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Argentine Food: Asado, Empanadas, and Malbec Wine

Argentine Food: Asado, Empanadas, and Malbec Wine

Home Argentina FoodArgentine Food: Asado, Empanadas, and Malbec Wine
Gate8 Global Team

Argentina takes its beef seriously enough that a full steak dinner with a bottle of Malbec at a good Buenos Aires parrilla runs $25–45 per person — a fraction of comparable quality in the US or Europe. Beyond steak: empanadas ($1–2 each, the go-to snack everywhere), a proper asado (the whole slow-grilled barbecue ritual, ideally shared with locals rather than eaten solo), and Malbec, Argentina's signature red, grown mostly around Mendoza. Dinner runs late — 9–10:30pm is normal, not fashionably late.

Argentines will tell you, without a trace of irony, that their beef is the best in the world — and having tried it, it's genuinely hard to argue. This is a food culture built around quality grass-fed beef, an Italian-immigrant pasta tradition, and some of the best-value wine on the planet. Here's what to actually order and what it costs.

What is an asado, really?

Asado is both the meal and the ritual — a slow, wood-or-charcoal grill cookout, traditionally a weekend social event rather than a quick weeknight dinner. A proper asado works through cuts in order: chorizo and morcilla (blood sausage) first, then the beef itself — asado de tira (short ribs), bife de chorizo (sirloin), and vacío (flank) are among the most common cuts. If you're invited to a home asado, go — it's the single best way to eat in the country.

Must-try dishes and where to eat them

DishWhat it isApprox. price
Bife de chorizoA thick-cut sirloin steak, the parrilla classic$12–25
EmpanadasBaked or fried pastry pockets, beef/chicken/cheese fillings$1–2 each
MilanesaA breaded, fried cutlet (beef or chicken), often with fries$8–15
ChoripánA grilled chorizo sandwich, the classic street/stadium food$3–6
Dulce de leche on everythingArgentina's caramel spread — on toast, in pastries, in alfajores$1–4 for alfajores

Malbec and Argentine wine

Malbec is Argentina's signature grape, mostly grown in Mendoza's high-altitude valleys, and the country produces genuinely excellent bottles at prices that would be considered a steal anywhere in the US or Europe — a very good Malbec at a wine shop runs $8–25, and restaurant markups are far gentler than in most countries. See our Mendoza guide for visiting the wineries themselves.

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Dietary needs: Buenos Aires, especially Palermo, has a real and growing vegetarian and vegan restaurant scene — look for 'sin carne' (meatless) menus. Outside the capital, options narrow, though empanadas (ask for cheese or vegetable filling) and pasta (a strong Italian-immigrant influence nationwide) are reliable fallbacks. Halal food is limited to a handful of specific restaurants, mostly in Buenos Aires — check ahead if it's a requirement. Gluten-free is increasingly well catered to in bigger cities.

Argentine dinner culture — the late-night thing is real

  • 9pm is considered an early dinner; many locals don't sit down until 10 or 10:30pm. Restaurants in very touristy areas will happily seat you at 7–8pm, but that's for visitors, not the local rhythm.
  • Mate (a bitter, caffeinated herbal tea sipped from a shared gourd through a metal straw) is a genuine social ritual, not just a drink — if you're offered some, it's a friendly gesture worth accepting.
  • Tipping around 10% is standard and appreciated at sit-down restaurants; it's not automatically added to the bill the way it sometimes is elsewhere.

What it costs, all in

Meal typePrice per person
Empanadas + soft drink (quick lunch)$4–7
Casual parrilla lunch$8–15
Full steak dinner with a glass of Malbec$25–45
High-end tasting-menu dinner$50–90

Questions people actually ask

Is Argentine beef really the best in the world?
It's genuinely excellent — grass-fed cattle, vast ranching land, and two centuries of asado tradition. Whether it's objectively 'the best' is subjective, but the combination of quality and price, a fraction of comparable US or European steakhouse prices, is hard to match anywhere.
What time do Argentines actually eat dinner?
Late — 9pm is an early dinner, and many locals don't sit down until 10 or 10:30pm. Tourist-area restaurants will seat you earlier if you'd prefer, but the real local scene starts after 9.
Can vegetarians and vegans eat well in Argentina?
Yes in Buenos Aires, especially Palermo, which has a real and growing plant-based restaurant scene. Outside the capital it takes more searching, though empanadas with vegetable or cheese filling and pasta are reliable fallbacks almost everywhere.