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Chilean Food and Wine — What to Eat, Drink, and What It Costs

Empanadas, Pacific seafood, and a wine industry that quietly rivals France's.

Chilean food centers on empanadas (the classic 'pino' filling: beef, onion, egg, olive), some of the best Pacific seafood in South America, and a wine industry built around Carmenère — a grape variety nearly extinct in France that found its true home in Chile's Colchagua Valley. A street empanada runs $1.50–3; a casual sit-down meal $6–14; a bottle of genuinely excellent Chilean wine at a restaurant $12–25. Tap water is safe to drink almost everywhere in Chile, a real rarity in the region.

Chile's food scene doesn't get the international attention Peru's or Mexico's does, and that's honestly a little unfair — it has a distinct, seafood-and-empanada-driven cuisine, and its wine industry is a genuine world player, not a regional curiosity. Here's what to actually order, what it costs, and the wine 101 that makes the Colchagua and Casablanca valleys worth a day trip.

Questions people actually ask

What is Chile's national dish?
There's no single official answer, but empanadas de pino (beef, onion, hard-boiled egg, and an olive baked into a pastry) and pastel de choclo (a corn-crusted beef casserole) are the two dishes most Chileans would point to first.
Is Chilean wine actually good, or just cheap?
Genuinely good — Chile is a serious wine-producing country, not just a value option. Carmenère (its signature red, virtually unique to Chile) and Casablanca Valley's cool-climate Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Noir hold their own in blind tastings against much pricier French and Californian bottles.
Can I drink the tap water in Chile?
Yes, in Santiago and most cities the tap water is treated and safe to drink — a genuine rarity in South America and worth knowing, since it saves money and plastic. Rural areas and some smaller towns are the exception; ask locally if unsure.