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Lalín, Spain

Cabanas

CuisineTraditional Cuisine
LocationLalín, Spain
Michelin

Cabanas sits in central Lalín and holds consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) for its commitment to Galician traditional cooking. The restaurant is one of the town's most respected addresses for Cocido de Lalín, the slow-cooked pork dish that defines the region's culinary calendar, served alongside a wine list of over 1,500 labels overseen by an in-house sommelier.

Cabanas restaurant in Lalín, Spain
About

Where Galicia's Most Celebrated Winter Dish Finds Its Table

Lalín occupies an inland plateau in the province of Pontevedra, removed from the coastal circuits that draw most visitors to Galicia. The town's identity is bound tightly to a single dish: Cocido de Lalín, a slow-simmered assembly of Galician pork products — lacón, chorizo, ears, snout, and the fat-marbled meats that only make sense after long hours over low heat — accompanied by chickpeas, turnip greens, and the kind of bread that exists to mop up the broth. This is not a dish that travels easily to other tables or other cities; it belongs here, in this climate, at this altitude, in the season that demands it. Every January, Lalín holds its official Cocido festival, drawing visitors from across Spain to eat exactly what the region has been cooking for centuries. The restaurants that anchor that tradition are the ones worth knowing.

Cabanas sits on Rúa Pintor Laxeiro, at the centre of town, and has earned consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions in 2024 and 2025, a signal that its kitchen meets a consistent technical standard without straying into creative-contemporary territory. The Michelin Plate sits below star recognition but above the noise of unremarkable local dining; it marks a place where craft is taken seriously and the product is handled with care. In a small inland Galician town, that distinction matters.

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The Cocido Tradition and What It Demands of a Kitchen

Cocido de Lalín is a dish that punishes shortcuts. The pork products must come from local producers working with the Celta pig breed, historically dominant in Galicia and better suited to the wet, cool interior than the leaner breeds favoured elsewhere. The curing, the fat content, the ratio of meats to vegetables , all of it reflects decisions made months before the plate arrives at the table. A kitchen serving this dish well is not improvising; it is executing a protocol refined over generations.

Cabanas offers its own three-course format built around Cocido de Lalín, which gives the dish the structural weight it deserves rather than folding it into a broader à la carte as an afterthought. Alongside the cocido menu, the kitchen runs a seasonal à la carte that follows the Galician pattern of letting the fish and seafood market lead: the catch of the day takes precedence over fixed preparations. This approach is common across quality-level restaurants in northwest Spain , from Auga , Traditional Cuisine in Gijón to the rural dining rooms of the interior , and reflects a regional philosophy where supplier relationships and seasonal availability determine the menu more than any single chef's creative agenda.

For context, Spain's most-discussed dining addresses operate in an entirely different tier: El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, DiverXO in Madrid, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, Mugaritz in Errenteria, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte - Oria, and Ricard Camarena in València. Cabanas is not competing in that conversation, nor should it be. Its value is entirely different: it is the kind of restaurant that preserves a specific regional tradition at a price point that makes it accessible to the town it serves, earning Michelin recognition not through innovation but through fidelity.

The Wine List as a Separate Argument

A wine list exceeding 1,500 labels is unusual at this price tier anywhere in Spain, let alone in an inland Galician town of Lalín's scale. The depth of the list signals that wine is taken seriously here as a discipline in its own right, not as an afterthought to the food. The family has a sommelier working the floor, a detail that reflects a broader Galician tendency to treat Albariño and the other white-led appellations of the region as a genuine area of expertise rather than a default house pour.

Galicia's wine culture extends well beyond Rías Baixas Albariño, the variety that international visitors recognise most readily. The interior produces wines from Ribeiro, Ribeira Sacra, and Valdeorras that appear less frequently on lists outside the region; a cellar of 1,500 labels at a mid-range traditional restaurant in Lalín is likely drawing heavily on that local depth. This is the kind of list worth approaching with questions rather than assumptions, and the presence of a trained sommelier makes that conversation worthwhile.

Atmosphere and Occasion

The room is described as warm in the conventional Galician sense: the kind of interior that reflects the region's long tradition of communal eating, where the table is expected to hold a group for several hours and the rhythm of service follows the food rather than the clock. At the €€ price range, Cabanas sits in the same bracket as Asturiano (Seafood) and the broader set of mid-range traditional addresses in the town. It draws a Google review score of 4.5 from over 1,000 reviewers, a volume that indicates consistent repeat custom rather than a single wave of attention.

The Cocido de Lalín season runs through January and February, when the dish is at its most culturally visible and the local festival brings the highest concentration of visitors. Arriving outside that window does not diminish the kitchen's offering, but it changes the context: the cocido is then a dish eaten by those who sought it out rather than those swept along by the town's seasonal calendar.

Planning Your Visit

Cabanas is at Rúa Pintor Laxeiro, 3, in central Lalín, Pontevedra. The price range (€€) places it comfortably within reach of a two-course meal with wine under €40 per person in most Galician dining contexts, though the extensive wine list offers scope to spend considerably more if the cellar pulls you in that direction. No booking phone or website is listed in this record; confirming availability directly with the venue before visiting, particularly during the Cocido festival in January, is advisable. For those building a longer trip around the region's food and drink, see our full Lalín restaurants guide, our full Lalín hotels guide, our full Lalín bars guide, our full Lalín wineries guide, and our full Lalín experiences guide.

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