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The Night Market

4.5 (8 reviews)
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The Night Market Pan Asian Restaurant Photos

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Cantina Sunae - Adobo Pao (two pork buns; two mushroom buns) A+ and Soo Mai (dumplings)

Cantina Sunae

4.5(65 reviews)
0.1 kmPalermo
$$$

First of all this place is called Asian Cantina so don't let name Cantina Sunae fool ya. It was so…read moregood that we came back 2 nights in a row. Hot take: I think it's better than Nino Gordo. There was literally food on my face but the food was so good that the bigger concerns was getting another bite in mouth so I didn't wipe it off. - Drinks (basil lemonade and gin gimlet) - 12/10 - Roti - packed a punch of flavor and was also a little spicy (which we have been missing in this city). Wish I could put this in my pocket and eat it later back in the US. I got a little mad at my boyfriend cuz he ate most of it the second night but it's okay cuz we ordered a second one because it was that good. - 13/10 - Tempura Pao - Good but not great 7.5/10 - Khao Soi - very spicy but also very good! 10/10 - Tuna salad - more like ceviche 11/10

Came here on our trip to Buenos Aires once we started craving a different cuisine. We arrived at…read moreopening so it was pretty empty and the staff was friendly. My husband and I both ordered the Khao Soi and were glad to see it was vegetarian. It was delicious but so so spicy! We can handle Asian spice but this was next level. May be worth asking this to be made to your spice tolerance for this dish. The decor and ambiance was excellent, the food was tasty! Recommend overall.

Photos
Cantina Sunae - Sotanghon Pancit - Beans noodles stewed in a casserole with prawns, bacon, Chinese celery, black mushroom and ginger. A+

Sotanghon Pancit - Beans noodles stewed in a casserole with prawns, bacon, Chinese celery, black mushroom and ginger. A+

Cantina Sunae - Okinawa Ginger Beer

Okinawa Ginger Beer

Cantina Sunae - Roti with Curry

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Roti with Curry

Dumpling House - Thai dumplings

Dumpling House

2.0(1 review)
6.0 kmRetiro

While I don't recall my mother ever saying it, received wisdom is that if you have nothing nice to…read moresay, don't say it. On the other hand, if a picture is worth a thousand words, the following five photos are spewing out a 5k monologue that ought, at least in brevity, be stood up to. This place is dedicated to the world of dumplings, and offers up a quartet of different ethnic types, plus a few random other dishes. Anemic, flavorless, oily, chicken wings, and hey, only 40 pesos for 3 of them. Chinese - they look pretty, they're folded beautifully. They belie the unseasoned pork and green onion filling. The mound of shaved raw cabbage with some sort of creamy dressing drizzle has more flavor. Actually, the cabbage without the dressing has more flavor. 180 pesos for 8. The Thai style have almost no filling. What there is, does taste of ginger. There's more cabbage. Oh, condiments... they have soy sauce, and salt. 180 pesos for 8. The Korean "spicy"... surely there will be... no, no there's not. Did I mention that all the dumplings are undercooked so that the edges where they're pinched together are basically raw pasta dough? More cabbage. 180 pesos for 8. Perhaps the vegetable momo, which doesn't list an ethnicity, but that would typically be somewhere around Tibet or Bhutan. The filling here, of mushroom and tofu, actually has some decent flavor, but there's so little of it in relation to the whopping steamed bun - maybe two tablespoons inside a 5″ ball of dough tastelessness, that it may as well not be there. Again, more cabbage. 180 pesos for 1. With four of us, we were still hungry, and, at least, keeping in the same general theme, I suggested we head a block north to Bao Kitchen, where I'd been, but the others hadn't. One of our number suggested that it would at least get the taste of the dumplings off our palates - I beg to differ, there was no taste to get rid of. 'nuff said about Dumpling House.

Photos
Dumpling House - The queue

The queue

Dumpling House - Korean dumplings

Korean dumplings

Dumpling House - Wings

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Wings

Yüt - dining room

Yüt

3.5(2 reviews)
3.4 kmBelgrano

Way back, many moons ago, like November 2005, I had stumbled upon BuddhaBA, a pan-asian spot that,…read morewhile never having the quality or variety of fare that I later found at Captain Cook (no longer open) or Cantina Sunae (not open at the time), always had a classy elegance about it, and I particularly liked the tea garden for after lunch sipping. Sadly, it closed last year, it had been limping along for awhile. It sat vacant for a bit, and then suddenly, about two months ago, underwent a rapid renovation and flung its doors open as Yüt, in Barrio Chino. While still pretty, it's not near as elegant as it used to be - they've gone for more booths than tables, and for soft, neutral colors. On their website, they tout that they are a truly classic Taiwanese restaurant. On their menu it says they're a Cantonese restaurant. And, about a third of the dishes are identified as Sichuan. So, a mix, like most Chinese spots here. The menu itself is interesting - it's a beautiful, photo-laden, spiral bound affair. Each dish has a letter rather than a price next to it. And on each table, there's a price card that tells you how much dishes with that letter cost. It's a little tedious to zip back and forth, though basically, the further along the letter in the alphabet, the higher the price. It's also smart on the restaurant's side for ease of changing prices - something that given the handwritten changes on the price card already noted, in the six weeks they've been open, they've already done at least once. One of the best hot and sour soups we've encountered in BA. Packed with flavor and had a kick to it, and a really good texture. Most hot and sour soups we've had tend to have those wood ear or black mushrooms in them, this didn't, which was noted, but didn't take away from how good the soup was. A steal given that six of us split this, for 490 pesos. A simple stir-fry of green beans and pork. Good flavors, it might have been better if the pork was a bit more distributed, given that it was ground pork - it was all in clumps. But other than that, we really liked this one. 390 pesos. A little disappointing on the "super spicy" Sichuan beef dish. Almost no chili in it, and only maybe a couple of scattered szechuan peppercorns. The beef was a little chewy, too. Meh. 490 pesos. Mixed reactions to this one. It was billed as crispy fried oysters, but turned out to be simply stir-fried oysters topped with a pile of "crunchy bits" of really crispy sort of tempura batter, peppers, and fermented black beans. I think some of the negative reaction was that we were all expecting individually battered and deep fried oysters, but that may simply be a bad translation of the Chinese dish. The flavors were great, the oysters were fresh. I personally loved the dish. Quite pricey at 880 pesos, though there were a good number of oysters on the plate, and they're not cheap here. Oddly, the last dish to come out, we'd expected it first... I mean, dumplings. Good, but not anything special. Filled with a nice pork and chive filling, good wrappers, but a bit oily. 390 pesos for a dozen of them isn't bad though. Add in a big bowl of rice (320 pesos, or individual ones at 80 pesos each, so we saved over getting six individual portions, and it was more than we ended up eating), and drinks, and it was still a pretty reasonable outing at 670 pesos apiece with tip, or around $11. Oh, and the tea garden is gone - replaced by Yüt Express, a quick eats and takeout counter - that I'll check out at some point to see how different the fare is there.

Photos
Yüt - Front

Front

Yüt - Crispy oysters

Crispy oysters

Yüt - Dumplings

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Dumplings

The Night Market - panasian - Updated June 2026

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