Gastronomic Recommendations
In the courtyard of an old house lost between the borders of
Roma and Doctores, there is a small restaurant that for just over a year has been offering
traditional flavors from Singapore and several other countries from
Southeast Asia:
Makan.
Makan, the name chosen to represent this
paradise of flavors created by Singaporean chef
Maryann Yong and Mexican chef
Mario Malvaez, means
to eat in Malay, the official language of Singapore, and is also a popular expression commonly used in the Asian country to ask people if they have eaten or to invite them to eat. Thus, this restaurant is also an open invitation to a
feast where the young couple of cooks makes the most of the
plethora of Mexican ingredients while evoking the flavors typical of Singapore, the country where they met, and the various cuisines they discovered during their multiple travels across
Southeast Asia.
The menu at
Makan is brief—it features three appetizers, five main dishes, and a couple of desserts—and changes almost daily, as it adheres to the
seasonality of local products. The restaurant also offers a modest selection of
natural wines or low-intervention wines—red, rosé, orange, white, and sparkling—and some
cocktails crafted by Mexican bartender Elí Martínez to enjoy with the dishes served in the unusual garden.

To whet your appetite, the
braised lettuces are a complete delight. They arrive at the table drenched in soy sauce and are topped with a generous portion of creamy garlic puree and a few garlic chips scattered here and there.
Without a doubt, the
chicken rice is one of the must-try dishes at Makan. The bird is poached in a broth made from ginger, lemongrass, and soy sauce, resulting in
an extremely juicy and flavorful chicken that shares the plate with
fragrant jasmine rice that perfumes every bite. Another favorite is the
roasted eggplant with fideuá. The purple fruit comes on a kind of
dried noodle decorated with
a silky eggplant and peanut puree, pickled cucumbers, basil leaves, and cilantro sprigs.
As expected, the dessert at Makan is also a revelation. Depending on the day, you can find anything from
delicious frozen popsicles to an
elegant pavlova, both options featuring
seasonal fruit.
It is worth noting that from time to time Makan shares its kitchen with
emerging culinary projects in order to
create community within the culinary industry, so if you keep an eye on their calendar, you can enjoy ephemeral delights such as the caramel and miso milkshake for
Margarita Burgers by chef Ricardo Campuzano or the
makan sichuan tart for their most recent collaboration with
Ficelle, a classic French boulangerie by restaurateur Julien de Bellaige and baker Eric Lenoir.