Category Archives: Monthly Lunch
Monthly Luncheon — Wednesday, October 15
Date: Wednesday, October 15
Time: 12:30 pm
Place: Beijing – El Salvador 5702, esq. Bonpland
Cost: 100 pesos (includes tip)
This month BAIN members will be dining at a new Chinese restaurant – Beijing. The folks at Shi Yuan (which I have always considered was the best Chinese restaurant in the city) have opened a new venue in Palermo. The restaurant is on a corner and is about two blocks away from bus stops of the 39 and 111 lines.
Same waiters, same chefs and pretty much the same menu. The difference is that they now offer a Menu Ejecutivo for lunch so we are going to take advantage of that. I keep claiming that we will never see 100 peso lunches again but I keep getting surprised.
The special menu includes a starter of two spring rolls – either carne or vegetarian, a main course selection from over 10 different items served with a bowl of steamed rice and includes water or soda. The portions are quite large and are certainly tasty!
Please note no alcoholic beverages or dessert are included.
Please RSVP to me to secure a place. Do not reply to this e-mail as it will go to BAIN, but rather send the reply to my address below.
4815-4660
September 11 — Monthly Luncheon
Where: Agraz RestaurantAddress: Posadas 1232Time: 1 pmPhone 4819-1100
The 2014 edition of BAFoodweek is too good for us to pass up. With 42 top end restaurants offering lunch and dinner specials we are going to take advantage of the opportunity.Consequently I have booked our group at Agraz which is the signature restaurant of the Caesar Park Hotel in Recoleta. Billed as International, the restaurant specializes in modern Argentine cuisine. The following link will show you the menu: http://www.bafoodweek.com/menus/agraz.jpgFood week will run for the first two weeks in September and I can recommend two other choices for lunch. These are Marieta and Sivela 465.The cost for our lunch is 155 pesos and as usual, correct change will be appreciated. Please note that the cost does not include any beverage (other than a complimentary welcome cocktail). I am asking the staff to provide pitchers oragua ordinaire for the table.Date and time: Thursday 11/Sep 13:00 hsRSVP to: mweldon213@yahoo.com
Or: 4815 4660
Monthly Lunch — July 23, 2014
On Wednesday, July 23, at 1:00 pm we will have lunch at the Benihana restaurant next to the Alto Palermo shopping center. The chain is expanding and will shortly open a venue in Puerto Madero – let’s take advantage of their current bargain pricing as I suspect it will not last much longer!
Benihana restaurants are traditional Japanese hibachi steakhouses, which feature the Japanese cooking method known as “teppanyaki.” Your meal is prepared fresh and served by a performing chef, right before your eyes. For a nice write up on the history of the restaurants visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benihana. Our group has dined there previously with great reviews. Check out their Spanish language site at http://www.benihana.com.ar/ . Don’t believe the prices on the menu – they are very out of date!
You can choose the chicken, steak or shrimp teppanyaki. This includes soup, salad, water or gaseosa and the main course. Please note that the hibachi chicken rice is also included, as well as the tip!
The pricing for this event is quite “tight” – coffee, dessert, alcoholic beverages, etc. are not included in the price.
Date: Wednesday, July 23
Time: 1:00 pm
Place: Benihana, Arenales 3310 y Coronel Diaz (near Santa Fe)
Cost: 100 pesos
Please RSVP to mweldon213@yahoo.com
4815-4660
Luncheon – Wednesday, June 25 at 12.30 p.m.
Please note the new luncheon day – Wednesday, June 25, 2014.
With the return of the cold weather my thoughts turn to heartier food and that makes me think – German – so this month we are dining at Bodensee. The restaurant was originally founded in 1925 and changed hands in 1959 when Ruben and his son Javier took over. The location was originally in Las Canitas but is now in Palermo. The sides of sauerkraut, German potato salad and my favorite the apfestrudel are all lovingly prepared on the premises by Ruben’s wife.
The price for the meal includes the entrée, choice of beverage, dessert, cover and tip. I will provide extra bottles of wine to supplement the one glass that is included. I am assuming that everyone will have the apfestruded with crème for dessert, it is really not to be missed!
With inflation raging as it is I am sure that this will be your last opportunity to go out and have two courses with beverage for less than 100 pesos.
The menu is attached – my favorites are numbers 7, 14 and 15.
Place: Bodensee, phone 4774-9064
Time: Wednesday, June 25 at 12:30 pm
Location: Honduras 6000, Palermo, esq Arevalo
Cost: 99 pesos (tip, beverage and cover included)
Correct change will be appreciated
Please RSVP to Michael Weldon
or 4815-4660
Monthly Luncheon — April 23, 2014
Please note the new luncheon day – Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Place: El Imparcial, phone 4383-2919
Time: Wednesday, April 23 at 12:30 pm
Location: Hipolito Yrigoyen 1201 (esq. Salta) – Monserrat
Buenos Aires, Argentina (El Centro)
Cost: 120 pesos (tip, non-alcoholic beverage and cover included)
correct change will be appreciated
Please RSVP to Michael Weldon at mweldon213@yahoo.com or 4815-4660
Our destination this month is a Spanish restaurant and following is a bit of history surrounding my choice.
While in Plymouth, England, my wife and I shared a pint of ale at the oldest pub in the city. The Minerva Inn, which opened in 1540, had Sir Francis Drake as a neighbor. Drake supposedly bought a round of drinks there for his officers on July 19, 1588 before sailing that evening with the tide and 55 ships to face the Spanish Armada.
Spain was at the height of its power in 1588 but the defeat of the Spanish Armada, sent to invade England, saw the beginning of a slow decline. Even though gold and silver were flowing into Spain (In the 16th century alone 150,000 kilograms of gold and 7.4 million kilograms of silver were shipped to Spain from the New World) the Spanish kings faced financial problems largely because of the cost of fighting wars.
Between the 15th and 19th centuries, the Spanish Empire was the sole colonial power in the territories that became Argentina after the1816 Argentine declaration of independence. Thus, before 1816, a great part of the European settlers in Argentina were from Spain and between 1857 and 1960, more than 2.5 million Spanish people emigrated to Argentina.
In my search for the oldest restaurant in Buenos Aires it should come as no surprise that it would turn out to be a Spanish restaurant. . El Imparcial opened in 1860 and has been a mainstay of the Spanish community ever since. Its popularity can be traced to the original purpose of the place – a neutral, “impartial”, eatery where the multiple Spanish political factions of the time could meet to discuss the business of the day over the white tablecloth of truce.
The food at El Imparcial is very traditional and the prix fixe menu offers two different three course lunch options, each with a half dozen appetizers, main courses, and desserts, for a respective 90 and 100 pesos – we will be choosing from the 90 peso menu which includes a non-alcoholic beverage. Although not on the luncheon menu you might plan a return visit to try the Puchero which is reputed to be the finest in the city!
by Michael Weldon
January Luncheon — January 30
Those of us who are still in the city have a treat coming. We dine this month at Club Danes. This unpretentious Danish restaurant on the edge of Retiro is on the 12th floor of the building that houses the Danish embassy. They took an alternate route to the lowered traffic and are open only for lunch! The view over the river is great.
The menu has four options and includes a beverage plus coffee or tea for 80 pesos. Dessert (a large selection) is an additional 28 pesos. A wide range of open-face sandwiches are about 40 pesos each.
Hoping to see you all on Thursday the 30th.
Time: 12:30
Date: Thursday January 30
Place: Club Danes, L. N. Alem 1074, Piso 12
Phone. 4312-9266
Cost: 40 – 120 pesos depending on choices
RSVP please to Michael at: mweldon213@yahoo.com
Phone: 4815-4660
November Luncheon
We are going to go to a fairly new Cuban restaurant in Canitas (actually Low Belgrano). The restaurant is the first franchise in South America of a successful chain. They have 4 sites in Mexico,and one each in Checa, Macedonia, Kiev, Beirut and Sydney.
September Luncheon
The date for the September luncheon is Thursday, September 19. Please note this is a week earlier than we normally have the luncheons.
On Thursday September 19, at 1:00 pm we will have lunch at the Benihana restaurant next to the Alto Palermo shopping center, Ave. Coronel Díaz y Arenales (one block from Santa Fe), one of our most reliable and enjoyable venues.
Benihana restaurants are traditional Japanese hibachi steakhouses, which feature the Japanese cooking method known as “teppanyaki.” Your meal is prepared fresh and served by a performing chef, right before your eyes. For a nice writeup on the history of the restaurant visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benihana. Our group has dined there previously with great reviews.
You can choose the chicken, steak or shrimp priced at 95 pesos for the chicken or 100 pesos for the other options. This includes soup, salad, water or gaseosa and the main course. Please note that the hibachi chicken rice is an optional extra. If this is offered by the waitress, it is an additional 10 pesos!
Check out their Spanish language site at http://www.benihana.com.ar/
Date: Thursday September 19
Time: 1:00 pm
Place: Benihana, Coronel Diaz y Arenales
Cost: 95 or 100 pesos depending on menu choice
Please RSVP to secure a place.
August Monthly Luncheon
This month we will be dining at Classica y Moderna, a restaurant that saved an important bookstore from extinction. The bookstore opened in this location in 1938 where it became a nexus of the intellectual community of Buenos Aires. In the early 80’s changes were made that reduced the quantity of books and the open space was turned into a dining room, bar and small stage. One can easily observe the stately air that helps distinguish ‘Clásica’ as one of Buenos Aires’s ‘Bares Historicos y Notables’. There’s a distinct element that has set this cafe apart from the crowd for the last 75 years!
While this is a protected café notable, the interior has been stripped down to the exposed brick. The brick walls, exposed ventilation, and dim lighting give it the feel of a bluesy back alley where you’re likely to slip into some unmarked door and discover a hidden gem. The walls are adorned with distinctly modern paintings and photographs which are in constant rotation. Decorations overhead include old bicycles and signs. It is a pleasant, relaxed space, where it’s easy to chat.
Pianist Juan Carlos Abitábile, plays in the cafe every weekday periodically releasing one hand from his keyboard to offer a hardy pat on the back and daily quip to a passing regular. The serenity of the space, the genial and thorough service of the staff and the superb selection of titles in the bookstore blend together to make Clásica a highly welcomed escape from the teeming activity of Buenos Aires. It is a fitting example of the description of a bookstore that Álvaro Abós gave in the book commemorating Clásica’s 70th anniversary: “A bookstore is like a temple where times stops on the threshold, but through which the climate and pulse of the period have to sweep, wild and uncontained as the wind.”
The meal will begin with a visit to the salad bar where you will find a wonderfully creative selection of dishes. Next a choice of two main courses — one choice will be ñoquis, the other will likely be their superb chicken cazuela.
Dessert will offer a choice of flan, budin or helado. Please note that water is included but coffee/tea or any wine will be charged additionally.
The 29th of every month is traditionally reserved for eating ñoquis, the Italian pasta/dumpling. People have suggested a simple reason for why this ritual takes place on 29th: being a day before payday, it was often a difficult time as wages would be drying up. Eating ñoquis was a good option as they are extremely cheap to make. Potatoes, flour and a pinch of salt is all you need. As part of the tradition, people put a coin or a banknote under their plate, a superstitious gesture meant to attract wealth for the future.
Interestingly, the word ñoqui has been twisted by Argentine slang and is now also used for a government employee who doesn’t do any work but turns up at the end of the month, around the 29th actually, to pick up his pay check.
Date: Thursday, August 29
Time: 12:30
Location: CLASICA Y MODERNA Av Callao 892
Tel 4812-8707 / 4811-3670
Cost: 120 pesos (this includes water and tip)
RSVP required to:
Tel 4815-4660


