Category: Barcelona Restaurant Reviews

  • La Flauta

    La Flauta

    Reliable but boisterous Barcelona city-centre tapas restaurant Eating options in Barcelona are limited on Monday nights. Fewer restaurants that usual remain open and those that do often have restricted menus. La Flauta (C/ Aribau 23, +34 933 237 038, no website, closed Sundays) falls into the second category. But that’s a good thing: I’d rather be told…

  • Cal Boter

    Cal Boter

    A traditional Catalan restaurant in Gracia that offers great value – if you don’t mind queuing. The first time I tried to eat at Cal Boter (C/ Tordera 62, 08012, Barcelona, (+34) 934 58 84 62, closed Sun. and Mon nights), the queue was out the door. I tried again another day, earlier, only to find…

  • El Tossal

    El Tossal

    UPDATE MAY 2017: EL TOSSAL HAS CLOSED PERMANENTLY This traditional family restaurant in Gracia still deserves its excellent reputation for game dishes and seasonal Catalan cuisine. I last visited El Tossal (c/ Tordera 12,  08012, Barcelona, Tel. 934576382) six or seven years ago after a tip-off from my Catalan mother-in-law. It’s that sort of restaurant; a multi-generational…

  • El Asador de Aranda (Tibidabo)

    El Asador de Aranda (Tibidabo)

    A spectacular modernista setting for simple but succulent roast lamb at this restaurant in Barcelona’s uptown Sant Gervasi district. The road that slopes up from Barcelona to Tibidabo mountain is one of the most pleasant in the city. An old blue tram still clanks slowly along it, giving passengers time to reflect on the dubious value…

  • Can Manel

    Can Manel

    Want to try calçots in Barcelona? This specialist wood-grill restaurant fits the bill … if you can stand the smoke. Calçots are one of the defining dishes of Catalan cuisine. Every winter, vast numbers of the leek-sized spring onions are grilled black over open flames before being served to bib-wearing hordes who strip them of their outer…

  • Au Port de la Lune

    Au Port de la Lune

    Full of character and food-first attitude, this no-nonsense French bistro is still a delight.  When Au Port de la Lune (C/Pau Claris 103, 08009, Barcelona, Tel. +34 934122224, open Mon-Sat lunch and dinner; Sundays lunch only) was located next to la Boqueria market, it offered a welcome haven of genuine character in an area increasingly blighted…

  • Surya

    Surya

    ‘Mumbai street food’ in Barcelona: a modern Indian restaurant for relaxed snacking. Surya (C/ Pau Claris 92, +34 936 678 760 Barcelona isn’t the typical flock-wallpapered Barcelona Indian restaurant that transports you to the bad old days of 1980s Britain. The first thing that you’ll notice, apart from the bright murals, is that there’s a bus parked…

  • 1881 Per SAGARDI

    1881 Per SAGARDI

    Great views, superb steak and slick service at this rooftop restaurant overlooking Barcelona’s Port Vell.  Restaurant locations in Barcelona don’t get much better than this. The Basque-Catalan 1881 Per SAGARDI (Plaça de Pau Vila 3, Barcelona; Tel. +34 932210050) perches atop the waterside Museu d’Història de Catalunya, at the crook of the old harbour where the former fishing district of Barceloneta juts away from…

  • Manairó

    Manairó

    Inventive and impassioned cooking from a charismatic chef whose personality shines through in every dish in his restaurant, making it one of the finest in Barcelona. Note: This review is based on a visit in January 2014. Chef Jordi Herrera isn’t, at first glance, the kind of guy you might expect to delicately arrange exquisite…

  • Tragaluz

    Tragaluz

    Tragaluz’s stunning glass roof, stylish interior and high-quality but play-it-safe cooking make it an ideal choice for entertaining business guests or taking a break from designer shopping sprees on Passeig de Gràcia. It was raining hard and the sky above Barcelona was black when I set out for Tragaluz (Passatge de la Concepció 5, Tel. +34 934…

  • Restaurant Sant Pau

    Restaurant Sant Pau

    The three-Michelin-starred Sant Pau, a short train ride up the coast from Barcelona, offers one of Catalonia’s greatest dining experiences. UPDATE: October 2018: Chef Carme Ruscalleda has closed Sant Pau to concentrate on other projects. I’m leaving this post up as a memento of the wonderful meal I enjoyed there in early 2014.  Thanks to…

  • L’Arrosseria Xàtiva

    L’Arrosseria Xàtiva

    Rice done right: L’Arrosseria Xàtiva in Les Corts and Gracia is one of Barcelona’s best bets for paella Like having your wallet stolen on the Metro, bad paella is more a question of ‘when’ than ‘if’ for unwary visitors. In every part Barcelona you’ll find tourists wearing expressions of profound disappointment on their sunburnt faces as…

  • Roca Bar

    Roca Bar

    Snack in style at the Roca brothers’ Barcelona gastrobar, annexed to their Michelin-starred Roca Moo restaurant in the luxury Hotel Omm. 2018 Update: Roca Bar is now PERMANENTLY CLOSED.   Barcelona is an informal, unstuffy city, where jackets and ties are always optional. Even in five-star hotels in Barcelona there are always a few tourists…

  • Cal Xim

    Cal Xim

    Cal Xim is as good a choice for a traditional country lunch as you’ll find in Catalonia. It’s less than an hour’s drive from Barcelona, in the Alt Penedés wine region where you can also enjoy some excellent vineyard tours. I don’t get out on my motorcycle as much as I used to; it’s not very practical…

  • Alkimia

    Alkimia

    Jordi Vilà’s Alkimia (C/ Industria, 79, +34 93 207 6115, closed weekends) is a lot of people’s favourite restaurant. Vilà himself is one of Barcelona’s gastronomic stars: a prodigy who worked under some of the city’s greatest chefs including the recently departed and much-missed Jean Luc Figueras. He opened Alkimia with his partner Sònia Profitós…

  • Bite-Sized Review: Ca L’Estevet

    Bite-Sized Review: Ca L’Estevet

    Some things should never change, and Ca l’Estevet (C/ Valldonzella 46, +34  93 302 4186) in the Raval is one of them. Unmoved by the tides of gastronomic fashion, it has been turning out old-school Catalan cuisine to devoted regulars since long before I first ate there over 15 years ago. It may be just around the…

  • Bardeni

    Bardeni

    Anywhere that describes itself as a ‘meat bar’ is already halfway to a place in my heart. Low-carb lunches are often a bleak prospect but Bardeni (c/ Valencia 454, no reservations, closed Mondays) promised to put a high-protein smile on my face with a meat feast of tapas. I hoped it would distract me from…

  • Piras Brasería

    Piras Brasería

    I was in Gracia, hungry and in a hurry, when I stumbled across Piras Brasería (C/ Montseny 10, +34 93 218 26 05, closed Tuesdays). I’d just visited Barcelona’s best (and only) English-language second-hand bookshop, Hibernian Books just a few doors away on the same street and I was lured inside Piras by the smell of…

  • Arola (Hotel Arts)

    Arola (Hotel Arts)

    Fine food and a fantastic terrace? A winning combination and, you’d think, a concept restaurateurs in Barcelona would regularly seize upon. There are, however, relatively few places where you can eat outstandingly well while enjoying the warm weather; lots of good places, certainly, but not many you’d describe as excellent. A notable entrant in this…

  • Gresca (revisited)

    Gresca (revisited)

    Actually I revisit Gresca (C/ Provença 230, (+34) 934 516 193, website) as often as I can, which isn’t as often as I’d like. I tend to send people there a lot, however, when they ask me: ‘What’s your favourite restaurant in Barcelona’. In fact, Gresca isn’t my favourite restaurant, but it’s my favourite that just about…

  • Bite-sized reviews: Café de L’Academia

    Bite-sized reviews: Café de L’Academia

    For a straightforward, fresh, top-value lunch in Barcelona’s Barri Gòtic, close to Plaça Sant Jaume, it’s hard to beat Café d’L’Academia (C/ Lledó  1, (+34) 93 319 8253, reservations required). This old favourite has seen dining trends come and go and ignored them all, staying packed every day with tourists and loyal locals in search…

  • Hisop

    Hisop

    Carpe mensam – seize the table. I’m sure my Latin’s all wrong but hopefully you can understand the hurry I was in to book a restaurant when an unexpectedly child-free evening arose in May as the result of an impromptu babysitting offer. It was short notice but I decided to try my luck at Hisop,…

  • A Tu Bola

    A Tu Bola

    I always love exploring Barcelona’s Raval; it’s constantly changing. Every time I go to the neighbourhood I find new ideas, new languages, new shops… but not always new restaurants. Or at least, not ones worth getting excited about. Barcelona’s most multicultural barrio has not yet produced any truly outstanding ethnic restaurants (that I’m aware of)…

  • Igueldo

    Igueldo

    Igueldo (c/Rosselló 186, 08008 Barcelona (between Enric Granados and Balmes)), +34 93 452 25 55) is a modern Basque restaurant with a growing reputation in the Eixample district. If you don’t mind traffic fumes, or if you’re a smoker, it has a neat little street terrace where you can eat; most visitors, however, will pass through…

  • Pepito

    Pepito

    Sometimes all this fine dining and foodie community stuff can make you a bit crazy. You lose perspective and start to think that everyone is like you; that they’ll travel miles then tolerate appalling service or horrendous decor or cripplingly uncomfortable chairs, just for the sake of a sensational mouthful that makes you go ‘Mmmmmm.’…

  • Tradición Moderna: Cocina Peruana Creativa

    Tradición Moderna: Cocina Peruana Creativa

    UPDATE: Tradición Moderna is now PERMANENTLY CLOSED. The good news is that another Peruvian restaurant, El Chalaco, has taken over the premesis. It’s less elaborate but good, no-frills traditional food.   I feel a bit guilty about this review. I know, obviously, that for reasons of time, money and stomach capacity that I can’t check out…

  • Llamber

    Llamber

    Appearances can be deceptive. At first glance it would be easy to write off Llamber (Carrer de la Fusina 5, +34 933 196 250) as just another example of the many stylish-but-bland tapas sheds which have sprung up across the city in recent years. It sits directly opposite the Mercat del Born cultural centre, perfectly placed to snare tired…

  • N.A.P. Neapolitan Authentic Pizza

    N.A.P. Neapolitan Authentic Pizza

    Even though it’s more than fifteen years ago now, I can still remember my first, and best, experience of Neapolitan pizza. November 1997, Da Michele, Naples. I’d been in Italy for a few months and had already eaten some splendid pizzas when a simple Margherita, costing about 4000 Lira — the equivalent of a couple…

  • Rangoli

    Rangoli

    The paucity of quality curry restaurants  in Barcelona has been a gripe of mine for as long as I have lived here. Many years ago the situation was understandable but I have watched the city’s SE Asian immigrant population expand enormously, and I have licked my lips in anticipation of a wave of aromatic culinary…

  • Bite-sized Reviews: Mam i Teca

    Bite-sized Reviews: Mam i Teca

    Last week I had the pleasure of meeting Dayna Kurtz who was in town ahead of her concert appearance with soul & gospel legend Mavis Staples at the Sala Apolo. Dayna is, in my opinion, one of the best unsung (pardon the pun…) jazz/alt-country/Americana talents in the world – go and buy some of her music then…