
Coyoacan Mezcaleria
Coyoacan Mezcaleria on Calle Genova runs a mezcal-focused program with more than 80 varieties sourced from Oaxaca, Guerrero, and Puebla. The space is small and conversation-oriented, with a long wooden bar as the focal point and bartenders who walk newcomers through tasting flights organized by region or agave type. Lighting is low and warm, the soundtrack stays at background volume, and the crowd leans toward curious drinkers rather than party seekers. Beyond straight pours, the menu includes mezcal cocktails built around seasonal ingredients and a small selection of Oaxacan food including chapulines, tlayudas, and chocolate tastings. Despite sitting in Zona Rosa, the feel is closer to a Oaxaca City specialty bar than to the dance clubs a block away on Amberes.
Where to stay near Coyoacan Mezcaleria
Hotels and rentals within walking distance.
What to Expect
A compact, warmly lit bar with a wall of mezcal bottles behind the counter, quiet conversation, and bartenders explaining regional differences to anyone who asks. The crowd is mixed-age and drink-focused.
Quiet, focused, and educational. A drink destination, not a party stop.
Low-volume Latin acoustic, bolero, and cumbia in the background
Stylish-casual. Jeans and a button-down are fine; no dress code enforced.
Travelers interested in mezcal education, quiet conversation, pre-dinner drinks
Cards and cash accepted; cards standard
Price Range
Mezcal pour 120-300 MXN, tasting flight 350-600 MXN, cocktail 200-240 MXN, food 120-280 MXN
Pour ~$6.50-16, flight ~$19-32, cocktail ~$11-13, food ~$6.50-15
Hours
Tue-Sun 17:00-01:00, closed Monday
Insider Tip
Start with the three-mezcal tasting flight before committing to a full pour of something unusual. Pair strong pours with orange slices and sal de gusano as the bartenders suggest. Weekends fill quickly; reserve a bar seat if you want guided service.
Full Review
Coyoacan Mezcaleria occupies a ground-floor space on Genova just off the main Zona Rosa grid. The entrance opens directly into a narrow room dominated by a long wooden bar, with the back wall displaying roughly 80 bottles of mezcal organized by region and producer. A handful of small tables line the opposite wall, but the bar seats are where the real experience happens since the bartenders do most of the educational work.
The mezcal program is genuinely deep. Pours range from familiar espadín at 120 MXN up to rare tobalá and tepextate varieties running 250 to 300 MXN. Tasting flights of three or five glasses let you compare agaves, regions, or distillation styles, and the staff will pair pours with orange slices, sal de gusano, or citrus depending on the profile. Mezcal cocktails are well-built, though most regulars come for the straight pours.
Food is simple but authentic. Chapulines arrive crispy and salted, tlayudas come in small-plate portions meant for pairing rather than a full meal, and a small Oaxacan chocolate tasting closes the menu. Pricing is mid-range by Zona Rosa standards, with serious mezcal tastings running higher than casual drinks at the nearby bars.
For travelers interested in Mexican spirits culture, this is one of the better educational spots in central CDMX. The format rewards asking questions, and the staff responds with specifics about producers, distillation methods, and regional traditions rather than generic marketing lines. Compared to the mezcalerias in Roma Norte and Condesa, Coyoacan Mezcaleria holds its own on selection and outperforms on bar-side teaching.
The Neighborhood
Genova is a pedestrian-friendly street that forms the quieter spine of central Zona Rosa, with restaurants and boutiques rather than clubs. The bar sits a few blocks from the Angel of Independence and Reforma.
Getting There
Metro Insurgentes on Line 1 is a five-minute walk. Metrobús Hamburgo on Line 1 is close. Uber drops directly at the address.
Address
Calle Genova 44, Col. Juarez
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