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Bao Kitchen

4.6 (53 reviews)
Closed 12:00 pm - 4:00 PM, 6:00 PM - 11:00 PM

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Review Highlights - Bao Kitchen

I have been living here in Buenos Aires for about 3 months and this restaurant is my one of my favorite spots so far.

Mentioned in 8 reviews

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Fukuro Noodle Bar

Fukuro Noodle Bar

4.3(200 reviews)
5.6 kmPalermo
$$

We were excited to take a break from the usual fare when I saw good reviews for this place and it…read morewas right around the corner from our hotel. Now several reasons for the rating - 1) the hostess who seated us and all of the servers had no energy or smile. It literally felt like they were forced to be there 2) absolutely no help with the menu 3) we got vegan dim sums , bao and ramen. All of the bao, dim sums and noodles were uncooked. And there was no soy or any other sauce available for the dimsums or bao. Would not recommend this place at all.

My brother and I were looking for a noodle bowl dish after a long day of walking around in the…read morepark. We settled on this restaurant after reading the reviews on Yelp. The interior and decor of this place seemed really cute. The restaurant opens at 8pm and we got there around 8:30pm. The place was already packed and so we waited about 10-15 mins to be seated. The menu is pretty simple. They even have English menu on the backside. We decided on the #Huangbrothers Bao and #Keepitreal ramen. The Bao were pretty good although I would leave the pickles out of it next time. It was a weird mix. The real loser of the meal was the Ramen. The pork bone broth was underwhelming and my noodles were undercooked. I decided to take a chance and bit into the block of noodle but realized quickly that was a bad idea. When the server asked me if the meal was okay I pointed to the block of undercooked noodles and she just smiled and nodded. I blame the language barrier. Would probably skip this place next time. Don't be fooled by its cute interior.

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Fukuro Noodle Bar - Veggie + pork

Veggie + pork

Fukuro Noodle Bar - Salón solo con barras, como en Japón

Salón solo con barras, como en Japón

Fukuro Noodle Bar - Interior decor

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Interior decor

Cinco Corderos

Cinco Corderos

5.0(2 reviews)
10.9 kmVilla Urquiza

There used to be a Chinese place of this name along Av. Las Heras that offered up a selection of…read moredim sum, one of the only spots around that did. And a far bigger offering than either Hong Kong Style or Canton did or do. I never liked the physical space, but the food was excellent, and as a delivery option, it was a weekly call. When they closed up in 2012, I was not pleased. What I didn't know, is that they'd simply been priced out of the neighborhood, and decided to try for fame and fortune in the more relaxed and residential area in the northwest of the city. But here, they've been apparently happily plugging away for the last five years. They still have the same old multipage menus packed with Cantonese and Szechuan dishes, though a large percentage of them are now not available, without an advance phone call. As the owner, who still cheerfully attends every table says, most of her customers don't order anything but stir-fried noodles or fried rice, so stocking all the ingredients for the rest of it isn't tenable. But anything on the menu is available with a day or two's notice - or at least that was the offer. I've been twice now, once solo, once with a friend. Potstickers - Some of the best of these around - well seasoned, packed with pork, green onions, and more, and just look at the hot sauce, which is, as it used to be, a blend of fresh chilies, garlic, and szechuan peppercorn. 60 pesos. Steamed BBQ Pork Buns - Again, excellent, and with the classic slightly sweet barbecued pork instead of the more common simple stewed pork that so many places here offer. 50 pesos. Shumai - I don't know that I've ever seen shumai without any kind of wrapper, but honestly, after trying these, who cares about the wrapper. Huge, delicious pork meatballs infused with flavors of orange and tangerine peel and white pepper. 50 pesos. Kung Pao Calamari - On the plus side, laden with calamari, a mix of vegetables, and when informed "bien picante", happily made so, with a good amount of fresh chilies sliced and stir-fried into the dish. I also like that it was fresh chilies, not dried. Toasted whole almonds were served on the side rather than tossed in with the dish - I do still prefer peanuts with my kung pao, and the menu does specify peanuts, but nothing to complain about, unless you have an allergy to almonds. Though again, on the side, so you could just not add them to the dish. 158 pesos. Ma-Po Tofu - Easily the best version of this spicy tofu and pork dish that I've had in Buenos Aires, and among the best I've had anywhere. We slurped this down so fast that I'm not sure she'd made it back to the kitchen by the time we were done. 158 pesos. Cute little place, about a quarter the size of the old one. Great service. Excellent food. Really reasonably priced. It's a bit of a pain to get to from Recoleta, but this one's going to be a fairly regular trip for me - it's worth the effort. Easily moves to the top of my "Casual Chinese" list.

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Cinco Corderos
Cinco Corderos
Cinco Corderos

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Koko

Koko

4.3(15 reviews)
6.4 kmPalermo

I got takeout from Bar Koko and the staff was quite helpful, and the food was unique and good. I'd…read moredefinitely go back here.

This one's a tough one. I got violently ill half an hour or so after eating, and spent the…read moreafternoon in the bathroom at home. It was the only thing I ate for the day, so provenance isn't in doubt as to place, though as to what caused it? Who knows. Most likely either raw veggies or hands that weren't properly washed. At the same time, it's not the sort of place that felt like that would be a regular occurrence, and they were mortified when I contacted them about it, and promised to sort it out. Which made me think I ought to give them a second visit. As did the fact that the place comes recommended by at least a couple of foodie folk I know. On, however, this visit, and looking at just the food, they have a lunch special for 200 pesos ($8.50) that includes a choice of appetizer and a choice of bao. For the former I went with a classic Vietnamese nem, or fried springroll. It was tasty, but a bit oily inside because, as you can see from when I flipped it over, one entire side is open. That's the kind of thing that you'd think someone plating the dish would have noticed and started over again. For my choice of bao, I went slightly unusual with the fried chicken one, because, well, fried chicken. Actually pretty good, and the "broken potatoes" rock. I could just go in and eat a plate of those. A small bottle of ginger ale washed it all down. Negative, I'd have liked to try a second bao, but the only way they offer it is in combo, and the minimum combo was a 170 peso bao with another appetizer, more potatoes, and another beverage, none of which I wanted. They weren't willing to sell just a bao, even though I'd already eaten a full combo. That strikes me a little inhospitable and inflexible. Which made me think I ought not to give them a second visit... but... ...eventually, about three weeks on, giving them another shot won out. On my second visit, they've dropped the lunch combo, and now simply charge more for each individual bao, each of which comes with those great broken potatoes. They've expanded the appetizer offerings, or maybe they're just non-bao offerings, as they're all roughly the same prices., somewhere between 120-150 pesos apiece. They did, however, change that great vinegary dipping sauce for the potatoes too, and now offer up a sort of milky, near flavorless liquid that made no sense to me. Like watered down ranch dressing. Tried two of the bao (they won't serve one without the potatoes, so if you want more than one, it's a lot of potato - I didn't even eat half of them). The clasico is a sweet, hoisin sauce glazed pork belly, the sweetness offset nicely by pickled beets; the bondiola is a slow braised pork shoulder with a sort of cabbage slaw. Both delicious. No ill effects. They do pick out one of the half dozen bao offerings daily at lunch and offer it as the day's special, dropping the price for whichever one it is from 150 down to 90 pesos, which is a bargain! Bring back the spicy dipping sauce for the potatoes, and maybe let folk who want to order a second bao get one without a pile of potatoes, and I'm sold.

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Koko
Koko - Salon

Salon

Koko

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Bao Kitchen - taiwanese - Updated May 2026

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