San Telmo Fair
Every Sunday the neighbourhood's cobbled streets fill with antique stalls, street performers, and an outdoor milonga from around 7:30 pm — the single best free afternoon in the city.
Buenos Aires eats late, dances later, and rewards the local tip over the TripAdvisor list. Appricio gives you the one parrilla, the one milonga, the café worth the detour — for right now.
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Every Sunday the neighbourhood's cobbled streets fill with antique stalls, street performers, and an outdoor milonga from around 7:30 pm — the single best free afternoon in the city.
A 70-year-old bodegón deep in working-class La Boca where Creole cooking meets Spanish and Italian immigrant tradition — practically every local has eaten here at least once.
Argentine football is a visceral, communal religion — attending a Boca Juniors or River Plate match (via a local guide, since tickets are only sold to season-ticket holders) is unlike any stadium anywhere.
The bar that essentially invented modern Buenos Aires cocktail culture — a low-key, dimly-lit room on Thames where the industry crowd drinks and the cocktail menu is named after city neighbourhoods.
Order at the counter — a slice of muzzarella, standing up, the way porteños have been doing it since 1932.
Regularly ranked among the world's top bars, but still feels like a local Chacarita institution — a tight, unpretentious room where serious technique meets a neighbourhood crowd rather than a tourist circuit.
Stop scrolling fifty options. Appricio gives you the one — with a reason, and a Plan B if you've seen it.
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