Sign up with email

or

Already a member? Log in.

Trouble logging in?

Not a member? Sign up!

It wasn’t very long ago that finding a vegan restaurant in Mexico City was like finding a friend on the city’s overcrowded metro during rush hour (read: impossible). In fact, until this decade there were no exclusively vegan eateries in Mexico’s bustling capital. This is not to suggest that vegan options weren’t available, but exploring the city as a vegan could be a tricky business, and veganism was a little-understood concept.

So unusual an idea it was, that journalist-cum-chef Mariana Blanco was often called a loser or perdedora by friends who found her animal-free and plant-rich lifestyle to be at odds with what they knew. So when she opened the first vegan restaurant in the city, and indeed the first in Latin America, she called it Los Loosers. For those eagle-eyed readers who have already spotted the misspelling, it is happily intentional: the double “o” represents the wheels of the bikes that were used to deliver the food across Mexico City.

Los Loosers, in fact, started not as a restaurant as such but as a delivery service. At a time before Uber Eats arrived in Mexico City, Blanco cleared space in her apartment, invested 6,000 pesos (US$320) in a bread oven and began taking orders for vegan hamburgers through Facebook. The burgers were delivered by bicycle far and wide across the megalopolis.

The food was popular, very popular, and in 2014, having not spent a peso on advertising, Blanco had enough customers and enough money to open a proper restaurant in the Roma Norte neighborhood. Four successful years later, they no longer offer deliveries because Blanco now sees the restaurant as being about “more than just food.” For this deeply passionate chef, eating is also about “feeding your soul.” It is the whole experience, from leaving your house, to coming to the restaurant and being part of the atmosphere. And quite an atmosphere this small and perpetually busy restaurant has.

We entered the beautifully designed eatery, which is decorated with a combination of accessories from Mexico and Asia, on a bustling Friday afternoon. The long central table was packed with young locals laughing and hungrily enjoying a mixture of tacos and ramen, while late 80s pop rock rang out from the speakers. On the menu were Mexican favorites like tacos al pastor, gorditas and sopes as well as Korean-style tacos and ramen, all made without animal products.

The Asian influence comes from Blanco’s love of the region. She recounts watching a Japanese cartoon as a child and recognizing herself in it. From there, her interest in Asia and Asian food only grew. She sees similarities in the cuisines too, explaining that they both use a lot of “lime, chile, soups and sauces,” meaning that they pair well together.

The meat eaters among our group swore that the tacos al pastor tasted much like the “real thing.”

Discussing the menu, Blanco told us proudly “they are all my recipes,” and with the menu changing week by week – the most popular options remain and new dishes are added – she has to innovate again and again. Ingredients are carefully selected from local producers whom Blanco visits personally before buying from them. On the day we stopped by the restaurant, she was excited by a delivery of yellow broad beans, reveling in the challenge of a new ingredient.

The food, which comes beautifully displayed, is packed with the type of flavor that you can only get from using the best ingredients. The meat eaters among our group swore that the tacos al pastor tasted much like the “real thing.” Blanco described how some customers come here without knowing it is a vegan restaurant and don’t even notice that there is no meat. The textures, the flavors and the presentation all serve to entice even the most ardent meat lovers.

Blanco’s passion and commitment to consciously sourced vegan food is clear. “For me, it is a type of mission,” she said, describing how she wants humans to view animals as equal rather than as inferior. Blanco explained that starting the restaurant was a “way of finding my own voice,” and since Los Loosers began in 2011 she has been invited to share her food globally, traveling to New York, London, Japan and South Korea for workshops and talks on ethical, vegan cuisine. Considering that she started out with just a 6,000-peso investment, the fact that this year the restaurant and Blanco were featured in the Forbes list of businesses changing the way business is done in Mexico is quite an achievement.

It is not an exaggeration to say that Los Loosers led the way in Mexico City’s vegan food boom. Nowadays, the options are seemingly endless; a quick Google search reveals some two-dozen or so vegan eateries in the central neighborhoods alone. Blanco pays little attention to this, however. “My only competition is with myself,” she told us, and it is clear that this 33-year-old has very high expectations of herself and her work, striving always to grow and expand.

Whether or not she’s aware of it, Blanco’s crusade into the unknown has led to big changes in the city’s culinary landscape. Vegans and non-vegans alike are searching out restaurants like hers that offer something different, something creative.

Whether you want an elegant sit-down vegan meal with wine or an animal-free, cruelty-free street food option, your options as a “looser” in Mexico City are only expanding.

  • Trattoria Pizzeria CaravaggioJune 18, 2021 Trattoria Pizzeria Caravaggio (0)
    In 2017, when Francesco Cancelliere and his brother-in-law Oreste Improta opened their […] Posted in Naples
  • Picnic Week 2020July 9, 2020 Picnic Week 2020 (0)
    With its temperate climate, extensive coastline and friendly character, Marseille has […] Posted in Marseille
  • CB on the RoadDecember 26, 2016 CB on the Road (0)
    To call San Miguel de Allende mind-blowingly picturesque is no hyperbole. Cobblestone […] Posted in Mexico City
Susannah RiggMariana Blanco and Nikhol Esteras

Published on July 27, 2018

Related stories

June 18, 2021

Trattoria Pizzeria Caravaggio: Masterpiece Kitchen

Naples | By Amedeo Colella
NaplesIn 2017, when Francesco Cancelliere and his brother-in-law Oreste Improta opened their small trattoria in Piazza Cardinale Sisto Riario Sforza, a splendid little-known square behind Cattedrale di San Gennaro, they drew inspiration from a nearby masterpiece: Caravaggio’s The Seven Works of Mercy, which was made for, and is still housed in, the church of Pio…
July 9, 2020

Picnic Week 2020: Marseille

Marseille | By Alexis Steinman
MarseilleWith its temperate climate, extensive coastline and friendly character, Marseille has all the ingredients for prime picnicking. The sun shines over 300 days a year. Winter temperatures hover in the 50s and 60s while summer’s late sunsets let daylight linger until 10 p.m. Marseille’s 26 miles of coastline are peppered with rocky coves, sandy beaches…
December 26, 2016

CB on the Road: San Miguel de Allende's Mercados and Marchantes

Mexico City | By Margret Hefner
Mexico CityTo call San Miguel de Allende mind-blowingly picturesque is no hyperbole. Cobblestone streets and colonial facades enchant and inspire romantic notions from even the greatest cynic. Called by some “Mexico’s Disneyland for adults,” it’s a coveted destination for lavish fairytale weddings and romantic getaways and for expats and snowbirds to pass the time under azure…
Select your currency
USD United States (US) dollar
EUR Euro