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Modern Spanish Tasting With Rice Specialties

Google: 4.6 · 2,606 reviews

← Collection
CuisineCatalan, Contemporary
Executive ChefMiquel Prado
Price
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityIntimate
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

A Michelin Bib Gourmand holder on a quiet Eixample street, Cruix runs two tasting menus — an 11-course Classic and a 13-course Grand — built around Catalan technique and precision rice cookery. The exposed-brick room is deliberately casual, the service warm, and the price point among the most accessible for structured tasting-menu dining in Barcelona.

Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

Cruix restaurant in Barcelona, Spain
About

A Tasting Menu Built on Catalan Foundations

Barcelona's tasting-menu scene divides sharply by price tier. At one end sit the three-star rooms — Cocina Hermanos Torres, Disfrutar, and Lasarte — where a single sitting can clear €250 per person before wine. At the other sits a smaller, more interesting cohort: restaurants that commit to the full tasting-menu format , the progression, the pacing, the narrative built across ten-plus courses , without pricing themselves into special-occasion-only territory. Cruix, on Carrer d'Entença in Eixample, operates squarely in that second group. The single price-range marker is €, and the Michelin Bib Gourmand it earned in 2024 is the guide's formal signal that quality and value are in deliberate alignment here.

That recognition carries editorial weight. The Bib Gourmand designation is awarded to restaurants offering cooking inspectors consider worth a detour at a price point below the starred tiers , it signals a specific kind of discipline: the kitchen is doing something coherent and considered, not just feeding people cheaply. Cruix has since accumulated further recognition from Opinionated About Dining, appearing on the OAD Casual Europe list and ranking at position 676 in the 2025 edition, following an earlier 2023 recommended listing. Across Barcelona's crowded casual-dining field, that accumulation of independent recognition from two separate evaluation systems is a meaningful data point.

How the Menu Is Structured

The menu architecture at Cruix is direct: two fixed tasting formats, no à la carte. The Classic Cruix runs 11 courses; the Grand Cruix extends to 13. The difference matters less in terms of sheer volume than in the room the extra courses create for the kitchen to develop its argument , more space to introduce variations on a theme or to give secondary ingredients their own moment before the central rice dishes arrive.

Those rice preparations are, by all available evidence, the structural core of the menu. Paella at this level is distinct from the beachfront standard: the socarrat, the caramelised crust that forms at the base of the pan when rice is cooked with controlled heat, is the technical proof of execution. Getting it right requires timing, temperature management, and confidence , rush it and the base burns; pull the pan too early and you lose the texture entirely. The fact that Cruix makes the socarrat a stated point of emphasis rather than a casual aside tells you something about where the kitchen locates its identity.

Beyond the rice, the menu incorporates savoury courses that work through contrast. The cod churro , fish inside a fried, crispy exterior , applies a street-food format to a high-quality central ingredient, a move that requires the sourcing to justify the presentation. A dessert listed as "sad day on the beach" closes the sequence with a degree of irreverence that signals the kitchen's tone: technically serious, but not austere. This kind of naming convention, odd enough to be memorable but not so whimsical as to undermine credibility, is common in contemporary Catalan cooking, where humour has long been a legitimate part of the vocabulary , a tradition that runs from elBulli through the current generation of Barcelona's creative kitchens at places like Enigma and ABaC.

The Room and the Register

The physical environment at Cruix is consistent with its positioning. Exposed brick walls, an informal atmosphere, and service described by Michelin inspectors in notably human terms , friendly without qualification , set a register that is the opposite of the white-tablecloth formality that still marks some of Barcelona's multi-starred dining rooms. That gap between the format (a 13-course tasting menu) and the setting (a casual room on a residential Eixample street) is a deliberate editorial choice by the kitchen. It signals that the food is the argument, not the ceremony around it.

This approach has precedents in cities across Spain and beyond. Some of the most technically demanding kitchens in the country operate in rooms that would read as unremarkable on first encounter , a pattern visible at restaurants like El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, which despite its three-star status has always maintained a warmth and ease unusual at that level. The deliberate compression of formality is, at this point, a recognisable strand in Spanish dining culture rather than an anomaly.

When the weather allows, a terrace is available, and it is worth requesting at booking. The street-level outdoor experience in Eixample, with its grid of wide pavements and moderate traffic, shifts the meal into a different key , less contained, more connected to the neighbourhood's rhythm.

Where Cruix Sits in the Barcelona Scene

For readers mapping Barcelona's dining options across a stay, Cruix occupies a specific gap. The city's internationally followed fine-dining tier , the kitchens that draw visitors from other countries specifically to eat at them, from Disfrutar to Cocina Hermanos Torres , operates at price points and booking lead times that require advance planning months out. Cruix is not competing with that group. Its peer set is the cohort of Bib Gourmand and lower-starred restaurants in Eixample and the broader city where the kitchen's ambitions exceed the price point , a category that Barcelona supports unusually well relative to comparable European cities.

Spain's broader restaurant culture, traceable through kitchens from Arzak in San Sebastián to Azurmendi in Larrabetzu to Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, has long sustained a parallel track of serious regional cooking that does not require three-star pricing to justify the commitment. Cruix is the Barcelona expression of that track: a kitchen under chef Miquel Prado that has earned recognition from two independent critical systems while keeping its price marker at the accessible end of the structured tasting-menu format.

For international context, comparable value propositions in other cities , kitchens like Atomix in New York or Le Bernardin in New York City , operate at significantly higher price floors, which underlines how specifically Spanish (and Catalan) the Cruix value equation is. The same tasting-menu discipline, applied in New York or at the three-star level elsewhere in Europe, would demand multiples of the current tariff.

Planning Your Visit

Cruix operates Tuesday through Friday evenings from 7 to 10:30 pm, adds a Saturday lunch service from 12:30 to 3:30 pm alongside the evening sitting, and closes Sunday and Monday. The Saturday lunch is a practical option for visitors whose evening schedules are already committed, and the afternoon light on the terrace, if available, gives that sitting a different atmosphere from the dinner service. Given the Bib Gourmand profile and the Google rating of 4.6 across more than 2,500 reviews, booking ahead is the sensible approach , this is not a walk-in proposition on weekends.

For more on where Cruix sits within the city's broader dining options, see our full Barcelona restaurants guide. Further context on where to stay is in our Barcelona hotels guide, and for drinking before or after, our Barcelona bars guide covers the field. For those extending beyond the city, our Barcelona wineries guide and Barcelona experiences guide map further options.

Signature Dishes
cod_churropaellasad_day_on_the_beach
Frequently asked questions

Awards and Standing

A quick context table based on similar venues in our dataset.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Intimate
  • Modern
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Group Dining
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Terrace
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Informal and cozy with exposed brick walls, warm atmosphere, and friendly service that makes diners feel at home.

Signature Dishes
cod_churropaellasad_day_on_the_beach