It’s 10 p.m. on a Thursday in Colonia Americana, and the scent of juniper and citrus clings to the air inside Pigalle. A bartender leans over the marble counter, shaking a Negroni with the precision of a surgeon. This is the bar’s signature move: a drink that reviewers call 'the best in the city for balance and bitterness.' The menu, available online, doesn’t skimp on details—try the $185 Negroni ($15), where Campari’s sharp tang fights Campari’s sharp tang with gin’s herbal depth. One guest wrote, 'It’s the kind of drink that makes you want to stay until last call.'
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Two blocks away, Old Peter’s doors swing open at 7 p.m. on Fridays, and the room fills with the smoky perfume of grilled pork belly. This bar-grill hybrid is where mezcal lovers come to sip $165 smoky sips alongside $280 empanadas. A regular’s note says it best: 'The mezcal flights here are life-changing—try the 10-year-old with a slice of blood orange.' The pork belly, charred at the edges and glazed with achiote, sells out by 10 p.m. 'It’s carnitas with a soul,' wrote one reviewer, 'the kind of dish that makes you forget you’re waiting for a friend.'
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Pigalle’s magic lies in its restraint. The lighting is low, the playlist curated to match the drinks’ intensity, and the staff knows your name by 11 p.m. A $200 old fashioned ($16) arrives with a twist—applewood-smoked bourbon, a dash of orange bitters, and a cherry that looks like it was stolen from a Victorian parlor. One guest’s review sums it up: 'It’s not just a drink; it’s a conversation starter.'
Old Peter, meanwhile, leans into chaos. The kitchen clatters until 1 a.m., and the mezcal menu reads like a history of agave. The $185 10-year-old is aged in oak barrels once used for Mexican whiskey, giving it notes of burnt sugar and earth. 'This place feels like a secret everyone’s discovered,' wrote a reviewer. 'Come early or come hungry—preferably both.'
At 1:30 a.m., the last Negroni is poured at Pigalle, and the final empanada disappears at Old Peter. The city’s pulse slows, but for a few more minutes, these two bars keep Guadalajara alive with the kind of flavor that turns casual visits into regular rituals.






