01 — The plates

Dish films

Every plate is built from a single decision — coal or time, usually both. The menu shifts with the chapter and the season. What follows are the recurring pieces and the logic behind them.

Costilla al Rescoldo — short rib buried in coal embers against a dark background No. 01 Recurring

Antioquia · short rib

Costilla al Rescoldo

Live coal · 9 h Beef

Buried in the coal bed for nine hours, the rib renders its own basting — fat into smoke into crust. Finished over open flame, served falling. No sauce. The coal is the seasoning.

Maíz 30 Días — elegantly plated heirloom corn dish No. 02 Recurring

Oaxaca · heirloom corn

Maíz, 30 Días

Nixtamal · 30 days Corn

Heirloom Oaxacan corn nixtamalized for a month, pressed to the comal, blistered on live coal. Smoke and lime and the taste of patience. The simplest thing on the table and the hardest to rush.

Trucha Ahumada en Verde — plated river trout in a dark editorial light No. 03 Recurring

Cundinamarca · river trout

Trucha Ahumada en Verde

Cold smoke Chile verde cure Fish

Cold-smoked over green oak for six hours, then cured in fermented chile verde. The fish never sees direct flame — only its breath. Served at cellar temperature, sliced thin.

Charred and fresh peppers — an ingredient portrait for Plátano Miel de Caña Ceniza No. 04 Recurring

Chocó · plantain

Plátano, Miel de Caña, Ceniza

Ash-roasted Plantain

Roasted whole in the wood ash, split when soft, glazed with raw cane honey, dusted with the pale ash it cooked inside. Sweet and bitter and warm. The dessert that begins the same fire as the meat.

Mezcal poured at the CRUDO table — the ceniza salt pairing No. 05

Oaxaca · mezcal pairing

Ceniza Salt, Single-Village Pour

Mezcal Aged salt

The ceniza salt aged at the Lágrimas distillery. Paired tableside with single-village mezcal, one pour per coal stage. The drink and the seasoning come from the same smoke logic.

Earthenware pot over an open fire — slow-cooked seasonal CRUDO dish No. 06

Seasonal · clay pot

Guiso del Día

Slow fire Koji broth Rotates

The dish that changes every chapter. Andean tubers, coastal fish, highland lamb — whatever arrived that week, cooked in a clay pot on residual coal heat in a koji-and-chile broth built over two days. You do not know it until you sit.

Rows of clay fermentation jars — chiles and grains aging in CRUDO's larder
Close-up of fermentation vessels with lids — slow-aged CRUDO ingredients
The larder

The wait is an ingredient

Chiles aged in clay for sixty days. Corn nixtamalized for a month. Koji grown on Andean grain in the dark. Fermentation is not a trend here — it is the architecture of the flavour, built long before the fire is lit.

Each CRUDO season begins with the larder: what has been laid in, what is ready to use, what the coal will finish. The fire does not decide the menu — time does. The fire only reveals what time has built.

Request the next table