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Málaga, Spain

Beluga

CuisineRussian - Caviar, Mediterranean Cuisine
Executive ChefAnton Kovalkov
LocationMálaga, Spain
Michelin
La Liste
Opinionated About Dining

On a small square in Málaga's centro histórico, Beluga builds its identity around what the kitchen calls 'meridian cuisine': Mediterranean-rooted cooking with serious technical depth, a signature programme of savoury rice dishes, and two tasting menus that trace the southern coastline from Alicante to Andalusia. A Michelin Plate holder ranked 622nd in Opinionated About Dining's 2025 European list, it earns its place among Málaga's most considered mid-to-upper tier tables.

Beluga restaurant in Málaga, Spain
About

A Square, a Philosophy, and a Kitchen With Something to Say

Plaza de las Flores sits at the quieter end of Málaga's pedestrian centre, a square defined more by its working neighbourhood rhythm than by tourist foot traffic. Tables spill onto the terrace here without fanfare, and the surrounding architecture is unremarkable by Andalusian standards. What draws attention at Beluga is not the setting but the premise: a rice-centred, coastally anchored menu framed around what the kitchen describes as 'meridian cuisine', a deliberate positioning that aligns the cooking with the geography and culture of the southern Mediterranean rather than with any single regional tradition.

That framing matters more than it might initially appear. Málaga's dining scene has pulled in two directions over the past decade: towards Andalusian fine dining with strong contemporary technique, represented by restaurants like Kaleja, which holds a Michelin Star and works exclusively within that regional idiom, and towards more eclectic international kitchens like Blossom, which blends Chinese and fusion influences at the city's highest price tier. Beluga occupies a third position: Mediterranean in conviction, Alicante in lineage, and southern Spanish in its relationship to ingredient and technique.

Rice as the Organizing Principle

The editorial angle assigned to this page calls for a focus on minimal intervention and clean flavour, and Beluga's rice programme is where that logic runs deepest. Savoury rice is one of the most technically demanding formats in Spanish cooking: it rewards precision over elaboration, and it punishes kitchens that over-reach. The shell-free rice with monkfish and white prawns, the Alicante-style rice cooked in fish stock with wild-caught fish, and the rice with Angus beef cheek and chickpeas each demand that the base carry the dish. There is nowhere for a poorly executed sofrito or an imprecise socarrat to hide.

The Alicante connection is not incidental. The kitchen is run by a couple originally from Alicante, a city whose rice culture sits alongside Valencia's but operates with its own distinct character, favouring deep, stock-driven intensity over the drier, more restrained Valencian style. That provenance explains the technical register of the rice dishes and the choice to build a menu architecture around them. Individual rice dishes can be ordered separately, which gives the menu a flexibility that pure tasting-menu formats do not. It is a considered commercial decision that also reflects a confidence in the cooking: these dishes are not supporting acts.

Two Menus, One Coastline

Beyond the rice programme, Beluga structures its broader offer around two tasting menus: Meridiano Cero and Virazón. The names are geographical and meteorological, both evoking the southern Spanish coast and the winds that define it. Virazón is the sea breeze that shifts onshore in the afternoon along Mediterranean coastlines, a term familiar to anyone who has spent time on Málaga's waterfront. The naming is not decorative; it signals that the kitchen's organizing logic is rooted in the physical environment of the region rather than in abstract culinary ambition.

Fish, seafood, and technically detailed preparations run through both menus, consistent with the awards record. Michelin's Plate designation, awarded in 2024, places Beluga in the category of restaurants recognized for good cooking without the formal elevation of a Bib Gourmand or Star. La Liste's 2025 score of 81.5 points positions the restaurant in the upper segment of a global list that aggregates reviews from multiple guide sources. Opinionated About Dining's 2025 European ranking of 622nd reflects a peer group that includes hundreds of serious European restaurants. Taken together, these signals confirm a kitchen operating at a consistent and credible level within its category.

Where Beluga Sits in Málaga's Table

Málaga's restaurant tier at the €€€ price point sits between the casual seafood and tapas culture that defines the city's mass dining and the formal tasting-menu rooms that compete with Seville and Marbella for regional recognition. Within that middle band, Beluga's approach has more in common with the technically ambitious Mediterranean cooking found at Aire or the produce-driven rigour of Alaparte than with the traditional Malagueño framing of Arte de Cozina.

At the leading of Spain's culinary hierarchy, the conversation runs through kitchens like El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, and Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, restaurants that operate with decades of accumulated institutional weight. Beluga does not compete in that tier. What it offers is a specific and coherent culinary argument made at a more accessible price point, with a menu format that gives the diner genuine options rather than a single prescribed progression. For the Andalusian coastal context, the more relevant comparison is Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, which has built one of Spain's most recognized seafood-driven tasting menus from a similar geographic and ingredient base, though at a considerably higher price and formality level. Beluga does not replicate that ambition, but it shares the underlying commitment to the southern Mediterranean as both subject and source.

For those building a broader picture of Spain's contemporary dining scene, kitchens like DiverXO in Madrid and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona represent the country's maximalist, high-production pole. Beluga operates at the opposite end of that axis: ingredient-led, technically precise, and organized around a clear regional identity rather than spectacle. Internationally, that restraint-first approach finds its closest analogues at kitchens like Le Bernardin in New York or the Korean-influenced precision of Atomix, where the cooking earns recognition through discipline rather than scale.

Planning a Visit

Beluga is located at Plaza de las Flores, 3, in Málaga's Distrito Centro, a short walk from the cathedral and the main pedestrian shopping streets. The terrace is the more sought-after seating option when the weather allows, and the awards copy specifically recommends booking in advance if that is the intention. The restaurant is priced at the €€€ level, placing it above casual dining and below the city's most formal tasting-menu rooms. The Google rating of 4.9 across logged reviews indicates consistent satisfaction among those who have dined, though the review count remains modest. Booking ahead is the practical move regardless of season.

For a complete picture of eating, drinking, and staying in the city, EP Club maintains guides to Málaga's restaurant scene, the city's bars, its hotels, wineries, and experiences.

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