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San Luis Potosí’s Seafood Gems: Where Flavor Meets TraditionGuide

San Luis Potosí’s Seafood Gems: Where Flavor Meets Tradition

At Mariscos Fredy, the lunch rush hums with locals ordering ceviche tostadas by the dozen. Across town, Mariscos Guajardo serves shrimp broth so rich it tastes like a story. These two spots define San Luis Potosí’s seafood soul.

The scent of citrus and grilled fish hits you before the doors do. It’s 12:45 p.m. at Mariscos Fredy, and the line snakes out the front as workers in faded work boots and office types in button-ups jostle for tables. This is where the city comes to eat like a coastal town.

Fredy’s ceviche tostadas ($80) are the star. Tamarind-dressed shrimp rest on crispy disks, glistening with sesame seeds and chopped cilantro. A woman in a floral blouse orders four, then sips a michelada as her daughter texts from the next table. "It’s like my abuela’s recipe, but fresher," says regular Raúl, 42, who eats here three times a week. The kitchen moves like a well-choreographed dance—knives clack, citrus peels hiss in hot oil, and the ceviche’s tang cuts through the heat.

Twenty minutes north, Mariscos Guajardo thrives in a quieter rhythm. Its shrimp broth ($150) simmers for six hours, a fact owner María Guajardo will tell you twice. "We add three kinds of chili, no shortcuts," she says, wiping a flour tortilla across the counter. The broth arrives in a clay bowl, its surface floating with avocado slices and crispy tortilla strips. One bite and it’s clear why retirees make weekly pilgrimages: the depth of flavor tastes like a secret passed down through generations.

The lunch crowd here skews older, but the energy is no less vibrant. A man in a checkered guayabera sings along to a mariachi band playing in the background. His wife, Araceli, points to the "shrimp filled with crab" ($220), a dish she’s ordered every birthday since 1998. "It’s the only thing my husband eats for dinner," she laughs. The kitchen’s precision is evident—each crab-stuffed shrimp is sealed with a golden crust, the filling a perfect balance of briny and buttery.

Both restaurants share a stubborn devotion to simplicity. Fredy’s menu has no fusion nonsense, no "seafood risotto with mango glaze." Just tacos al pastor with whitefish, Aguachile in lime juice so sharp it makes your eyes water, and a trust in ingredients that can’t be rushed. Guajardo’s stainless steel countertops gleam with the same no-nonsense ethos—fish scaled on-site, tortillas pressed three times daily.

By 3 p.m., Fredy’s line has dissolved into a handful of after-work drinkers sharing micheladas. A teenager at the bar sketches the waitstaff on a napkin. At Guajardo, the last table debates which chili to add to their next order. These are places where seafood isn’t a dish—it’s a language, spoken fluently by those who grew up with it.

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