Skip to Main Content
← Collection
Tenerife, Spain

Char Fuego Y Brasas

Executive ChefBabacar Fall
World's Best Steaks
Star Wine List

At Char Fuego Y Brasas inside Baobab Suites in Costa Adeje, chef Babacar Fall works across Basque-style grills, charcoal ovens, and cast-iron pans to produce fire-driven cooking built around dry-aged Spanish beef from Galicia, the Basque Country, and Teruel. The open kitchen places the live fire at the centre of the room. Recognition from Star Wine List signals a wine program serious enough to match the meat-focused format.

Char Fuego Y Brasas restaurant in Tenerife, Spain
About

Fire as the Organizing Principle

Walk into Char Fuego Y Brasas and the kitchen announces itself before the menu does. The open-kitchen format, inside Baobab Suites on Costa Adeje’s Roques del Salmor, positions the live fire as the room’s visual anchor. Charcoal heat, the faint char of rendered fat, the rhythm of a grill station operating in full view: these are the sensory coordinates of a restaurant that has made combustion its explicit argument. That is a more specific commitment than it might sound. Most hotel restaurants in the Canary Islands operate on broad-market menus calibrated for resort-scale turnover. Char Fuego Y Brasas takes the opposite position, concentrating almost entirely on what fire does to premium Spanish beef.

Where Char Fuego Y Brasas Sits in the Spanish Grill Tradition

Spain’s premium grill culture is one of Europe’s most geographically specific. The txuleton tradition of the Basque Country, the suckling animals of Castile, the wood-fired asadors of Aragon: each regional school has its own fuel source, cut preference, and temperature logic. The high end of this tradition has drawn international attention in recent years, partly because it operates at a remove from the tasting-menu format that dominates coverage of Spanish fine dining. Venues like Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria represent the creative and tasting-menu tier of Basque cooking, while serious asadors occupy a parallel track that prizes product and fire management over technique theatrics. Char Fuego Y Brasas draws on the latter tradition. The restaurant sources from Galicia, the Basque Country, and Teruel, the three Spanish regions that consistently produce the country’s most sought-after beef, and it works those cuts through Basque-style grills, charcoal ovens, and cast-iron pans rather than any single orthodox method.

The decision to work across three cooking surfaces rather than commit to one is worth noting. Basque asadors have historically been defined by a single wood-fired grill and a refusal to complicate the process. Using charcoal ovens and cast-iron alongside the open grill suggests a different ambition: extracting distinct results from each cut depending on thickness, fat distribution, and the temperature gradient required. That approach places Char Fuego Y Brasas closer to the technique-conscious end of the Spanish grill spectrum than to the austere asador tradition.

Chef Babacar Fall and the Logic of the Menu

Spanish fire cooking has historically been a regionalist discipline, shaped by geography and inherited practice rather than individual chefs moving across culinary traditions. Chef Babacar Fall represents a different formation. His presence at a Canary Islands hotel restaurant is itself a product of how Spanish hospitality has internationalised over the past two decades, drawing talent from outside the peninsula’s traditional culinary circuits. What the menu reflects is a focus on Spanish primary product, specifically dry-aged beef, interpreted through a range of fire techniques rather than a single regional grammar.

The dry-aging program draws on both Spanish and Japanese methodology, an approach that has become more common at serious European meat restaurants as the Japanese kakuni and long-aging techniques have influenced how chefs across the continent think about texture and umami concentration in beef. Combining Spanish sourcing with Japanese aging logic is not unusual at the upper end of the current European grill market, but it does position Char Fuego Y Brasas in a more internationally aware tier than a conventional Basque asador.

The Steak Tartare “Char”, prepared with Luismi beef and finished with pickled vegetables and marrow emulsion, demonstrates how the kitchen uses its premium product beyond the grill: the raw preparation is a direct test of the beef’s quality, with nowhere for fat marbling or aged depth to hide. Luismi beef carries a specific reputation within Spanish meat culture, associated with extended aging and a fat profile that holds up under high heat without rendering too quickly. The grilled octopus on the menu indicates the kitchen is not locked into a single-protein format, though the operational focus is clearly on red meat.

The Wine Program and What Star Wine List Recognition Means

Char Fuego Y Brasas was published on Star Wine List in November 2025 and carries a White Star designation. Star Wine List’s White Star tier indicates a wine program that the platform’s reviewers consider worth seeking out: not the full Gold or top-tier designation, but a meaningful signal that the list has been assembled with intention rather than defaulting to a hotel-standard selection. For a fire-focused meat restaurant, that matters. The Spanish grill tradition is accompanied by specific wine logic: old-vine Rioja, structured Ribera del Duero, and the more tannic expressions of Bierzo and Priorat tend to dominate serious lists at this kind of restaurant. A wine program strong enough to earn external recognition suggests the pairing side of the meal has been treated with the same deliberateness as the sourcing and cooking.

Spain’s serious wine production extends well beyond the mainland, and Tenerife itself is a wine region of growing credibility, particularly for Listan Negro and age-worthy whites from the volcanic soils of the north. Whether the list engages with Canarian production alongside mainland references would say something meaningful about the restaurant’s commitment to its location. For wine-focused readers exploring the island’s drinking culture, our full Tenerife wineries guide maps that terrain in detail.

Costa Adeje and the Restaurant’s Position on the Island

Costa Adeje sits in the southwest of Tenerife, in the municipality of Adeje, and is the island’s primary hub for upscale resort hotels. The area’s restaurant scene has historically skewed toward international formats and resort-buffet scale, which makes Char Fuego Y Brasas’s product-specific positioning more conspicuous. Hotel restaurants in this part of Tenerife tend to operate as amenities; a restaurant with external wine recognition and a documented sourcing program from named Spanish beef regions is operating on a different logic.

For readers building a full itinerary, our full Tenerife restaurants guide covers the island’s dining range beyond Costa Adeje, and our Tenerife hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide give the wider context. The broader Spanish fine dining conversation runs through venues like El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, DiverXO in Madrid, Mugaritz in Errenteria, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Ricard Camarena in València, Atrio in Cáceres, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María. For international reference points at the premium end of fire and product-focused cooking, Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City show how product-first kitchens operate at a comparable level in a different culinary register.

Planning Your Visit

Char Fuego Y Brasas is located within Baobab Suites at Calle Roques del Salmor 6, Costa Adeje. As a hotel restaurant with a documented tasting-format option (the Char Fire Menu) alongside an à la carte, booking ahead is advisable, particularly for the open-kitchen-facing seats that give the leading sightline to the grill station. Phone and website details are not currently listed in the EP Club database; contacting Baobab Suites directly is the most reliable route to a reservation.

Frequently asked questions

Quick Comparison

These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.