Restaurant in Mexico City, Mexico
Groove Casa Fusión
100Pearl PointsJuárez fusion spot: book it or skip it?

About Groove Casa Fusión
Groove Casa Fusión on Londres 37 in Colonia Juárez is an accessible, easy-to-book fusión concept in one of Mexico City's most active dining neighbourhoods. With no long waits and a convivial atmosphere, it suits date nights and low-key celebrations better than formal occasions. For documented pedigree and award credentials in the same city, Pujol and Quintonil set the higher-stakes reference point.
Groove Casa Fusión: Quick Take
Groove Casa Fusión sits on Londres 37 in Colonia Juárez, one of Mexico City's most active dining corridors — a neighbourhood that now rivals Polanco for serious restaurant density. With no awards data on file, no published price range, limited public documentation, this is a venue that earns its reputation quietly. That makes it worth understanding before you book, not instead of booking.
The name signals intent: fusión suggests a kitchen pulling from more than one tradition, Juárez is the right neighbourhood for it. The area draws a local creative crowd rather than a tourist circuit, which typically means the kitchen is cooking for repeat guests who have options — a useful pressure that tends to improve consistency. For a special occasion, that context matters.
On the wine side, casa fusión formats in Mexico City increasingly treat the wine list as a genuine editorial statement rather than an afterthought. The country's own wine production, primarily from Baja California's Valle de Guadalupe, has matured enough that restaurants in this tier routinely carry domestic bottles alongside European imports. If Groove Casa Fusión follows that pattern, expect a list that rewards asking the floor team for guidance rather than defaulting to the familiar. Venues of this type in Juárez often rotate selections to match a shifting menu, so what's available the week you visit may differ from what's listed anywhere online. That's an argument for calling ahead, if contact details become available, or arriving with genuine curiosity rather than a pre-selected bottle in mind.
For a date or a low-key celebration, Colonia Juárez delivers on atmosphere without the formality of Polanco. The streets are walkable, the venues are human-scaled, the energy skews convivial rather than ceremonial. Groove Casa Fusión, positioned as a fusión concept, fits that register well: it's a setting for a real meal with someone you want to impress, not a stage-managed fine-dining performance.
Booking here appears direct, no evidence of the multi-week waits that apply to Pujol or Quintonil. That accessibility is part of the value proposition for Juárez neighbourhood restaurants at this level. If you're planning around a specific date, check current reservation availability early, but this is not a venue where you need to plan months in advance.
For broader context on where Groove Casa Fusión sits within Mexico's wider dining geography, Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe, Le Chique in Puerto Morelos, and Levadura de Olla in Oaxaca each show how Mexican kitchens are drawing on regional identity in different ways. Groove Casa Fusión's urban, Juárez-rooted approach is its own answer to that question.
Know Before You Go
- Address: Londres 37, Colonia Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City
- Neighbourhood: Juárez, walkable, central, well-served by Metro (Insurgentes) and ride-share
- Booking difficulty: Easy, no evidence of significant wait times
- Price range: Not published, budget for a mid-range Mexico City dinner and adjust on arrival
- Leading for: Date night, low-key celebrations, solo diners comfortable with a neighbourhood fusión format
- Wine approach: Likely a curated list mixing domestic (Baja California) and imported labels, ask the floor team for current recommendations
- Contact/website: Not currently listed, check Google Maps or reservation platforms for the latest details
- Nearby Pearl picks: Rosetta and Em are within the same neighbourhood cluster and offer useful reference points for price and ambiance
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- Our full Mexico City restaurants guide
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Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Groove Casa Fusión in Mexico City?
Colonia Juárez and the wider CDMX dining scene give you strong options at every price point. Rosetta on Colima is the neighbourhood anchor for refined Mexican-European cooking and books out weeks ahead. Comedor Jacinta is the sharper value play for seasonal Mexican cuisine without the wait. If budget is less of a concern, Quintonil and Pujol are the benchmarks for ambitious tasting-menu dining, while Em offers a more intimate counter format. Where Groove Casa Fusión fits relative to these depends on price and format details not yet confirmed.
Can I eat at the bar at Groove Casa Fusión?
Bar seating availability at Groove Casa Fusión on Londres 37 hasn't been confirmed in available records. Call ahead or check directly with the venue before planning a walk-in bar visit, particularly on weekends when Colonia Juárez restaurants fill quickly.
What should I order at Groove Casa Fusión?
Specific menu details for Groove Casa Fusión are not confirmed in current records, so naming dishes here would be speculation. The fusion format signals a menu that draws from more than one culinary tradition — ask the team on arrival what's seasonal or off-menu, which tends to be the better call at independently run Juárez spots.
Is Groove Casa Fusión good for a special occasion?
Without confirmed pricing or a tasting-menu format on record, it's hard to call Groove Casa Fusión a safe special-occasion bet compared to Pujol or Quintonil, which have established track records for milestone dining. If your priority is a guaranteed elevated experience with clear credentials, those are lower-risk choices. Groove Casa Fusión on Londres 37 may well deliver, but verify the format and price point directly before committing to a significant occasion.
Is Groove Casa Fusión good for solo dining?
Colonia Juárez restaurants at this address tier tend to work well for solo diners, particularly if counter or bar seating is available. Whether Groove Casa Fusión accommodates solo walk-ins comfortably depends on layout details not yet on record. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating options — solo diners in CDMX generally fare better at spots with counter service or a bar programme, so that's the key question to ask.
Location
Londres 37, Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, 06600 Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico
Mexico City, Mexico
Compare Groove Casa Fusión
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Groove Casa Fusión | Easy | ||
| Pujol | Mexican | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Quintonil | Modern Mexican, Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Rosetta | Italian, Creative | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Em | Mexican | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Comedor Jacinta | Mexico, Mexican | Unknown |
How Groove Casa Fusión stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Pujol, Mexican, $$$$
- Quintonil, Modern Mexican, Contemporary, $$$$
- Rosetta, Italian, Creative, $$
- Em, Mexican, $$$
- Comedor Jacinta, Mexico, Mexican, $$
How It Compares
If your priority is a documented, award-backed experience with serious culinary credentials, Pujol and Quintonil are both $$$$ operations that require planning weeks or months ahead, they are the ceiling of Mexico City dining and price accordingly. Groove Casa Fusión sits in a different register entirely: accessible, neighbourhood-scale, available without the logistical overhead. You are trading prestige and polish for ease and atmosphere.
For value-conscious diners, the closer comparisons are Rosetta ($$) in Roma Norte and Comedor Jacinta ($$), both deliver a strong dining experience at mid-range price points, both are easy to book, both have more public documentation of their menus and wine programs than Groove Casa Fusión currently offers. If transparency about what you're getting matters to your decision, Rosetta is the safer pick. Em ($$$) sits one tier up in price and offers a more defined Mexican kitchen identity for those who want that specificity.
Where Groove Casa Fusión has a potential advantage is location and format: Londres 37 in Juárez is a strong base for an evening that moves between dinner and the neighbourhood's bar scene, a fusión kitchen gives the wine program more range to work across styles. If you're building a full evening in Juárez rather than making a single destination booking, Groove Casa Fusión fits that plan better than a $$$$ Polanco restaurant ever could. For other Mexico City options worth considering, see our full Mexico City restaurants guide.
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