Restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico
Panadería Rosetta
150ptsElena Reygadas' bakery. Go early, go often.

About Panadería Rosetta
Panadería Rosetta is Elena Reygadas's bakery in Colonia Roma Norte and one of the clearest value propositions in Mexico City: European-influenced baking grounded in local ingredients, ranked #51 on Opinionated About Dining's North America Cheap Eats list in 2025. Go on a weekday morning for the best selection. No reservations, walk-in only.
The Verdict
If you are comparing Panadería Rosetta to a standard neighbourhood bakery, you are looking at the wrong category. The better comparison is Rosetta, Elena Reygadas's full-service restaurant a short walk away in Colonia Roma. The bakery is the more accessible, lower-commitment version of the same culinary sensibility: European-influenced baking done with serious technical intent, at a price point that makes it one of the strongest-value food stops in Mexico City. Opinionated About Dining has ranked it among the leading cheap eats in North America three consecutive years, moving from #127 in 2023 to #51 in 2025. That trajectory tells you something about how quickly the food world has taken notice.
About Panadería Rosetta
Panadería Rosetta sits on Colima 179 in Colonia Roma Norte, one of Mexico City's most food-dense blocks. The visual draw is immediate: trays of laminated pastries, flaky conchas, and naturally leavened breads stacked in a space that reads more like a thoughtful Milanese pasticceria than a traditional Mexican panadería. That visual register is intentional. Reygadas trained in Italy before opening Rosetta, and the influence runs through everything here from the lamination on the croissants to the use of high-quality local grains. What makes this worth visiting, beyond aesthetics, is that the baking holds up to the look of the place.
For a food-focused traveller, this is one of the clearest expressions of what Mexico City's dining scene has been doing well for the past decade: taking an international technique and grounding it in local ingredients without making a performance of the fusion. You are eating good bread in a good room, not sitting through a concept. That restraint is what makes Panadería Rosetta easy to recommend to almost anyone passing through Roma Norte.
Leading Time to Visit
The optimal window is weekday mornings, specifically Tuesday through Friday between 8am and 10am. This is when the broadest selection of freshly baked items is available and before the mid-morning rush from the surrounding neighbourhood and nearby offices fills the small space. Weekend mornings draw longer queues, particularly on Saturdays, when Roma Norte foot traffic peaks. The bakery opens at 7am Monday through Friday and 7am Saturday (7:30am Sunday), which makes it a viable first stop before a full day of eating around the city. Wednesday through Saturday hours extend to 10pm, meaning it also works as an early-evening detour for pastry and coffee after dinner reservations that end early — though selection thins out considerably by late afternoon.
Does the Food Travel Well?
This is a bakery, so takeaway is essentially the default format. Most items are designed to be carried: pastries in paper bags, breads boxed or wrapped. If you are heading to a hotel room, a park, or a long transfer, Panadería Rosetta is one of the few Mexico City food stops where the off-premise experience is comparable to eating in. Laminated pastries are leading within an hour of purchase — the flakiness degrades with time and humidity, which matters in CDMX. Bread holds better, particularly any naturally leavened loaves, which travel well across a full day. For a food traveller building a morning itinerary, buying here and eating in Parque México a few blocks away is a practical and worthwhile option. Delivery, if available through local platforms, is a lower-priority choice given how short the window is for laminated items at their leading.
Ratings and Recognition
- Opinionated About Dining , Cheap Eats North America: #51 (2025), #75 (2024), #127 (2023)
- Google rating: 4.5 across 9,080 reviews
Practical Details
Address: Colima 179, Roma Nte., Cuauhtémoc, 06700 Ciudad de México. Hours: Monday 7am–9pm; Tuesday–Wednesday 7am–10pm; Thursday–Friday 7am–10pm; Saturday 7am–10pm; Sunday 7:30am–9:30 pm. Booking: No reservations , walk-in only. Budget: Cheap eats tier; expect to spend under 200 MXN per person for pastry and coffee. Dress: No code; casual is the norm. Leading for: Solo visitors, couples, small groups picking up breakfast or an afternoon snack.
How It Compares
Explore More in Mexico City and Beyond
For the full picture of where to eat in the city, see our full Mexico City restaurants guide. If you are planning the rest of your trip, our Mexico City hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the key decisions. For Reygadas's full-service cooking, Rosetta is the natural next booking. Elsewhere in Mexico, Levadura de Olla in Oaxaca and Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe are worth building itineraries around. For bakery benchmarks in other cities, Radio Bakery in New York and Antica Focacceria San Francesco in Palermo offer useful points of comparison.
Compare Panadería Rosetta
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Panadería Rosetta?
Panadería Rosetta operates as a bakery, not a sit-down restaurant with a bar counter in the traditional sense. Seating is limited and casual — expect to stand, perch, or take your order to go. If you want a full table-service experience from Elena Reygadas, book a table at Rosetta, the parent restaurant, instead.
What should a first-timer know about Panadería Rosetta?
Go early. The bakery opens at 7am Monday through Friday and selection is broadest before 10am — later visits risk depleted trays. It sits on Colima 179 in Roma Norte, a walkable, food-dense neighbourhood. Ranked #51 on OAD Cheap Eats North America in 2025, it punches well above what the price point suggests.
Can Panadería Rosetta accommodate groups?
Small groups of two to four work fine, but this is not a venue built for large parties. Seating is informal and space is tight. For a group meal with more structure, Rosetta or Quintonil offer the table formats and reservation systems that a bigger group needs.
Is lunch or dinner better at Panadería Rosetta?
Morning is the answer, even though the options extend to evening. The bakery runs until 9pm or 10pm depending on the day, but the core offer — freshly baked items at their best — is a morning and late-morning proposition. Dinner visits work if you are nearby, but the selection will be narrower.
What are alternatives to Panadería Rosetta in Mexico City?
For a comparable casual, counter-service format in the city, look at other Roma Norte and Condesa spots. If you want to stay within the Elena Reygadas universe, Rosetta is the full-service restaurant version on the same street. For a step up in formality and budget, Pujol and Quintonil are the standard references for Mexico City fine dining.
Is Panadería Rosetta good for a special occasion?
Not in the conventional sense. There are no reservations, no tasting menus, and no formal dining room. What it does offer is a low-cost, high-quality morning with a chef who holds serious credentials — Reygadas' work here earned OAD Cheap Eats rankings in 2023, 2024, and 2025. Treat it as a considered breakfast stop, not a celebration dinner.
Hours
- Monday
- 7 am–9 pm
- Tuesday
- 7 am–9 pm
- Wednesday
- 7 am–10 pm
- Thursday
- 7 am–10 pm
- Friday
- 7 am–10 pm
- Saturday
- 7 am–10 pm
- Sunday
- 7:30 am–9:30 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Mexico City
- QuintonilQuintonil is Mexico City's strongest argument for a special occasion table, with two Michelin stars, a #7 World's 50 Best ranking in 2024, and the 2025 Best Restaurant in North America title. Book lunch for value and calm; book dinner for the full celebration arc. Reservations are Near Impossible — start early or you will miss it.
- PujolPujol is Mexico City's most credentialed restaurant: two Michelin stars, a sustained World's 50 Best ranking since 2011, and a tasting menu format built around indigenous Mexican ingredients and serious technique. Book it for a special occasion in Polanco, but plan well ahead — this is one of the hardest reservations in Latin America.
- RosettaA Michelin-starred, World's 50 Best Top 35 restaurant at $$ pricing — Rosetta is the most compelling value proposition among Mexico City's serious restaurants. Chef Elena Reygadas' plant-forward reinterpretations of Mexican classics in a Roma Norte mansion justify the near-impossible booking difficulty. Plan four to six weeks ahead for dinner, closed Sundays.
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