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La Esquina de Las Flores

Bio's Arugula and Parmesan Bruschettas

Krishna Veggie Lunch

VerdeLLama's Beet Soup

VerdeLLama
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Vegetarian Menus Root in
Beefy Buenos Aires Published in The Boston Globe, March
25, 2007
BUENOS AIRES - Although the term "cocina vegetariana,"
or vegetarian cuisine, tends to draw blank stares or outright pity from
Argentines on the streets of this city -- considered by many the red meat
capital of the world -- vegetarians need not write Buenos Aires off as
a travel destination.
Red meat is a staple of the Argentine diet -- the average citizen eats
about 150 pounds annually -- and "parrillas," traditional grilled meat
restaurants, are found on almost every city block. But attitudes are changing,
if slightly.
"There are thousands of vegetarians in Argentina," says Manuel Mart’,
of the Vegetarian Union Argentina, which recently held its third annual
national conference. "Sure, most people here think we're a little strange.
But we're used to it."
Gourmet vegetarian restaurants that serve organic, vegan, and raw food
have been opening throughout Buenos Aires over the past several years.
Visiting vegetarians will find a surprising array of dining choices such
as phyllo dough filled with pumpkin and goat cheese, polenta lasagna,
and organic salads.
The favorable exchange rate makes prices low: vegetarian main courses
cost $4 to $8, and a bottle of good wine runs $5 to $12. But diners must
take care not to arrive at a restaurant famished; although cordial, service
in Buenos Aires is generally slow, at best.
Here is a guide to vegetarian dining options in various neighborhoods
of the capital:
Palermo Viejo and Palermo Chico Palermo Viejo, one of the trendiest neighborhoods
in the city, is home to a handful of vegetarian restaurants including
Artemisia, which is charmingly funky yet sophisticated. Diners enjoy their
meals at tables set with white tablecloths and statuesque wine glasses.
"What we wanted to do is serve healthy, gourmet, vegetarian food in a
festive environment ," says owner Carolina Guryn, who opened Artemisia
three years ago with partner Gabriel Gomez.
Guryn and Gomez serve imaginative dishes with either Mediterranean or
Asian influences, such as polenta lasagna filled with grilled red peppers.
Wendy Lieberman, a vegetarian of 20 years who moved here recently from
Miami, recommends Artemisia's appetizer of three small salads. "The freshness,
quality, and variety of greens is unusual for Buenos Aires," she says.
Krishna Veggie Lunch is a lively two-room restaurant that serves vegetarian
food all day. It is adorned with icons, shrines, paintings, and murals
depicting all faiths. It also has a disco ball hanging from the ceiling
and a soundtrack that ranges from OutKast to Bob Dylan to Indian dub.
Kelli Douglas, a vacationing vegetarian from New York , quickly became
a fan of Krishna Veggie Lunch's platter of pakoras, raitha, ginger sabji
rice, chutney, and chapatti. She admitted she had been nervous about her
dining options before the trip, as it seemed nearly half of her guidebook's
vocabulary words involved how to order meat. "Tongue, liver, toe -- I
don't know, whatever you order when you eat meat!" Douglas says. Krishna
Veggie Lunch, like many vegetarian restaurants in Buenos Aires, serves
fresh ginger lemonade, a simple sounding beverage, but absolutely divine.
Bio is an organic restaurant with a menu entirely dependent on available
produce, which became evident tasting various dishes, from arugula and
parmesan bruschettas, to lemongrass Thai stew with mushrooms and peppers.
In the upscale neighborhood of Palermo Chico, Senutre, primarily a take-out
lunch establishment, prepares a variety of empanadas, savory pies, pastas,
salads, pizzas, and sandwiches. Owner Martin Novo has earned a fervent
following, not only for the quality of his food, but also for Senutre's
efficiency and home delivery.
Microcentro/San Telmo Located on the second floor of a building in the
downtown business and shopping district known as Microcentro is the lunchtime
restaurant Granix. It is an enormous, beige room with a dizzying selection
of hot and cold entrees, pastas made to order, soups, a salad bar, desserts,
and juices, all on self-serve buffet tables. Scores of bankers and office
workers eat at the numerous tables.
Granix staffers efficiently bus tables and replenish the quickly consumed
trays of food.
Esteban Rajmilchuk, a conductor and pianist at Teatro Argentino, makes
it a point to eat at Granix once a week. "I'm not a vegetarian, but I
like the change," he says. Rajmilchuk notes that the increased acceptance
of vegetarian cuisine could be the result of a recent rise in meat prices,
and a newly passed law mandating that a certain percentage of restaurant
dishes be light and healthy.
Another lunch spot is Abuela Pan, situated in a gorgeous 1880s building
in the historic San Telmo neighborhood. Owned by Osvaldo Barros, this
little shop bakes organic bread, and diners have a choice of three carefully
chosen menus that change daily.
Off the tourist track The city's newest and most adventurous vegetarian
restaurant is VerdeLLama. Prompted by the birth of their child, owners
Lola and Diego Castro shut down the restaurant they ran out of their home
and opened VerdeLLama in the relaxed neighborhood of Colegiales. The restaurant
is housed in what looks like a former store from the 1950s and is clean,
simple, modern, yet warm and inviting.
"Now, we are serving organic, vegetarian, and raw food," says Diego Castro,
"although our intention is to eventually serve only raw food. But we think
the transition should be slow. It's going to be too much of a shock for
the people of Buenos Aires."
Some of VerdeLLama's unique creations include walnut paste baguette with
lettuce, grated carrot, avocado and sauce , and beet soup, made with homemade
almond milk and topped with sprouted then dehydrated quinoa, a grain from
the Andes.
La Reina Kunti, another restaurant off the tourist circuit, serves non-spicy
Indian food. The three-room restaurant is always packed, with a long line
of diners waiting to be seated. Its folksy Latin music, and general hippie
vibe don't do much to mellow out the crowd. Waitresses with piercings,
tattoos, and midriffs on display never get flustered by the number of
people streaming in the door. Reservations are strongly suggested.
Most patrons order trays of many little dishes, such as pakoras, samosas,
dhal, and rice and share with their table. Not to be missed is the absolutely
sensational carob mousse tart.
Abuela Pan
Bolivar 707, San Telmo
011-54-11-4361-4936
www.abuelapan.com
Artemisia
Cabrera 3877, Palermo Viejo
011-54-11-4863-4242
www.artemisiaresto.com.ar
Bio
Humboldt 2199, at Guatemala
Palermo Hollywood
011-54-11-4774-3880
www.biorestaurant.com.ar
Granix
Florida 165, Microcentro
011-54-11-4343-4020
Krishna Veggie Lunch
Malabia 1833, Palermo Viejo
011-54-11-4833-4618
La Reina Kunti
Humahuaca 3461, Abasto
011-54-11-4863-3071
Senutre
República Árabe Siria 3090
Palermo Chico
011-54-11-4800-1300
www.senutre.com
VerdeLLama
Jorge Newbery 3623, Colegiales
011-54-11-4554-7467
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