs a tighter, more accessible menu in the same Modern Peruvian register. If you are building a broader Peru trip, Mil Centro in Moray and Chicha por Gastón Acurio in Cusco extend the same culinary lineage into the highlands, and are worth sequencing if Lima is the start of a longer itinerary. See our full Lima restaurants guide for broader context.

    Timing and Practical Details

    Lunch (1–4 pm, Tuesday through Sunday) is the more considered choice for first-time visitors. The natural light through the hacienda's courtyard windows is better at midday, the pace is slightly more relaxed than the dinner service, and, in practical terms, lunch slots are marginally easier to secure. Sunday lunch, open from noon, is worth targeting if you are visiting over a weekend and have flexibility. Dinner runs later into the evening — 7–11 pm , which suits a night when Astrid & Gastón is the sole plan, not a stop in a longer evening. The nearest international airport is Lima Jorge Chávez, approximately 22 km from San Isidro; budget 40–60 minutes depending on traffic, more during peak Lima commute hours. For hotel context in the neighbourhood, see our Lima hotels guide, and for bar options before or after, our Lima bars guide covers San Isidro and Miraflores options within reach.

    How It Compares

    More Lima and Peru Dining

    For the full range of Lima's high-end dining, Central Restaurante and Central operate in the same tier with a more altitude-focused tasting structure. Rafael is a strong alternative if you want high-quality Modern Peruvian without the tasting-menu commitment. In Miraflores, Costanera 700 covers the ceviche and seafood side of the city's cooking with considerable skill. Beyond Lima, Cirqa in Arequipa and Mauka in Cusco are the standout addresses if your Peru itinerary extends south and into the highlands. See our Lima experiences guide and Lima wineries guide for further planning.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Astrid & Gastón?

    Lunch is the stronger choice for first-time visitors. The kitchen runs the same tasting structure at both services, but the 17th-century hacienda reads differently in daylight — the courtyard and architecture are central to the experience, not just backdrop. Dinner works well for repeat visitors or anyone who prefers the evening format. Tuesday through Saturday for lunch; Sunday opens at noon.

    What should I wear to Astrid & Gastón?

    Dress for a high-end special-occasion dinner: polished but not black-tie. The setting is a restored colonial hacienda in San Isidro, Lima's most formal neighbourhood, and the clientele skews business and occasion dining. Jeans and trainers will feel out of place. A dress, blazer, or equivalent is the sensible call.

    Can I eat at the bar at Astrid & Gastón?

    The venue data does not confirm a bar dining option. Casa Moreyra does include multiple spaces beyond the main dining room, so it is worth contacting the restaurant directly when booking to ask about counter or bar seating. Do not assume walk-in bar access is available given the reservation difficulty.

    Can Astrid & Gastón accommodate groups?

    The restored hacienda complex includes several distinct spaces, which makes it more group-friendly than a single-room restaurant. For parties of six or more, check the venue's official channels well in advance — the restaurant ranked #9 in South America on Opinionated About Dining in 2025, which means availability is genuinely tight. Larger groups should ask about private dining areas within Casa Moreyra.

    What are alternatives to Astrid & Gastón in Lima?

    Central Restaurante operates in the same tier with a more altitude-driven tasting menu concept and has ranked higher on recent global lists. Kjolle, also in Barranco, offers a shorter and less formal format led by Pía León. Mérito is the pick if you want a shorter tasting menu with strong fermentation and technique focus. Mayta suits those who want a modern Peruvian format at slightly lower intensity. Isolina Taberna Peruana is the right call if you prefer traditional criollo cooking over contemporary tasting menus.

    Does Astrid & Gastón handle dietary restrictions?

    A 2018 recognition as Best Vegetable Restaurant in Peru signals that the kitchen takes plant-forward cooking seriously, not as an afterthought. That said, specific allergy and dietary accommodation policies are not documented in available venue data — flag requirements at the time of booking, not on arrival, given the tasting menu format.

    Is Astrid & Gastón good for solo dining?

    It works for solo diners who are comfortable with a formal tasting menu environment, but it is not optimised for it — the setting and format are built around occasion dining and shared courses. If solo bar seating is confirmed when you contact the restaurant, that is the better route than a table for one in the main room. Solo diners who want more interaction with kitchen or staff should ask specifically about counter options.

    Location

    Av. Paz Soldán 290, San Isidro 15073, Peru

    Lima, Peru

    Compare Astrid & Gastón

    Quick Value Check: Astrid & Gastón

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    • Kjolle — Modern Peruvian, Modern Peruvian
    • Mayta — Peruvian Modern, Peruvian Modern
    • Mérito — Venezuelan/Fusion, Venezuelan/Fusion
    • Fiesta — Contemporary Peruvian, Contemporary Peruvian
    • Isolina Taberna Peruana — Peruvian, Peruvian

    Astrid & Gastón and Central Restaurante occupy the same tier but are not interchangeable. Central's tasting menu is organised around Peruvian altitude zones, making it a more conceptually rigorous experience — and arguably harder to book. Astrid & Gastón gives you more architectural atmosphere (the hacienda versus Central's Barranco space), a vegetable-forward approach with documented awards to back it, and a slightly broader set of sitting options across the week. If the building and the occasion matter as much as the plate, Astrid & Gastón wins. If you are primarily interested in the most technically exacting expression of Peruvian terroir, Central edges it.

    Kjolle is the practical alternative for anyone who wants Modern Peruvian without the full ceremony. It shares a lineage with Central, runs a shorter and more accessible menu, and is considerably easier to book. Mayta and Mérito operate in adjacent registers — Mayta with a strong Peruvian-modern focus, Mérito bringing Venezuelan-Peruvian fusion to the mix — and both offer flexibility that a multi-course hacienda format does not. If your priority is a single landmark meal in Lima, Astrid & Gastón and Central are the two names to choose between. For a lower-stakes but still considered Peruvian dinner, Mayta or Kjolle are the smarter bookings.

    Fiesta and Isolina Taberna Peruana sit in a different category altogether — Isolina is the address for traditional Peruvian cooking in a convivial setting, with none of the tasting-menu structure or price tier. If someone in your group is hesitant about a long multi-course commitment, Isolina removes the pressure entirely. Fiesta is worth considering for contemporary Peruvian cooking with a regional focus. Neither competes directly with Astrid & Gastón on occasion-dining grounds, but both are better fits if the group needs flexibility over ceremony.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    1–4 pm, 7–11 pm
    Wednesday
    1–4 pm, 7–11 pm
    Thursday
    1–4 pm, 7–11 pm
    Friday
    1–4 pm, 7–11 pm
    Saturday
    1–4 pm, 7–11 pm
    Sunday
    12–4 pm

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Astrid & Gastón on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.