What you should experience
Famous ceramics and cooking alongside a Michelin-starred Chef
Most trips tend to start in Lima as it’s the only international airport in Peru and there are two things we always suggest to any traveller. Museo Larco and Central.
Why? Well, Museo Larco is one of the most iconic museums in Lima – a privately owned museum of pre-Columbian art, located in the Pueblo Libre District of Lima. It presents one of the best ceramic displays in all of Peru and perfectly transports you through the many centuries of the country’s history, giving you a fantastic sense of place and understanding to kick off your Peruvian travels. With ceramic works from the Cupisnique, Chimú, Chancay, Nazca and Inca cultures it is truly mesmerizing to see it all side by side and get a fantastic historical lesson to set the scene of everywhere you’ll travel to from Lima.
Sometimes a slow walk through a museum just gets you craving pisco, or is that just us? Either way, we highly recommended a visit to the on-site Café del Museo whilst there. Set in a private garden draped in bougainvillea it’s a perfect spot for ceviche. And a pisco, naturally.
A morning (or afternoon) spent understanding the country’s history is then complimented by a one-of-a-kind culinary feast at Central restaurant in Barranco. Masterminded by Virgilio Martinez (see below) this 16 course tasting menu takes you on a sensory journey through the multiple climates, altitudes and coastal lands of Peru – truly no better way to try the many iconic, and lesser known, ingredients that you will no likely see and potentially taste again on your travels beyond Lima.
Or take it a step further and join our dear friend Virgilio on a culinary experience around Peru with Michelin-starred chef Virgilio Martinez – an experience very few can offer other than Black Tomato and one not to be missed. The mastermind behind the fifth best restaurant in the world takes a lucky few up into the Andes to teach them authentic pachamanca cooking techniques. Loosely translated as ‘earth oven’, Virgilio will show you how to create an Andean oven using only heated stones, grass, soil and banana leaves to transform foraged ingredients into a traditional Peruvian dish.
Follow Virgilio in search of ingredients and learn how he forages his country’s different altitudes. From the 4000 different types of potato that are grown tens of thousands of feet above sea level in the Andes to the hot peppers indigenous to the lowlands of the Amazon rainforest.
Virgilio tells us, “it’s not just about the mountains, the jungle, and the sea. It’s about the different types of mountain, jungle and sea. Each region is unique and has a biodiversity of its own. There are always new ingredients to discover”.