Having spent a week in beautiful Buenos Aires, I thought I would try to provide some recommendations on things that I enjoyed and heard about (condensed into a small 48 hour itinerary for the sake of creating a theme). The best advice I can give anyone visiting Buenos Aires is to go on an empty stomach and be prepared to wine & dine like royalty. Food and wine are cheap, plentiful and absolutely fantastic. Argetinians are also extremely warm, friendly and expressive people – not dissimilar to their Italian counterparts. In fact there is a saying that an Argentine is an Italian who speaks Spanish.
It is also advisable to visit the city around October-November as it’s spring in the southern hemisphere and temperatures in Bs.As usually hover around 75 degrees F. Also, the city’s countless jacaranda trees are in full bloom during this time highlighting the streets with a shade of purple thats very photogenic.
10AM: San Telmo Street Fair
On Saturdays, San Telmo is bustling with local artisans, bands and tourists. All along Defensa street, you will find tons of arts and crafts stalls selling everything from paintings, to flip flops to leather jackets to souvenirs. On practically every street corner you will also find bands playing live music from all over the continent. This is a great place to spend your saturday afternoon taking in the local culture. A much recommended stop for coffee and a quick bite is El Balcon which is a dingy cafe that sits above San Telmo plaza and provides a nice view overlooking the fair as well as free tango shows (very touristy and nothing fantastic about the food but its a nice experience).
3PM: Cemetery and Recoleta
The rich and famous rest in peace in this beautiful and immense cemetery located in Recoleta; the “Beverly Hills of Buenos Aires” as described by one affable cab driver. One can get lost walking the streets and alleys of this cemetery that are lined with large intricate forts containing coffins of past presidents, icons, blue blooded families and other movers and shakers of this country. This is also where Eva Peron‘s body has been buried along with Sarmiento.
After getting your morbid fill of coffins, walk outside the cemetery down Avenide Alveara and walk past the hotel. Keep walking down this road (very reminiscent of the Upper East Side in NYC) and you will see some beautiful apartment buildings and architecture as well as some high end clothing stores. If you see an ice cream parlor or heladeria, stop by and grab one, they are all over the city and excellent – similar to the gelatos in Italy.
9PM: Dinner at La Cabrera
What good is a trip to Bs.As without tasting some of the local beef. Venture into Palermo Viejo (the trendy part of town reminscient of SoHo) and stop by La Cabrera. This is one of the most popular steak houses in the city – so much so that they had to open up a sister restaurant right down the street from the original one. Walk in to the restaurant and it is like a carnivores heaven – pictures of cows on the wall detailing every cut of beef, with cow skins as carpets. I recommend ordering the bife de lomo (tenderloin) cooked a punto (medium rare). It is large enough to be shared by two and worthy of being a meat-eaters last meal. But you also can’t go wrong with anything else on their menu. Be sure to ask the knowledgable wait staff for a good a malbec recommendation. A dinner like this will put you back a mere $30!
Also recommended: the street fair in recoleta & the metal tulip sculpture Floralis Genierica (the petals of which open and close with sunrise and sunset)
See Day 2.
48 hours in Montreal – Day 1
July 23, 2009
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![]() | 48 hours in Buenos Aires – Day 2
November 22, 2009
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![]() | 48 hours in Montreal – Day 2
August 6, 2009
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March 7, 2010
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October 11, 2010
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