La Peña del Colorado

by Angela on March 25, 2009 · 10 comments

in do,eat,listen,see

La Jury at La Peña del Colorado

Where do you take a newcomer to Buenos Aires to show him the grittier, more rustic, and way romantic side of the music I so love? La Peña del Colorado of course (we mentioned it in our list of Ten Things to Do in Buenos Aires). The live shows are great, but I also recommend staying later to see the spontaneous guitarists and drunken singers that stick around until dawn. Plan for a late night.

Last Friday we watched La Jury sing her heart out for over two hours. La Jury, whose real name is Luciana, is from Buenos Aires. She sings in the style called “canto criollo.” Here are the names of a few famous criollo singers from Chile, Argentina, and Mexico to help you get familiarized with the style should you want to study up on the style before getting here (Violeta Parra, Mercedes Sosa, Lhasa del Sela, Chango Rodriguez, Oscar Valles, Chavela Vargas).

At first, La Jury was accompanied by Carlos Delgado on guitar and vocals.

Midway through her performance, master guitarist, Carlos Moscardini, joined her. Amazing. Truly amazing.

Carlos Moscardini

My memory stick was full, which was a total bummer because Carlos Moscardini’s guitar playing coupled with La Jury’s amazing pipes was truly spectacular. But here is Carlos Moscardini on guitar. Wow!

La Peña del Colorado is located in Palermo/Barrio Norte on Guemes, 3657. Call for a reservation and ask for a table close to the stage. The show was scheduled to start at 10:00 but really began closer to 10:30 (as is to be expected in Argentina). It cost 25 pesos for the show, and we had some dinner, too. Now, let me say that I would not go to La Peña del Colorado for sophisticated dishes or the best of Buenos Aires (here’s the menu). But I love that it is so very typical. Typical parrilla fare. Very good empanadas salteñas. Yummy casseroles of pumpkin with quinoa and goat cheese. Traditional guisos or locro. Tablas of cheese, meats and olives. It’s not creative; it’s traditional. As it should be.

La Jury y Carlos Moscardini

If you really want to do things the way the locals do, order a pinguino instead of a regular bottle of wine and ask for a bottle of soda to go with it. The pinguino is actually the shape of the pitcher that the house wine is served in. Because it’s not the greatest quality wine, Argentines often add a bit of soda to it. It’s like a sangria without the goodies. If you’re picky about wine, you might want to get a regular bottle first to have with your food and then switch over to the pinguino when your taste buds don’t care anymore.

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{ 10 comments… read them below or add one }

Still Life in South America March 25, 2009 at 1:48 pm

We lived not too far from La Peña del Colorado. It was a great place to get a reasonable, traditional meal. Also, there were some vegetarian options.

Sometimes, if you eat dinner American time, you can hear the singers practicing! ;-)

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Katie March 25, 2009 at 11:24 pm

This looks like a great spot to enjoy a night out. I’m sure your out-of-town guests were very pleased with your selection!

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santelmoloft March 27, 2009 at 9:03 pm

Hey there Still Life in S.A. (not BA… too bad). Thanks for mentioning the vegetarian dishes. It’s true… they do have a number of options. Those pumpkin dishes were really good. I’m jealous that you guys got to hear rehearsals. Better than the radio for sure.

Hi Katie… I think you’d love La Peña. Do you guys get much folklore down in Necochea? I need to go read your blog and catch up on your whereabouts.

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Katie March 28, 2009 at 3:22 pm

I’ve listened to Argentine folk music on the radio, but I have yet to attend a live performance. I enjoy that style of music, so I bet I would love La Peña! Next time I am in the Capital, maybe we could meet up. :)

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santelmoloft March 28, 2009 at 10:19 pm

YES! That would be so great. You’ll have to let me know when you’re here. And if I head to Necochea, I’ll be in touch for sure! Besos…..

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Paul Pettigrew December 20, 2009 at 4:29 am

Where can we buy a penguino? We have tried uncommongoods.com: they were selling them but have ceased stocking them.
We live in Perth, Western Australia and it is impossible to buy such items here.
We backpacked through Central and South America and enjoyed local wines in Argentina poured from penguinos. We now regret not buying one!!!
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!
Paul and Trish Pettigrew

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santelmoloft December 20, 2009 at 8:50 am

Hi Paul… I’ll look into it. I really don’t know if it’s possible to buy them online, but if so… I would guess they can be shipped. There’s got to be a place for penguinos online.
Cheers,
Angela

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santelmoloft December 20, 2009 at 10:10 am

Hi Paul, here are a few places I found online. The question will be to see whether they will send it to you in Australia and what they’ll charge to do so.
Mercado Libre has the traditional ones here

And Calma Chica is a store here that also has them in brown or white, but I don’t know if they will do online shopping.

You could try calling them (I’m sure they speak English if your Spanish isn’t up to ordering on the phone… that can be hard).

Also, try searching for pinguino jarra (or penguin pitcher in Spanish). There are tons in eBay type stores here in Argentina. If you contact the seller, they may ship to you. You can always use Babelfish to compose the message and/or understand what the seller replies.

Best of luck and if I find another option, I’ll let you know.
Cheers,
Angela

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tokoonline @konsultan toko online
Twitter:
April 27, 2012 at 6:52 am

if i have a change to go to Argentina, i would like to want boca junior — the club where maradona start his career….then i will follow your suggestion ;)
tokoonline @konsultan toko online´s last [type] ..Trend Berbelanja Online

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Angela @SanTelmoLoft April 27, 2012 at 12:17 pm

Best of luck!

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