Google: 4.6 · 1,086 reviews



Casa Solla in Poio holds a Michelin star and a place in the Opinionated About Dining European top 600, built on four decades of Galician family cooking reinterpreted for the modern table. Chef Pepe Solla runs two tasting menus named after traditional fishing techniques, leaning hard into the seafood-rich waters of the Rías Baixas. At €€€€ pricing, it sits in the upper tier of northwest Spain's serious restaurant circuit.

The Ría at the Table
The road into Poio from Pontevedra crosses a stretch of the Rías Baixas where the Atlantic pushes inland, and the landscape makes a clear argument for everything that follows at Casa Solla. This is seafood country in a specific, unambiguous sense: the estuary systems around here produce some of the most prized shellfish and crustaceans in Europe, and the restaurants that matter in this region are largely defined by how seriously they take that raw material. Casa Solla sits at the serious end of that spectrum, holding a Michelin star and ranking 511th among European restaurants in the 2025 Opinionated About Dining guide, up from 522nd the year before. Those numbers place it in a narrow peer group for northwest Spain's fine dining circuit, considerably outside the tourist-facing seafood restaurants along the Pontevedra waterfront and operating in a different register entirely.
Four Decades, One Address
The generational arc at Casa Solla is relevant here not as biography but as evidence for how this kind of restaurant develops credibility over time. The Michelin star now held by Pepe Solla was first awarded to the house in 1980, under his father. That continuity matters in the context of Spanish fine dining, where multi-generational kitchens are rarer than the country's profile might suggest. The restaurants that hold Michelin recognition across two generations at a single address — and there are not many — tend to carry a different kind of institutional weight than newer openings, however technically accomplished. Arzak in San Sebastián is the obvious northern Spanish comparison: a family kitchen where the star predates the current chef's tenure, and where the cooking has evolved without abandoning its regional anchor. Casa Solla occupies a structurally similar position in Galicia, though it operates at a smaller scale and with less international visibility.
What Pepe Solla has done with the inheritance is shift the cooking toward creative Galician territory without severing the connection to the ría. The framework remains maritime and regional; the technique and plating vocabulary are contemporary. That balance is not easy to maintain across decades, and the OAD trajectory , moving upward in ranking between 2024 and 2025 , suggests the execution is holding at a high level.
The Menus: Trasmallo and Piobardeira
The two tasting menus at Casa Solla are named Trasmallo and Piobardeira, both terms drawn from traditional Galician fishing vocabulary. Trasmallo refers to a type of trammel net; Piobardeira to a fishing technique specific to the region. The naming is deliberate and reasonably sophisticated: it signals that the conceptual frame for the cooking is the sea, not just as ingredient source but as cultural context. Spanish creative fine dining has a long tradition of this kind of anchored conceptualism. Ángel León at Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María has taken it further than anyone, building an entire kitchen identity around the tidal ecology of the Bay of Cádiz. Casa Solla operates with less programmatic intensity but similar directionality.
The menus are structured in sections , Fósiles, Intro, Mar, Huerta, Lo último among them , which sequence the experience from foundational snacks through to the kitchen's most current thinking. Dishes documented from the menu include "spider crab, spider crab" and "sea urchin, codium," both of which use repetition and single-ingredient focus to signal restraint and confidence rather than elaboration. The approach is consistent with a style found across the better end of contemporary Spanish cooking: ingredient-led, technically informed, and deliberately not trying to compete on complexity with the three-star kitchens in Madrid or Barcelona. DiverXO and Cocina Hermanos Torres occupy a different register, one built on layered technique and theatrical scale. Casa Solla's position in the one-star bracket reflects a different set of ambitions.
One operational detail worth noting: meat dishes do not appear on either menu. They are available on request at a supplement and must be arranged at the time of booking. For most guests, this will not matter , the kitchen's identity is so clearly maritime that ordering outside the seafood frame would be counterintuitive. But it is a practical consideration for tables with mixed preferences.
Where Casa Solla Sits in the Spanish Fine Dining Map
Spain's serious restaurant circuit is weighted heavily toward the north and northeast. The Basque Country produces the densest concentration of Michelin-starred cooking relative to population of any region in the world, and Catalonia anchors the country's most internationally visible addresses. El Celler de Can Roca, Azurmendi, and Martín Berasategui operate at three-star level and draw international visitors specifically for the restaurant. Casa Solla sits below that tier in both star count and international profile, but it operates in a region with its own distinct culinary identity and comparatively few competitors at its level. Galicia's food culture is defined by exceptional primary produce , percebes, navajas, merluza, centolla , and the coastal cooking tradition here has always prioritized quality of material over elaboration. Casa Solla adds a layer of creative interpretation to that tradition without replacing it, which places it in a niche that the Basque and Catalan scenes approach differently.
For reference outside Spain, the closest structural parallel might be a kitchen like Le Bernardin in New York: a seafood-focused address with multi-decade credibility, a clear regional and product identity, and technical refinement in service of ingredient rather than spectacle. The contexts are obviously different, but the underlying philosophy , that the leading seafood cooking is defined by restraint and sourcing, not elaboration , connects them.
Planning a Visit
Casa Solla is closed on Mondays and Sundays, and operates two services on the remaining five days: a lunch sitting from 1:30 PM to 2:40 PM and a dinner sitting from 8:30 PM to 9:40 PM. The tight booking windows , just over an hour per sitting , signal that the kitchen is running a precise, controlled experience rather than an open-ended dining room. At €€€€ pricing, the spend per head will be consistent with comparable tasting-menu restaurants in Spain, though specific current menu prices should be confirmed directly at booking. The restaurant is located on Avenida Sineiro in Poio, a short drive from Pontevedra's old city, and most guests arriving by car or taxi from the city will find it accessible within fifteen minutes. Those combining the meal with a stay in the area should consult our full Poio hotels guide for accommodation options at a range of levels. For broader planning in the region, our full Poio restaurants guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the wider Poio area. For those extending into broader Spanish fine dining, Mugaritz in Errenteria, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, Ricard Camarena in València, Atrio in Cáceres, and Atomix in New York represent the wider peer conversation at this level of ambition and craft.
Side-by-Side Snapshot
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Casa Solla | Modern Galician | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | This venue |
| Aponiente | Progressive - Seafood, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Seafood, Creative, €€€€ |
| Arzak | Modern Basque, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Modern Basque, Creative, €€€€ |
| DiverXO | Progressive - Asian, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Asian, Creative, €€€€ |
| El Celler de Can Roca | Progressive Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive Spanish, Creative, €€€€ |
| Quique Dacosta | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
At a Glance
- Elegant
- Modern
- Sophisticated
- Scenic
- Special Occasion
- Celebration
- Date Night
- Open Kitchen
- Wine Cellar
- Extensive Wine List
- Sommelier Led
- Local Sourcing
- Garden
Modern, minimalist dining room with simple elegant tables and attentive service; the space emphasizes the food and culinary artistry rather than ornate decoration, creating a refined yet approachable atmosphere.














