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Guatemala City gets a bad reputation as a place to rush through on the way to Antigua. Most travel guides barely give it a paragraph. But if you are traveling with kids, the city deserves at least a day or two because it has more family-friendly options than almost anywhere else in the country, concentrated in a small area, and most of them are genuinely fun rather than educational obligations dressed up as fun.
This guide covers the best things to do in Guatemala City with kids: what is worth your time, what has changed recently, and a few things that used to appear on lists but no longer exist. I was born in Guatemala City, grew up here, and have been taking my own children to these places for years. The list below reflects what I would actually tell a friend who was landing at La Aurora with kids in tow and one or two days to fill before heading on to the rest of the country.
If you want someone to map out the whole trip for your family, not just Guatemala City but the full itinerary, I offer personalized Guatemala travel planning for families and can put together something that fits your kids, your pace, and your time.

This guide is for
✓ Families visiting Guatemala City before or after Antigua
✓ Parents traveling with kids of all ages
START HERE
Get to Know Guatemala City First
Guatemala City is one of the largest cities in Central America, and it can feel overwhelming without a plan. For families visiting for the first time, a half-day guided city tour on arrival morning is worth doing. It gives kids context for everything they see afterward, and it takes the navigation pressure off parents who are already managing luggage, jet lag, and lunch.
The Guatemala City half-day private tour covers the historic center, the Metropolitan Cathedral, the National Palace, and Mercado Central. It is private, meaning just your group, and guides speak English. There is also a personalized full-day version where you can build the itinerary around what your family actually cares about. If your kids are into archaeology, ask to add Kaminaljuyú.
📌 GETTING AROUND
Uber works reliably in Guatemala City and is far safer than hailing street taxis. If you plan to cover multiple neighborhoods in one day, hiring a private driver for the day is worth the cost. Most hotels can arrange this. Do not rely on walking between the major activity zones in Zonas 13, 15, and 16 because the distances are not walkable.
ZONA 13
Zoo La Aurora
Zoo La Aurora has come a long way from what it was thirty years ago. The zoo now covers around 14 hectares with more than 280 species, organized by geographic region: Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Oceania. The Terra América section highlights Central American wildlife, which is worth prioritizing with kids who can connect what they see to the country they are actually standing in. There are jaguars, tapirs, spider monkeys, and the Motagua beaded lizard, which is found almost nowhere else on earth.
The VIP tours are worth the extra cost if your family budget allows. You can feed lemurs, get close to the macaws, or visit the giraffe enclosure. The Granjita VIP tour is designed for younger kids and lets them pet miniature goats and rabbits and feed farm animals. Note that some VIP tours require kids to be at least seven years old.


One practical advantage of this location: the Zona 13 museum cluster is right here. After the zoo, the Children’s Museum is a short walk away, and the National Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology is also nearby. You can combine them in a single morning without getting back in a car. If you want someone else to handle the logistics, there is a La Aurora Zoo admission ticket with hotel pickup available through Viator.
💡 Practical info: 5ta Calle Interior Finca La Aurora, Zona 13. Tue–Sun 9 a.m.–4 p.m., closed Mondays. Admission Q50 adults (~$6.50), Q25 for children ages 2–12 (~$3.25), free under age 2. Arrive early on weekends; the parking lot fills up fast.
ZONA 13
Museo de los Niños (Children’s Museum)
Right across from the zoo and one of the best children’s museums in Central America. What sets this one apart is staffing: there is an actual person working each of the 50-plus interactive exhibits, guiding kids through what they are doing and answering questions. You are not just turning children loose in a room of buttons. Each exhibit gets individual attention, even when the museum is busy.
The highlights include an earthquake simulator, giant bubbles, a fully stocked grocery store where kids run the checkout, a section on science and technology, and “Mi País,” which covers Guatemala’s geography, culture, and history. Plan at least two hours here. For kids between six and twelve, it is genuinely hard to pull them out.

💡 Practical info: 5A Calle 10-00, Zona 13. Tue–Fri 8:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. and 2:30–4:30 p.m. Sat–Sun 9:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. and 2:30–6 p.m. Closed Mondays. Admission Q40 per person (~$5). Adults are not admitted without a child. The museum closes during lunch and reopens, so check the schedule before you go.
IRTRA Mundo Petapa
The only theme park in Guatemala City and a full-day commitment. Mundo Petapa has roller coasters for different ages, a carousel, a dinosaur playground, arcade games, and a small zoo area with local reptiles and mammals. Going on a weekday is worth planning around if you can. Weekends get very crowded and ride lines are significantly longer.

The ticket system: personal bracelets give unlimited rides for one person. Passports (6 or 12 rides) can be shared across your group. For families where parents plan to ride less than the kids, sharing a passport between adults while buying bracelets for the kids usually makes more financial sense.

💡 Practical info: Av. Petapa 42-36, Zona 12. Open Thu–Sat 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun 9 a.m.–6 p.m. Closed Mon–Wed. Entrance Q100 adults and kids over 1.40m (~$13), Q50 for kids between 1m and 1.40m (~$7), free under 1m. Personal ride bracelet Q50 per person; shareable 6-ride passport also Q50.
Museo Miraflores: The Maya City Below Guatemala City
This one rarely shows up on tourist lists and it should. Museo Miraflores sits directly on the ancient Maya city of Kaminaljuyú, one of the most important pre-Classic Maya settlements in the highlands. The museum was built over the archaeological site itself, so visitors walk through layers of history rather than just reading about them. Exhibits are bilingual in Spanish and English.
For families who plan to visit the Mayan ruins in Guatemala or who have already been to Tikal, this is an excellent way to connect what they have seen to a much older story. The museum is also air conditioned, which matters more than expected after a morning at the zoo in Guatemala’s hot season.
💡 Practical info: Located inside Centro Comercial Miraflores, Anillo Periférico, Zona 11. Check their hours before visiting as they vary by season. Admission around Q30–Q40 per person. Easy to combine with a lunch stop at the Miraflores food court before heading elsewhere in the afternoon.
The Relief Map of Guatemala
The Mapa en Relieve is an enormous scale model of the entire country, built in the late 1800s and still standing in a small park in Zona 2. Every mountain range, lake, river, and volcano is represented. Kids can walk around it and find every place they have visited or plan to visit. Lake Atitlán and its three volcanoes are clearly visible. So are Tikal, the Pacific coast, and the highlands they drove through on the way in from the airport.

The guides who work there are knowledgeable and happy to answer questions. After the map, the small amusement park called Esquilandia is right across the street, with rides and a giant toboggan that younger kids love.

💡 Practical info: Av. Simeón Cañas, Zona 2. Tue–Sun 8 a.m.–4 p.m., closed Mondays. Admission Q25 (~$3.50) for tourists. Use Uber to get here from Zona 10 or 13 rather than trying to navigate on foot.
CIUDAD CAYALÁ, ZONA 16
Paseo Cayalá
Paseo Cayalá is an open-air shopping complex that looks more like a small Italian piazza than a Guatemalan mall. It is walkable, pet-friendly, and full of things for families: a train ride, scooter rentals, and a movie theater. There is also a playground and a garden with animal-shaped hedges that younger kids love to chase each other through.


The Cayibel food market inside Cayalá solves the problem of feeding a group where everyone wants something different. Traditional Guatemalan food, tacos, burgers, Japanese, pizza, it is all there. There is a restaurant built inside a decommissioned chicken bus that kids find genuinely exciting.

Vertika: Canopy and Rock Climbing
Vertika has two separate attractions inside Ciudad Cayalá, and both are worth knowing about if your family has kids old enough for something physical. The canopy at Jardín del Gigante is the longest zipline circuit in Guatemala City, with two options: a short 220-meter circuit (two runs, Q100) and a long 460-meter full circuit for the more adventurous. You glide over the natural reserve inside Cayalá with proper views below. The rock climbing wall at Jardín del CIAM is separate and has routes for all levels, from beginners who have never touched a wall to experienced climbers. They offer instruction, route guidance, and memberships for families who want to come back regularly.
Because both attractions are inside Cayalá, this pairs perfectly with lunch at Cayibel and a few hours at the shopping area or playground. It is one of the most active outdoor options available inside the city itself, which makes it genuinely unusual.
💡Practical info: Blvr. Rafael Landivar, Zona 16. Open daily 10 a.m.–8 p.m. Free entrance. Parking Q10–Q20 (~$2–$3). Individual activity pricing varies; budget Q20–Q50 per activity per kid.
Canopy at Jardín del Gigante, rock climbing wall at Jardín del CIAM, both inside Ciudad Cayalá, Zona 16. Short canopy circuit Q100. Contact: +502 3034-6856 or [email protected]. Check their Instagram (@vertika.ent) for current hours and availability before visiting.
Visiting With Family?
I Can Plan a Guatemala Trip Your Kids Will Actually Remember
Guatemala City is just the start. I have been bringing my own kids here every year since they were small, and I know what holds at different ages and what falls flat. If you want a personalized family itinerary built around your kids, your pace, and how long you have, tell me about your trip.
KM 24 CARRETERA A EL SALVADOR
Green Rush: Nature and Volcano Views Near the City
For families who need fresh air after a couple of days in the city, Green Rush is about 30 minutes from downtown Guatemala City along the Carretera a El Salvador. The park has 10 kilometers of trails, an animal sanctuary where kids can observe deer and other local fauna, archery, canopy, rappel, and a restaurant with traditional Guatemalan food and views over the valley. You can also camp here if your family is into that.
This is the right option for families who want something calmer than a theme park. The trails work well with younger kids and the animal area keeps toddlers busy while older children try the archery range and canopy line.
💡 Practical info: Km 24 Carretera a El Salvador, Cruce a Villa Canales. Thu–Sun 8:30 a.m.–10 p.m. Mon–Wed open with prior reservation. Check their Facebook page (@GreenRushGT) for current entrance fees and any schedule changes before you go.
SAN CRISTÓBAL, MIXCO
Strike Zone Gotcha: Paintball, Go-Karts, and Canopy All in One Place
Strike Zone Gotcha is a multi-activity outdoor park in Ciudad San Cristóbal, Mixco, that works particularly well for families with kids ages eight and up. The main draw is gotcha (paintball-style with soft pellets rather than paint), with four to five different field setups ranging from urban combat scenarios to open terrain. Beyond that, there are go-karts, canopy towers, rappel and climbing walls, bouncy castles, and soccer fields. The full range keeps groups of different ages from getting bored, which is harder to find than it sounds.
Pricing runs Q75 to Q175 depending on which package you choose. Bring a change of clothes if kids plan to do the gotcha field. Wear closed-toe shoes for go-karts and the climbing wall.
💡 Practical info: 9na Calle 7ma Avenida D Final Lote 30, El Campanero, Ciudad San Cristóbal, Mixco. Tue–Sun 9:30 a.m.–6 p.m. Closed Mondays. Packages from Q75–Q175. Check their Facebook page for current promotions and updated scheduling.
ZONA 11, LAS MAJADAS
Sky Zone: The Trampoline Park
Sky Zone is a wall-to-wall trampoline park with eight different courts and activities: dodgeball, obstacle courses, a foam pit, and a climbing wall. Kids from age two can enter, and it genuinely works for all ages including adults who want to join in. The foam pit is a permanent hit with younger kids; older ones gravitate toward the obstacle courses and the climbing wall.
They also run neon glow nights where the lights go down and the park switches to fluorescent colors, which older kids love. Non-slip socks are required and included in the price.
💡 Practical info: 28 Avenida 6-20, Zona 11, Parque Comercial Las Majadas. Tel: 2326-8118. 90 minutes Q130 per person; 2 hours Q150. Monthly memberships from Q145. Check their social media for updated hours.
SAN CRISTÓBAL, MIXCO
FunnyLand: Laser Tag, 7D Cinema, and Arcades
FunnyLand is an indoor family entertainment center at CC Sankris Mall in San Cristóbal, designed across multiple age-specific zones. Younger kids have their own safe play areas with ball pits and slides. Older kids get laser tag, a 7D Max cinema experience, a laser maze, and 14 arcade machines with the chance to win prizes. It is compact and indoor, which makes it a reliable plan for rainy days or hot afternoons when you want everything under one roof.
💡 Practical info: 3a Calle Sector A3, 6-72 Zona 8 Mixco, CC Sankris Mall, 2nd level, Ciudad San Cristóbal. Sat–Sun 10 a.m.–8 p.m. (check their Facebook for weekday hours). Bring comfortable shoes; the laser tag area requires movement.
FOR OLDER KIDS AND TEENS
Laser Heroes and Loops
Laser Heroes has two locations: Paseo Cayalá and Centro Comercial Pradera Concepción. Laser tag, trampolines, obstacle walls, bow and arrow targets, and foosball. Good for groups and for burning off energy. A round of laser tag costs about Q25 (~$3.50) and lasts 15 minutes.

Loops at km 17.5 on the Carretera a San José Pinula has go-karts, bowling, rollerskating, mini golf, gotcha, arcade games, and a sports bar. It skews older but young kids can ride the go-karts as passengers. Check the combo packages on their website before you go; individual tickets add up fast.
💡 Loops hours: Closed Mon–Tue. Wed–Thu 12 p.m.–8 p.m. Fri 12 p.m.–9 p.m. Sat 10 a.m.–9 p.m. Sun 10 a.m.–8 p.m. CC El Faro, km 17.5 Carretera a San José Pinula.
MIRAFLORES
Bowling: 1890 Bowling
The best bowling option in Guatemala City right now is 1890 Bowling, which has two locations: the third floor of Centro Comercial Miraflores and Oakland Place in Zona 10. Both have 14 lanes, plus a game area with air hockey, foosball, Pac-Man, and a VR car racing simulator. The food and mixology scene at both locations is genuinely good, which means parents are not just sitting at a bad snack bar while kids play. Hours at both: Sun–Thu 10 a.m.–10 p.m., Fri–Sat 10 a.m.–11 p.m.
FOR LITTLE ONES
Magic Forest and Sky City: Play Spaces for Younger Kids
For families with toddlers and young kids who are not yet ready for go-karts and laser tag, two indoor play spaces are worth knowing about.
Magic Forest at CC Parque Las Américas in Zona 14 is an indoor play area designed for kids up to twelve. The theme is a forest built by local artisans, with hand-crafted trees, rope bridges, slides, and ball pits. Entrance is free. It is a calm, beautiful space and the kind of thing that keeps younger kids occupied for a full morning without it feeling like a production. There is also a small train and electronic games in the wider shopping center. Open Mon–Sun 9 a.m.–7 p.m.
Sky City Guatemala, which opened in late 2025, is a newer indoor play center inside Cardales de Cayalá designed specifically for mixed-age groups. It has slides, sensory stations, Montessori-style interactive areas for small kids, and more active zones for older children. There is also a café where parents can actually sit down and have a coffee, which anyone traveling with a toddler will appreciate. Open Tue–Fri 1–6 p.m., Sat–Sun 9 a.m.–6 p.m.
✨ ESQUILANDIA: THE OLD STANDARD
Esquilandia has been part of Guatemala City since 1972 and has four fixed park locations across the city: inside Zoo La Aurora, at the Hipódromo del Norte near the Relief Map, at Parque Las Américas in Zona 13, and at Las Majadas in Zona 11. Rides cost Q10-Q20 each and include classics like the giant slide, bumper cars, and the Gusanito. Nothing fancy but kids love it and it connects well with a zoo visit. See all locations at esquilandia.com/parques-fijos.
SAN CRISTÓBAL / SAN JOSÉ PINULA
Restaurante La Finka: Dinosaurs, Llamas, and a Full Meal
La Finka is more than a restaurant. It is a collection of three outdoor themed experiences that you eat your way into, each one with its own personality. The main location is Tierra Perdida at km 20.7 on the Carretera a San José Pinula has a mini-zoo where kids can feed animals for Q15 extra, along with a jungle-themed restaurant. Tierra Jurásica at km 18.5 on the Carretera Interamericana in San Cristóbal has dinosaur replicas at real scale made by local artisans, llamas you can interact with, cloud forest trails, and outdoor seating with views. A third location, Bajo el Agua, has an underwater theme.

The model works like this: entrance to the themed park areas costs Q100 per person, which gets credited toward your food bill, so you are essentially paying for lunch and getting the park experience included. You can also pay for special animal interactions like feeding the capuchin monkeys at La Finka Carretera a El Salvador. The food is Guatemalan and solid: parrillada, pizza, traditional breakfast. Arrive before 5 p.m. if you plan to see the animals because they are put to bed after that. No reservation needed on weekdays; weekends get busy.
💡 Practical info: Tierra Jurásica: Km. 18.5 Carretera Interamericana, San Cristóbal. Tierra Perdida: Km. 20.7 Carretera a San José Pinula. Q100 entrance credited to your food bill. Arrive before 5 p.m. for the animals. Find them on Facebook as La Finka Guatemala for current hours.
DAY TRIP FROM GUATEMALA CITY
Iximché Ruins + Go-Karts: The Best Full-Day Option for Families
If you have a full day and want to leave the city, the combination of the Iximché archaeological site and a family farm with go-karts and canopy is one of the best options available for mixed-age groups. The Iximché Mayan ruins were the capital of the Kaqchikel Maya kingdom before the Spanish conquest, and the site is impressive enough that older kids engage with it when a guide explains it well.
The Iximché ruins plus canopy and go-karts family tour combines the archaeology with an afternoon at a family farm and includes admission, lunch, water, and go-kart rentals. It is private, hotel pickup is included from Guatemala City or Antigua, and it is specifically designed for families with children. This is the kind of tour that works for a ten-year-old and a four-year-old at the same time, which is not easy to find.
✨ ALSO WORTH KNOWING
If your trip extends to Antigua, there is a lot there for families too. My guide on the best things to do in Antigua Guatemala with kids covers everything from the chocolate workshop to colonial ruins. And for the full country picture, my guide to the best things to do in Guatemala is the right starting point.
WHERE TO STAY
Best Hotels in Guatemala City for Families
Most of the family-friendly activities here are concentrated in Zonas 10, 13, 15, and 16. Staying in Zona 10 puts you within easy Uber range of almost everything on this list. It is also one of the safer, more walkable areas of the city for families.
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⭐ BEST LUXURY PICK Westin Camino Real Guatemala Zona 10 location near restaurants and shopping. Large heated pool, fitness center, and consistent service that makes traveling with kids easier. Families rate it well for common areas and how staff handle children. |
⭐ BEST FOR SPACE Adriatika Hotel and Suites All-suites hotel in Zona 14, 10 minutes from the airport. Every room has a kitchenette. Family suites include two separate bedrooms plus a living room, which is a real advantage when you need to put small kids to bed before you are ready to sleep. |
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⭐ MOST ON-SITE ACTIVITIES Grand Tikal Futura Close to the National Museum of Archaeology, with a bowling alley, indoor pool, children’s pool, spa, and a full shopping mall with movie theaters attached. One of the most self-contained options if your family wants everything in one place. |
⭐ NEAR MUSEUMS Barceló Hotel Guatemala City Close to the Children’s Museum and the Natural History Museum. Outdoor pool, spa, three restaurants, and a free airport shuttle. Located next to a shopping center with plenty of dining options when the kids need variety. |
If your trip extends beyond Guatemala City to Antigua, Lake Atitlán, or further into the country, renting a car gives families far more flexibility than shuttles. Just know that Guatemala City traffic is serious, especially on weekday mornings and Sunday evenings coming back from Antigua. Plan around it or hire a driver for those routes specifically.
BEFORE YOU GO
Travel Insurance and Connectivity
Travel insurance is worth buying for Guatemala trips, particularly when traveling with kids. Private medical care in Guatemala City is quite good, but coverage that handles evacuation matters if something serious happens outside the capital. TravelInsurance.com lets you compare multiple plans side by side and find one that fits your group size and trip length.
For connectivity, an eSIM saves a lot of hassle at the airport. Holafly offers unlimited data eSIMs for Guatemala that activate before you land, so maps and Uber work from the moment you walk out of La Aurora.
Beyond Guatemala City
Most Families Only See a Fraction of What Guatemala Has to Offer
Guatemala City is one piece of a much bigger picture. I know how to build trips that work for families with kids of different ages, different interests, and different amounts of time. If you want a real itinerary rather than a generic one, I can put it together for you.
QUESTIONS PEOPLE ASK
Guatemala City With Kids: What Families Want to Know
Is Guatemala City safe for families with kids?
Yes, if you stick to the right areas. Zonas 10, 13, 14, 15, and 16 are where most family-friendly attractions are located, and these are the neighborhoods where most tourists and expats spend time. Use Uber rather than hailing street taxis. Stay aware of your surroundings, do not flash expensive cameras or phones in public, and keep the same common sense you would apply in any large city. Most families visiting Guatemala City have smooth, positive experiences.
How many days should I spend in Guatemala City with kids?
One to two days is enough for most families. A good split is the Zoo plus Children’s Museum on day one, both in Zona 13 and walkable from each other. Day two works well as either a Paseo Cayalá afternoon with Laser Heroes or a day trip to Iximché. Guatemala City is usually the start or end of trips that include Antigua and Lake Atitlán, so you rarely need more time here unless your kids are particularly interested in museums and archaeology.
What is the best area of Guatemala City to stay in with kids?
Zona 10 is the most practical base. It is close to good restaurants, safe to walk around, and within easy Uber range of the main family activity zones. Zona 14 also works well and is closer to the airport. Zona 1, the historic center, is interesting for adults but not well-suited for families with strollers or young children.
¿Qué hacer en Guatemala City con niños?
Las mejores opciones para familias con niños en la Ciudad de Guatemala son el Zoológico La Aurora y el Museo de los Niños en Zona 13 (ambos se pueden visitar en el mismo día), Divercity en Pradera Concepción, el Parque Mundo Petapa en Zona 12, y Paseo Cayalá en Zona 16. Para niños más grandes, Laser Heroes en Cayalá y Loops en la Carretera a San José Pinula son excelentes opciones. Para un día completo fuera de la ciudad, la excursión a Iximché con go-karts y canopy es perfecta para toda la familia.
Is it worth spending time in Guatemala City before going to Antigua?
For most travelers flying into La Aurora, one night in Guatemala City before heading to Antigua makes the logistics easier. For families, adding a morning at the zoo or the Children’s Museum turns that stop into something the kids will actually remember. Read my full guide on the best things to do in Guatemala City for more on what the capital offers beyond the family circuit.
KEEP EXPLORING
More Guatemala Travel Guides
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ANTIGUA Best Things to Do in Antigua Guatemala With Kids From chocolate making to colonial ruins, what actually works for families in Antigua. |
LAKE ATITLÁN Best Things to Do in Lake Atitlán With Kids Everything from Panajachel to the smaller villages around the lake, for families. |
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MAYAN RUINS Best Mayan Ruins to Visit in Guatemala From Tikal to Iximché, a guide to Guatemala’s most impressive archaeological sites. |
FULL COUNTRY Best Things to Do in Guatemala Adventure, culture, food, and nature across the whole country, from a local. |
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TIKAL Everything you need before visiting the most spectacular Mayan ruins in Guatemala. |
IXIMCHÉ The Ultimate Guide to the Iximché Mayan Ruins The Kaqchikel Maya capital, a great day trip from Guatemala City or Antigua. |
This Is My Country
I Know Guatemala the Way I Know My Own Neighborhood
I was born here. I raised my kids here. I have spent forty years learning which experiences are worth your time and which ones are built for tourists who do not know the difference. If you are bringing your family to Guatemala and want a trip planned by someone who actually lives it, reach out.
Guatemala City is not just the city you pass through on the way to Antigua. It is a city worth a day or two of your time, especially with kids in tow. Give it the chance and it will earn it.
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Nice options we never grasp that when we travel internationally there are also options for the children to have fun, thanks for sharing!
Es un gran alegría el regresar a nuestras raíces y mejor aun el disfrutar de estos instantes con nuestras familias. Me encanta ver estos paisajes y conocer de que manera podemos disfrutar de unas vacaciones familiares, gozando de los atractivos de Guatemala.
Que bellos lugares, me encantaria ir a tu pais, se ve maravilloso.
Cuantas opciones divertidas para la familia en especial los niños. Me encantaria visitar Guatemala!
guao que viaje tan divertido! nunca he visitado pero esta en mi lista 🙂
Todos se ven super divertidos, pero me gustaría ir a La Aurora oo.
Hi Paula, I have recently returned from a missions trip to San Raymundo. We are having a follow-up meeting and I am trying to make some of the great fried chicken we were served by the family we built a house for. Unfortunately we were not able to get the recipe while we were there. Can you make some suggestions? Thank you.
Sorry Melissa wish I could help but I don’t know of amy traditional Guatemalan fried chicken recipes, this must be the family’s own recipe.