Cuina Sant Pau
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Once the home of three Michelin stars under Carme Ruscalleda, Cuina Sant Pau in Sant Pol de Mar has reinvented itself as a relaxed bistro. Raül Balam Ruscalleda and Brazilian chef Murilo Rodrigues Alves now run a Catalan-inflected menu with Brazilian touches, earning a Michelin Plate in 2025. The €€ price point marks a deliberate shift from haute cuisine formality toward accessible, neighbourhood-scale dining.

From Three Stars to Bistro Tables: Sant Pol de Mar's Most Instructive Restaurant
Walk down Carrer Nou toward the old town of Sant Pol de Mar and the building at number 10 carries more culinary history per square metre than almost anywhere on the Costa del Maresme. The dining room that was once set for the kind of meal you booked six months in advance, pressed your jacket for, and talked about for years afterward now feels deliberately unhurried. Framed photographs and mementoes from a decades-long career line the walls. The tables are closer together. The prices sit at a level where you order another round without internal negotiation. This is a restaurant that has chosen to change, and that choice says something important about where Spanish fine dining is moving.
The Architecture of a Deliberate Reinvention
Spain's multi-starred houses have generally held their formats intact as the country accumulated Michelin recognition through the 2000s and 2010s. Places like El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, and Azurmendi in Larrabetzu continue operating in the register their stars demand, as do newer arrivals like Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona and DiverXO in Madrid. The institutional weight of three Michelin stars tends to lock a kitchen into a particular mode of ambition and formality. What happened at Cuina Sant Pau runs counter to that pattern. A restaurant that held three stars for many years — a distinction shared with only a handful of addresses across the entire Iberian Peninsula, alongside houses like Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, Mugaritz in Errenteria, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, and Ricard Camarena in València — has stepped down from that formal register by choice, not by circumstance. The Michelin Plate awarded in 2025 confirms the guide's recognition of the new format, which prioritises accessibility over ceremony.
The Table Culture Here Now
The editorial angle worth applying to Cuina Sant Pau is not tasting-menu progression but the communal, sharing logic of the Mediterranean table. The current menu operates in the bistro register , contemporary Catalan cooking with measurable Brazilian inflection, unpretentious in plating and portion logic. Dishes arrive in a rhythm closer to mezze service than to the single-bite choreography of haute cuisine. You share. You revisit what you liked. The Brazilian influence brought in by chef Murilo Rodrigues Alves adds tropical sourness and a different approach to acid balance that sits alongside Catalan product-first instincts rather than displacing them. For a coastal town where the sea is always visible from the upper streets, the flavour references move in more directions than the geography alone would suggest. For visitors building a wider sense of the region's table culture, Banys Lluís nearby handles the straight seafood brief while Cuina Sant Pau operates in a more hybrid register. The contrast between the two is a useful lens on how Sant Pol de Mar's small restaurant scene has quietly become more layered than a beach-town reputation might imply.
Reading the Room: What the Mementoes on the Walls Actually Communicate
The photographs and career artefacts displayed throughout the dining room are not decoration in the conventional sense. They function as an honest acknowledgement of what this address was, and a way of grounding the new format in that lineage rather than pretending the history doesn't exist. The format change at Cuina Sant Pau belongs to a broader pattern visible across European fine dining: the deliberate downshift from ceremony to conviviality, from tasting marathon to shorter menus eaten at a livelier pace. That shift is happening most visibly in cities, but Sant Pol de Mar's version of it carries specific weight because of what was here before. Raül Balam Ruscalleda's presence in the kitchen ensures the lineage isn't merely decorative. He grew up inside the cooking culture that built the restaurant's original reputation and now channels it through a format designed for more frequent visits at a lower emotional and financial threshold. The €€ pricing structure is a policy decision as much as a positioning one: the room should fill on a Thursday, not just on milestone occasions.
Mediterranean Context Beyond Catalonia
Catalan-Mediterranean cooking as a category spans a geography wide enough to include significant variation. Comparing the bistro register at Cuina Sant Pau with Mediterranean-adjacent fine dining elsewhere in Europe , say La Brezza in Ascona or Arnaud Donckele & Maxime Frédéric at Louis Vuitton in Saint-Tropez , clarifies how differently kitchens can interpret the same geographic inheritance. The Cuina Sant Pau approach privileges texture and informality over ceremony; the kitchen's relationship with the Costa del Maresme's produce base remains direct but the presentation language has loosened considerably. This is what makes the current format editorially interesting rather than merely easier: it's a genuine recalibration of what Mediterranean sharing culture means at a post-starred address, not a compromise.
Planning Your Visit
Cuina Sant Pau sits at Carrer Nou, 10 in Sant Pol de Mar, a coastal town roughly 45 kilometres north of Barcelona along the Maresme coast, reachable by regional train from Passeig de Gràcia in under an hour. The €€ price range makes it a realistic lunch or dinner option without the booking-window anxiety that attached to the previous format. Google review data from 869 submissions gives the restaurant a 4.6 rating, which at that volume carries more weight than a smaller sample would. Given the building's profile and the interest that typically follows a format change of this visibility, advance booking is advisable, particularly on weekends. For anyone structuring a longer stay on the coast, the broader resources at our full Sant Pol de Mar restaurants guide, our Sant Pol de Mar hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide provide the surrounding context for building a complete itinerary around the area's character rather than a single address.
FAQ
- What's the signature dish at Cuina Sant Pau?
- The database record for Cuina Sant Pau does not confirm individual signature dishes under the current bistro format. What the record does confirm is a contemporary Catalan-influenced menu with Brazilian touches, operated by Raül Balam Ruscalleda and Murilo Rodrigues Alves, under the Michelin Plate recognition awarded in 2025. Given the sharing-table format now in place, the more useful framing is the overall menu rhythm rather than a single dish: the kitchen divides the Catalan product instinct from the original restaurant's heritage against Brazilian acid and tropical flavour references brought by Alves, creating a menu intended to be ordered across in multiple plates rather than sequenced through a single tasting arc. For verified dish-level detail, checking the restaurant's current menu directly is recommended before visiting.
Price Lens
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuina Sant Pau | €€ | This iconic restaurant, which held three Michelin stars for many years, has adop… | This venue |
| Aponiente | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Seafood, Creative, €€€€ |
| Arzak | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Modern Basque, Creative, €€€€ |
| DiverXO | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Asian, Creative, €€€€ |
| El Celler de Can Roca | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive Spanish, Creative, €€€€ |
| Quique Dacosta | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
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