Organised by William Reed, the people behind The World’s 50 Best Restaurants, Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants and Middle East & North Africa's 50 Best Restaurants, Latin America’s 50 Best Restaurants is a snapshot of the opinions and experiences of 300 regional restaurant industry experts who form the Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants Academy.
The Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants Academy is an influential group of leaders in the restaurant industry across Latin America, each selected for his or her expert opinion of Latin America’s restaurant scene. None of the employees of the organiser, or of any of the sponsors associated with the awards, is part of the voting Academy. What constitutes ‘best’ is left to the judgment of these trusted and well-travelled gourmets. The list is the result of a simple computation of votes.
The Academy is divided into five separate regions: Mexico; Central America; South America (North); South America (South); and Brazil, covering the following countries: Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guyana, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, Venezuela.
Each region has its own panel of members, including a chairperson to head it up. The division and number of voters in each region are designed to represent the Latin American restaurant scene as fairly as possible at the current time and are agreed with the Academy Chairs. The gender-balanced panel is made up of food writers and critics, chefs, restaurateurs and highly regarded 'foodies'.
These criteria are designed to allow our panellists to vote far and wide. They could vote for a small, unknown restaurant in a secluded area of Latin America, or select the best-known restaurants in their own country or region – it is their opinion and the experiences they have had that matter.
This method means that restaurants cannot apply to be on the list, and cannot be nominated, and no external influences (from William Reed or our sponsors) can influence the list. It also means that every restaurant in Latin America is eligible, unless the restaurant is closed at the time that the list is announced, or we receive notice that it will be closing in the near future.
There are no criteria that a restaurant has to meet. They certainly do not have to sell a certain product. They do not need to have been open a certain number of years and they do not need to have won any other culinary accolades.
Professional services consultancy Deloitte is the official independent adjudication partner of Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants. Deloitte has been granted full and independent access to the Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants voting process and data and has performed certain procedures to confirm the integrity and authenticity of the voting process and the resulting list.
In order to guarantee a fair relationship between the percentage of votes a region receives and their proportionate representation in the Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants list, in the event of a significant variance, Deloitte will apply a normalisation process to the voting data.
Founded in 1845, Deloitte has grown to become one of the world’s pre-eminent and most trusted professional services consultancies. As part of its wide-ranging portfolio, Deloitte works with companies in all areas of the licensed retail industry and has considerable experience in proving bespoke adjudication services for a number of internationally recognised awards.
It has a dedicated team devoted to the restaurant sector that specialises in a comprehensive range of audit and advisory services, complemented by industry-specific knowledge and the leverage of a network of specialist expertise across the UK, Europe, the US and Asia. In the sector Deloitte works with businesses spanning one-site start-ups through to FTSE-listed groups – and it is proud to be acting as independent adjudicator for The World’s 50 Best Restaurants.
deloitte.co.uk/travelhospitalityleisure
As a result of the impact of Covid-19 on the restaurant sector in Latin America in 2020 and 2021 and the curtailment of travel for diners and voters, in 2021 50 Best pivoted to identify the greatest restaurants in the region of the last nine years. A distinctive one-off list recognised 100 restaurants based on the aggregated votes of the previous eight editions of the ranking since the awards’ inception in 2013, with no voting taking place in 2021. Latin America’s 50 Best Restaurants 2013-2021: Pasado y Futuro was announced on Monday, 22nd November 2021 at a series of live events held in key cities across the region.