Restaurant in Cuzco, Peru
Highland-Rooted Andean Cooking

Chicha Cusco is the right dinner for food-focused travelers who want serious Andean cooking in a historic colonial setting on Plaza Regocijo. Best visited during the dry season (May to October) when highland produce is at its peak. Booking is easy outside peak months, harder in high season — reserve ahead for weekend dinners.
Chicha Cusco, at Plaza Regocijo 261 in the heart of Cusco, is the right call for food-focused travelers who want to eat Andean cooking in a setting that matches the seriousness of the cuisine. If you are on a first visit to Peru and want to understand what the highland kitchen actually looks like beyond street food, this is a sensible anchor dinner. It also works well as a post-Machu Picchu meal on your return day into the city, when you want something grounded and satisfying rather than experimental. For travelers already planning a meal at Mil Centro in Moray or Astrid & Gastón in Lima, Chicha sits in a complementary register — more regional, less showpiece.
Cusco has two distinct seasons that affect how you eat here. The dry season, roughly May through October, is when the city fills with visitors and when the highland produce is at its peak , tubers, dried grains, and cured meats that form the backbone of the Andean table are most reliably sourced. If you are traveling specifically to eat well, target June through August for the widest availability of classic preparations. The wet season, November through March, brings fewer tourists and a different rhythm in the kitchen, with fresh corn and certain highland greens more prominent. Both windows are valid; the question is what kind of Andean table you want. Midweek lunch tends to be quieter than weekend dinner, which is worth factoring in if a calmer room matters to you. The plaza-facing location on Plaza Regocijo means weekend evenings carry more ambient noise from the square.
Chicha occupies a colonial building on Plaza Regocijo, one of the secondary plazas that runs adjacent to the main square. The layout typically spans multiple rooms across a converted house, with the kind of high ceilings and thick stone walls that define Cusco's historic architecture. That spatial character works in the restaurant's favor: the rooms feel substantial without being cavernous, and the separation between dining areas means you are not sitting in one undifferentiated hall. For solo diners or couples, the more intimate interior rooms are preferable to any table positioned near the entrance. Groups of four or more have more flexibility on placement. For more options across the city's dining scene, see our full Cuzco restaurants guide.
Without confirmed menu data we will not invent dish names or tasting notes, but the general approach at Chicha is rooted in Andean ingredients: native potato varieties, corn in multiple forms, slow-cooked proteins, and fermented or pickled preparations that reflect highland preservation traditions. If the kitchen is running seasonal rotations, ask the server directly what came in that week , this is the kind of restaurant where that question gets a real answer rather than a shrug. Travelers who have eaten at Campo Cocina Andina will find Chicha operates in a similar register of ingredient-first Andean cooking.
Reservations: Booking is rated Easy , walk-ins are likely possible outside peak season, but a reservation is still the safer approach for dinner during June through September when the city is at capacity. Booking method: No direct online booking system is confirmed in our data; check the restaurant's current contact details on arrival in Cusco or via your hotel concierge. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate; this is not a formal dining room, but it reads more seriously than a tourist-facing café. Budget: Price range is not confirmed in our data , budget conservatively for a mid-to-upper tier Cusco dinner. Groups: The multi-room layout suggests groups of four to six are manageable; larger parties should confirm in advance. Dietary needs: Andean cuisine is structurally accommodating for many restrictions given its reliance on vegetables, grains, and proteins rather than dairy-heavy preparations, but confirm specifics directly. For bars, hotels, and other planning resources, see our Cuzco bars guide, our Cuzco hotels guide, and our Cuzco experiences guide.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chicha Cusco | Easy | — | ||
| Campo Cocina Andina | Unknown | — | ||
| Casa Cusqueña | Unknown | — | ||
| Hanz Gastronomique | Unknown | — | ||
| Intillay Peruvian Fusion Food | Unknown | — | ||
| KUSHKA Restaurant | Unknown | — |
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