Daniela Soto-Innes

Today we take to the streets of Mexico City with Daniela Soto-Innes, one of Mexico’s most internationally celebrated chefs. Known for her role in shaping contemporary Mexican cuisine on the global stage, she became the youngest recipient of the World’s Best Female Chef award by The World’s 50 Best Restaurants in 2019. Daniela’s career accelerated quickly. In 2016 she received the James Beard Award for Rising Star Chef of the Year, and soon after became chef and partner at Cosme in New York - one of the restaurants most responsible for redefining modern Mexican cooking abroad. Alongside chef Enrique Olvera, she also opened Atla, a mainstay of elevated Mexican cuisine in New York. A daughter of Mexico and Texas - her youth spent between the two - Soto-Innes has recently returned to Mexico to develop her own projects, including Rubra in Punta de Mita on the Riviera Nayarit.

By Daniela Soto-Innes

@danielasotoinnes – Written by: Condesa Gin

Daniela

Soto-Innes

Mexico City Through Daniela’s Eyes

Moving through Mexico City with Daniela feels like following a quiet current of joy. Native in both languages she eases through the city graciously greeting new friends and old. The way she crosses the city – lightly, and always with an infectious curiosity – makes you notice and appreciate little things you might otherwise miss.

She loves to seek out spots with interesting light, color, and atmosphere. For Daniela, the latter can depend so much on whether you know the story behind a place. Spaces shift depending on the people in them, she says. Understanding the intention behind a place – the thinking of the people who made it, why they made certain choices – changes how you experience it, how it makes you feel.

Walking through the city with her becomes a kind of map of creative energy: the minds behind the projects, the ideas that sparked them, the pleasure of discovering them in real time from the people creating and living them.

Mornings start simply. Daniela prepares a V60 coffee at home, then steps out into the city.

April is her favorite month in Mexico City. Jacarandas bloom everywhere, washing entire streets and parks in violet.

Photograph with frame

Inspiration, Interwoven

In Colonia Atlampa, hidden among the neighborhood’s industrial buildings, stands a striking structure designed by architect Alberto Kalach. Inside is a Casa Wabi, an exhibition space dedicated to emerging artists.

Daniela speaks with obvious admiration for the work of the Casa Wabi Foundation, which runs not only this space in Mexico City but also artist residencies in Puerto Escondido and Tokyo.

PLACES MENTIONED

a Casa Wabi

Inside, the galleries unfold between two buildings of concrete and brick connected by a zig-zagging staircase. Each room feels carefully composed. The visit begins quietly – with a mineral water in the courtyard – and ends on the rooftop exhibition terrace, the city stretching outward below.

“People change when they see something new,” Daniela says. “Any form of expression can do that. Everything inspires me – it pushes me toward something new.”

a Casa Wabi feels like that kind of place: quiet, reflective, full of possibility, full of inspiration.

PLACES MENTIONED

a Casa Wabi

Something

A Bistro Without Labels

When Daniela chooses where to eat, the criteria are straightforward.

  • The food should be good.
  • The wine should be good.
  • And the place shouldn’t be too crowded.

(With one exception: a Mi Compa Chava, which is always full – but always worth it.)

PLACES MENTIONED

a Mi Compa Chava

Today she’s heading to a CANA, chef Fabiola Escobosa’s bistro.

“Mexico City is the best food city in the world,” she says as we walk. And a CANA is one of her favorites. The approach there is simple: “The food is just delicious. It’s about the ingredients themselves. Simple and delicious. Very New York, very Mexican – and the wine list is incredible.”

Daniela takes a corner table with friends, where she can watch the entire room. They share the house Caesar salad, followed by tuna tartare with hibiscus kimchi, kombu, and date.

Between bites she reflects on how quickly Mexico’s culinary scene has evolved.

“Seven years ago you didn’t see so many chefs wanting to come cook in Mexico,” she says. “Now our ingredients and techniques are being recognized. Everything is coming together here in the city.”

PLACES MENTIONED

a CANA

Three blocks away, in Colonia Juárez, sits a Minutito, a tiny café styled like an Italian espresso bar from the 1920s. It was also featured in Condesa Gin’s City Guide with Pedro Reyes, the food writer, chef, and Academy Chair for The World’s 50 Best Bars in Mexico. You can read his City Guide here.
A couple of small tables sit outside. A vintage Volkswagen combi has been converted into some additional seating out the front.

“It’s like stepping into a time capsule,” Daniela says.

Behind the bar sits a workhorse La Marzocco espresso machine, beside trays of Mexico City’s beloved pan dulce. Daniela orders her favorite combination: orejas pastry and a flat white – half regular milk, half oat.

She sits near the curb watching the city move around her. The branding is everywhere but subtle – matchboxes, calendars, small design details that feel nostalgic and intentional.

On the wall, a clock without numbers.

A reminder that sometimes it’s good to take a minutito.

PLACES MENTIONED

a Minutito

As evening approaches, Daniela heads toward Bucareli Street, where a Makan sits quietly among the city’s constant motion.

Here, chef Maryann Yong expresses her Singaporean roots through a focused, minimalist menu. The philosophy resonates with Daniela’s own work at Rubra: using fresh ingredients to tell the story of where you come from.

At Makan, dinner feels less like a meal and more like a moment of exchange – sharing food, time, and space.

PLACES MENTIONED

a Makan

Mapping
Mexican Spirits

Later, on Córdoba Street in Roma Norte, another kind of exploration begins at a Despacho Margarita.
The space is devoted entirely to Mexican distillates – a kind of liquid archive of the country’s spirits.

By late afternoon, when the sun is still hanging low, a frozen margarita feels like the right place to start.

Shelves line the room, organized by state, displaying bottles from across the country. The bar, the comal, and the terrace tables – arranged almost like a library – invite guests to slow down and rethink the origins of the drinks they know.

Daniela begins with the margarita, then orders a Condesa Clásica martini.

Small bites follow: chile tacos, carne seca served over sliced cucumber – thoughtful, simple, perfectly executed.

PLACES MENTIONED

a Despacho Margarita

Later still, when the mood shifts toward something darker and more atmospheric, Daniela might stop at a Tlecān for mezcal.

One of the people behind a Tlecān describes it as a love letter to Mexico – and the feeling is immediate.

The room plays with shadow and candlelight. The scent of copaldrifts through the air. A full-scale figure of Mictlantecuhtli, the Mexica god of the underworld, stands watch.

Here the connection to Mexico’s deeper cultural history feels tangible – not just in the spirits themselves but in the way the space is built around them.

Each drink carries its own story.

The standing bar, the darkness, and the music create the perfect atmosphere for Daniela to continue the conversation with friends late into the evening – before the night inevitably pulls everyone onward, toward Tenampa.

PLACES MENTIONED

A Tlecān

The cantina and mariachi traditions in Mexico City stretch back to the pre-revolutionary era, and the spirit of the cantina still burns brightly here. a Garibaldi is the classic place to feel the color and sound of the Mexican fiesta – trumpets, dancing, voices rising together. At a Tenampa, the night loosens. Conversations become songs at full volume. Daniela likes to celebrate life, and between laughter, drinks, and a few Mexican dishes, the night takes on endless colors until the first hints of dawn begin to appear.

PLACES MENTIONED

a Garibaldi

a Tenampa

Favorite bar for Condesa Gin:

ABar Chaval — With Juan González at the helm, an intimate bar where the martini is religion and the counter feels like home.

 

Favorite restaurants:

APujol — Enrique Olvera’s contemporary classic: familiar flavors that renew themselves with every visit.


AEm — Fine dining sobrio y elegante, cocina de precisión.


AContramar — A gathering point for seafood, long lunches, and afternoons of mezcal.


ALos Tolucos — A traditional taquería for carnitas and barbacoa, where essence lies in flavor.


AEl DanubioAn iconic seafood house in the Centro Histórico, founded in 1936.

Best spot to unwind at night:

AT HOME— Edo prefers his living room, vinyl spinning, music as a nocturnal ritual.

Best spot to dance:

AMimi Disco A retro-futuristic dance floor reviving Mexico City’s nocturnal hedonism.

 

Favorite street food:

ATacos el Triciclo — Taco bikes in Cuauhtémoc: street food with character.


ABirria Roma — At Colima and Río de Janeiro: Jalisco-style birria with broth and tortillas.

Favorite gallery:

AMuseo Tamayo — Contemporary art in dialogue with modern architecture.


AKurimanzutto — A flagship gallery of Mexico’s contemporary art scene.

Don’t ask, just go:

AGaribaldi — Pozole at Beto y Lety and the Juan Gabriel impersonator that brings the whole hall to tears.

ALa Mascota A classic cantina downtown, where every drink comes with stories.

 

Our thanks to Daniela for showing us around and wearing us out.

Stay tuned for more Condesa Gin City Guides for the inside look at where some of our communities brightest stars spend their time.

Daniela Soto-Innes

Chef Chef and Entrepreneur

Today we take to the streets of Mexico City with Daniela Soto-Innes, one of Mexico’s most internationally celebrated chefs. Known for her role in shaping contemporary Mexican cuisine on the global stage, she became the youngest recipient of the World’s Best Female Chef award by The World’s 50 Best Restaurants in 2019.
Daniela’s career accelerated quickly. In 2016 she received the James Beard Award for Rising Star Chef of the Year, and soon after became chef and partner at Cosme in New York – one of the restaurants most responsible for redefining modern Mexican cooking abroad. Alongside chef Enrique Olvera, she also opened Atla, a mainstay of elevated Mexican cuisine in New York.
A daughter of Mexico and Texas – her youth spent between the two – Soto-Innes has recently returned to Mexico to develop her own projects, including Rubra in Punta de Mita on the Riviera Nayarit.

Read article

Santiago Muñoz Moctezuma

Chef Chef and Entrepreneur

Santiago Muñoz Moctezuma is the chef and creative mind behind Maizajo, a Mexico City project that treats maíz criollo as the main character—an ongoing, hands-on argument for why the tortilla still defines the country’s most ambitious cooking. What began in 2016 as a native-corn preservation effort has grown into Maizajo’s multifaceted, beautifully colorful restaurant home in Condesa, where the craft of nixtamalization and direct relationships with corn growers translate into everything from everyday tacos to more refined, ingredient-driven plates upstairs. The restaurant has earned international attention—recommended by the MICHELIN Guide in Mexico City and profiled by outlets like Condé Nast Traveler for its corn-first mission. We sat down with the rising star, who always welcomes the Condesa Gin team with a broad smile and a chef’s table after a long day in the office, to discuss his favorite places across the city.

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Edo

Edo Kobayashi

Chef and Entrepreneur

Welcome to Edo Kobayashi’s Mexico City. Join him as he takes you, often on two wheels, blurring past the streetside birria, world class kitchens and polished vinyl lounges that make up his city experience. Edo Kobayashi is the quiet force behind Mexico City’s thriving Japanese dining scene — a visionary restaurateur who’s turned a handful of bold ideas into an entire culinary ecosystem.

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Román de Castro

MULTIDISCIPLINARY ARTIST

Condesa Gin’s Sofia Supervielle sits down (on one of his MANY chairs) with Mexico City’s own Román de Castro, a multidisciplinary artist with a sharp eye and a restless spirit. We talked about the cities that shaped him, the creative spark that boredom can ignite, and of course, his favorite places to eat on a perfect day in CDMX.

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Guide to Mexico City | Pedor Reyes. Condesa Gin City Guides

Pedro Reyes

FOOD WRITER, CHEF

Pedro Reyes’ Mexico City bursts with flavor and energy. It smells of lime, sizzling meats, and freshly toasted corn tortillas. Pedro Reyes, is a man of many talents. He is Academy Chairperson for The World’s 50 Best Bars for Mexico, a prolific food writer, and author of Guía Domingo: Tacos CDMX, and most recently Tacos Tijuana. While the Mexico City-based author’s life is filled with gastronomy every day, he keeps up his other passions: football and cycling – perfect channels for discovering CDMX from another perspective.

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Sofia Tormenta

Sofia Tormenta

Artist

Sofía Tormenta’s Mexico City is chaotic, noisy, and inspiring. In it, vendors shout in the streets, greenery seemingly spills out of every crack in the gracefully aging architecture, overhead wires tangle an iconic web, and art, food and color beautifully and eternally dance a whirlwind together. It is precisely this ‘dance’ that makes the city so inspiring to our guide, Sofia Tormenta. Originally from Buenos Aires, Argenits, Sofía is a visual artist, audiovisual director, performer, and co-founder, along with her sister Anna, of Tormenta Studio.

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Sal

Eco-system architect Photographer

An explorer of the Amazon and a frog conservationist, Mexico City’s Sal Sanchez has built a career on understanding the significance of the physical environment on the development of living things. He is the force behind DARDO MX, a project with the mission to protect amphibian ecosystems – both natural and designed. He shares his own habitat – CDMX – with us. Come along.

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Alejandro Payan

Vintage Curator

Mexico City takes on a unique look through the eyes of a vintage treasure hunter. Alejandro Payan is a graphic designer, photographer, and the creative brain behind the REvolver project, which seeks to rescue and reestablish a dialogue with vintage clothing and objects. He boasts an impeccably curated collection from the 1920s, 30s, 40s, 50s, and all eras he can find.

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Grecia Erives

Creative Director

Cozumel-born and Mexico City-based Grecia Erives, Creative Director and Head Photographer for Condesa Gin guides us around her favorite CDMX haunts – where she eats, finds peace, finds chaos and where she gets her creative inspiration.

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Explore our community’s picks through Mexico City and beyond. Happy exploring…