The Best of Santa Maria de la Ribera
Overview
The 19th-century neighborhood of Santa María la Ribera features cafés, restaurants, and traditional shops that are becoming rare in Mexico City. This tour showcases local culinary delights while sharing the stories of the vendors and entrepreneurs shaping this unique area.
- 🍽️ Visit a working tamales factory offering over 20 varieties daily.
- 🛒 Stroll through the local market to experience a traditional city market atmosphere.
- 👩🍳 Stop by a neighborhood cooking school and restaurant supporting locals interested in starting food businesses.
- 🍹 Explore a pulquería that has been a local favorite for more than 100 years.
To keep footprints lighter, Tinggly offers instant digital delivery, a never-expiring benefit, and global options.
- As much food as you can eat (enough food for a large breakfast and lunch combined)
- One Mexican microbrew or Mezcal
- A generous taste of traditional Mexican pulque
- One agua fresca and one coffee or tea at the end of the tour
- Additional personal beverages, outside what’s included on the tour itinerary
- Tip for your guide
- Souvenirs
- Transport to/from the meeting and end points of the tour
Meeting point
Return details
-
Santa Maria la RiberaSanta María la Ribera was founded in the 1860’s, and it still retains its turn-of-the-century character. On this tour, designed by our expert culinary guide Nico Garcia, you’ll visit a range of local places that highlight just how special this neighborhood is. You’ll stop at a neat local garden, where you’ll make your own herb-infused Mexican salt. You’ll visit a working tamales factory that offers more than 20 varieties daily—a place we think supplies the best tamales in the city. Plus you’ll do a quick stroll through the local market, to see how a traditional city market looks and feels. You’ll pop into a neighborhood cooking school and restaurant that helps locals who may want to start their own food businesses. And you’ll stop by a hidden pulquería—a place with swinging saloon doors and no sign—that’s drawn neighborhood residents for more than 100 years, each imbibing the fermented Mexican beverage that traces its roots to prehispanic times. You’ll also see some of the landmarks that make Santa Maria la Ribera what it is, including a century-old geology museum. As a sweet treat, we’ll also try buñuelos, or crunchy, fried dough topped with sugar syrup.
If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met,
you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.