6 Best Restaurants in Barcelona, Spain

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Barcelona's restaurant scene is an ongoing adventure. Between avant-garde culinary innovation and the more rustic dishes of traditional Catalan fare, there is a fleet of brilliant classical chefs producing some of Europe's finest Mediterranean cuisine.

Catalans are legendary lovers of fish, vegetables, rabbit, duck, lamb, game, and natural ingredients from the Pyrenees or the Mediterranean. The mar i muntanya (literally, "sea and mountain"—that is, surf and turf) is a standard. Combining salty and sweet tastes—a Moorish legacy—is another common theme.

The Mediterranean diet—based on olive oil, seafood, fibrous vegetables, onions, garlic, and red wine—is at home in Barcelona, embellished by Catalonia's four basic sauces: allioli (whipped garlic and olive oil), romesco (almonds, nyora peppers, hazelnuts, tomato, garlic, and olive oil), sofregit (fried onion, tomato, and garlic), and samfaina (a ratatouille-like vegetable mixture).

Typical entrées include faves a la catalana (a broad-bean stew), arròs caldós (a rice dish more typical of Catalonia than paella, often made with lobster), and espinacas a la catalana (spinach cooked with oil, garlic, pine nuts, raisins and cured ham). Toasted bread is often doused with olive oil and rubbed with squeezed tomato to make pa amb tomàquet—delicious on its own or as a side order.

Beware of the advice of hotel concierges and taxi drivers, who have been known to falsely warn that the place you are going is either closed or no good anymore, and to instead recommend places where they get kickbacks.

Aside from restaurants, Barcelona is brimming with bars and cafés, the latter of which can serve as an outdoor meeting spot or a place to socialize and enjoy a cocktail. Be advised that the sidewalk cafés along La Rambla are noisy, dusty, overpriced, and exposed to pickpockets.

Catalan wines from the nearby Penedès region, especially the local méthode champenoise (sparkling white wine, known in Catalonia as cava), pairs perfectly with regional cuisine. Meanwhile, winemakers from the Priorat, Montsant, Empordà, and Costers del Segre regions are producing some of Spain's most exciting new wines.

Bar La Camila

$ | Gràcia

This female-owned café pairs the aesthetics of an old-school Catalan tapas bar with a modern offering: specialty coffee, artisanal beer, natural wines, plus croissants, Spanish tortilla, and soup. It’s always popular, with trendy local families and their dogs spilling out onto the quiet street outside.

Betlem

$$ | Eixample

Set in a charming Moderniste space dating back to 1892, this bar hits the perfect balance of quality, price, service, and ambience. The menu mixes classic dishes like deep-fried calamari and spicy patatas bravas, with house specials like the steak tartare.

Girona 70, Barcelona, 08009, Spain
93-265--5105
Known For
  • Omelet with black pudding and mushrooms
  • Sunny terrace
  • Moderniste interior
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Contracorrent Bar

$ | Eixample

Famous among local foodies for being a great restaurant in an area devoid of culinary hype, Contracorrent fulfills its “against the tide” name by conjuring up imaginative dishes (such as potato foam with truffle and egg, or steamed mussels with tapioca) alongside only natural, small-batch wines. Highly recommended if you're near Arc di Triomf or the Estació del Nord bus station, and your stomach is getting vocal.

Carrer de Ribes 35, Barcelona, 08013, Spain
61-784--0060
Known For
  • Small outdoor terrace
  • Tapas with a novel, often Italian, interpretation
  • Lesser-known local wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch Mon. and Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Orval

$ | La Ciutadella

Sunlight streams through the windows of this fashionable corner coffee spot, stuffed with plants, which offers cakes, cookies and vegan pastries, plus tempting nonedibles, such as design magazines and ceramics made in a little first-floor studio.

Carrer de Buenaventura Muñoz 31, Barcelona, 08018, Spain
Known For
  • Best coffee in the neighborhood
  • No-laptops rule (upstairs only)
  • Hipster aesthetics

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Sagardi

$$$ | Born-Ribera

An attractive wood-and-stone cider-house replica, Sagardi piles the counter with a dazzling variety of cold Basque-style pintxos served on toothpicks; even better, though, are the hot offerings from the kitchen. The restaurant in back serves Basque delicacies like codfish omelets and txuletas de buey (beef steaks) grilled over coals. The other Sagardi branch at Carrer Muntaner 70–72 is equally good. The outdoor patio gets hectic in the high season but is quite lovely if you can find an empty spot.

Syra Coffee

$ | Poble Sec

If you're looking for a shot or two to spur your climb to Montjuïc, grab a café latte or a flat white at this specialty coffee shop, which has several locations around the city. The gourmet cookies are decent, too. 

Carrer Margarit 17, Barcelona, 08004, Spain
62-359--5883
Known For
  • Locally roasted specialty coffee
  • Friendly, English-speaking baristas who know their beans
  • Takeaway only

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