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    Bar in Mexico City, Mexico

    Tierras de Uva

    100pts

    Honest Spanish Bottle Shop

    Tierras de Uva, Bar in Mexico City

    About Tierras de Uva

    A wine bar on Colonia Roma's Sinaloa street that keeps its selection firmly anchored in Spain, Tierras de Uva operates on a straightforward editorial principle: nothing goes on the list unless the people pouring it would drink it themselves. The result is a focused, honest selection that sits apart from the broader cocktail-forward bar scene developing across the neighbourhood.

    Colonia Roma has spent the better part of a decade accumulating bars and wine spaces at a pace that would exhaust most cities. The neighbourhood's low-rise streets, mid-century apartment blocks, and daytime café culture have created the conditions for a particular kind of evening venue: small, editorially focused, and more interested in the quality of what's in the glass than in theatrical design. Sinaloa street, running through Roma Norte, concentrates several of these spaces within a few blocks. Tierras de Uva, at number 74, belongs to this quieter, more deliberate tier of the scene.

    The Room and What It Communicates

    Roma Norte wine bars tend to signal their seriousness through restraint rather than spectacle. Where the neighbourhood's cocktail venues, including Baltra Bar and Bijou Drinkery Room, have built identities around considered design and theatrical drink formats, wine-focused rooms in this part of the city typically take a different approach. The physical environment reads as secondary to what's in the bottle: lighting kept low enough for conversation, seating configured for groups of two or four, shelving that functions as the primary visual element. At Tierras de Uva, the selection itself is the décor. A room organised around bottles of Spanish wine communicates something specific about priorities before anyone has spoken a word.

    That atmosphere, unhurried and deliberate, puts Tierras de Uva in a different register from the more performative bars developing elsewhere in the city. Bar Mauro and Brujas operate closer to the cocktail-program model, where the drink arrives as a finished argument. Here, the conversation happens before the pour, and the staff's role is closer to guide than technician.

    The Selection Logic

    Spain produces wine across a wider range of climates, soils, and indigenous grape varieties than its international reputation typically suggests. Rioja and Ribera del Duero have long occupied the export-facing tier, but the country's more interesting production increasingly comes from Galicia's Atlantic-influenced Rías Baixas, the high-altitude vineyards of Sierra de Gredos, the oxidative traditions of Jerez and Montilla-Moriles, and the recovering old-vine parcels of regions like Calatayud and Terra Alta. A Spanish wine bar that takes its selection seriously has the raw material to build a genuinely varied list without leaving the peninsula.

    Tierras de Uva operates on a stated curatorial principle: nothing appears on the list that the people behind the bar would not drink themselves. This is a position that sounds obvious but is, in practice, a meaningful constraint. It rules out safe commercial selections chosen for margin or recognisability, and it implies a staff with sufficient knowledge and conviction to hold a point of view. The list draws primarily from Spain, with a small number of bottles from other regions included alongside. The effect is focus rather than comprehensiveness, which tends to produce more interesting conversations and more confident pours.

    For a city whose bar scene has historically leaned towards mezcal and tequila, and whose cocktail venues have attracted international attention, a space organised around Spanish wine occupies a genuinely specific position. Mexico City's relationship with European wine is maturing, driven partly by a hospitality generation that trained or travelled abroad, and partly by an importing infrastructure that has significantly deepened over the past decade. Tierras de Uva sits at the retail and education end of that shift, functioning as much as a place to learn as a place to drink.

    Roma Norte in Context

    The neighbourhood's concentration of specialist food and drink spaces has made it one of the more navigable parts of the city for an evening built around a single theme. Roma Norte rewards walking: the distances between venues are short, the streets are generally safe after dark, and the density of options means a single block can contain a natural wine bar, a mezcalería, and a serious coffee shop. Tierras de Uva fits into an evening in this part of the city as a focused first stop or a deliberate destination in its own right, depending on how deep the conversation goes.

    For visitors building a broader picture of Mexico's drinking culture beyond the capital, the country's bar scene extends well beyond Roma Norte. Arca in Tulum operates in a different register entirely, as does El Gallo Altanero in Guadalajara, which takes a deep position on agave. Bekeb in San Miguel de Allende and Aruba Day Drink in Tijuana represent the range of what serious drinking looks like across different Mexican cities. La Capilla in Tequila is, for historical reasons, in a category of its own. Coco Bongo in Cancun sits at the opposite end of the scale. For a full picture of Mexico City specifically, our full Mexico City restaurants guide maps the broader scene across neighbourhoods and categories. For international context, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu shows what a similarly focused, quality-first bar program looks like in a very different geography.

    Who Goes and When

    The profile of a venue like this skews toward people who already have a working knowledge of Spanish wine, or who want to develop one in a setting without pressure. It is not a place designed around the first-drink-of-the-night transaction, nor around groups seeking volume. The atmosphere suits pairs or small groups with time to sit through a conversation about what's on the list. Evenings earlier in the week tend to produce quieter rooms, which suits the format: the staff can give more attention, and the selection becomes easier to navigate with guidance.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: Sinaloa 74, Roma Norte, Cuauhtémoc, 06700 Ciudad de México
    • Neighbourhood: Colonia Roma Norte
    • Booking: Contact information not confirmed at time of publication; walk-in availability likely given the format, but calling ahead is advisable for weekends
    • Selection focus: Primarily Spanish wine, with a small number of bottles from other regions
    • Hours: Not confirmed at time of publication; verify before visiting
    • Price range: Not confirmed; consistent with mid-range Roma Norte wine bar pricing

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I try at Tierras de Uva?
    The selection centres on Spanish wine, with the staff's personal preference acting as the curatorial filter. Given that stated principle, asking for a recommendation based on what they are drinking themselves is likely to produce a more considered result than working from a list alone. Spain's range, from structured Rioja Reserva to oxidative Sherry and Atlantic-facing Albariño, means there is significant variety to explore even within the geographic focus.
    What makes Tierras de Uva worth visiting?
    In a city where the bar conversation has been dominated by mezcal, tequila, and technically driven cocktail programs, a Spanish wine bar with a clear point of view occupies an underserved position. The curatorial discipline, selecting only what the team would drink themselves, is a meaningful differentiator from venues stocking for breadth or commercial safety. For anyone building a serious evening in Roma Norte alongside stops at Baltra Bar or Bar Mauro, this is the stop that shifts the register.
    Is Tierras de Uva reservation-only?
    Booking details are not confirmed in our current data. Given the format, a walk-in model is plausible, but weekend evenings in Roma Norte fill quickly across the neighbourhood's wine and cocktail bars. Checking directly before visiting is advisable. Phone and website details were not available at time of publication.

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