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Contemporary Mediterranean Fusion

Google: 4.5 · 1,209 reviews

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Calahonda, Spain

El Conjuro

CuisineModern Cuisine
Price€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseQuiet
CapacitySmall
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

El Conjuro sits in the quiet coastal village of Calahonda, Granada, where a family-run kitchen built around two brothers sends out contemporary cooking grounded in Costa Tropical seafood, select meats, and occasional Asian inflections. Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, alongside a listing in Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe, positions it well above the coastal tourist circuit. Rice dishes served for two require advance reservation.

El Conjuro restaurant in Calahonda, Spain
About

A Quiet Village, a Serious Kitchen

The Costa Tropical between Motril and Salobreña is not where most visitors to Andalusia go looking for contemporary cooking. Calahonda is a small coastal settlement, calm even in July and August when the broader southern coast fills up. That relative quiet is part of what makes El Conjuro worth locating: the kitchen operates without the volume pressure of a resort-town dining room, and the produce it draws on — from the immediate coastline and the hinterland of Granada province — is the kind that rarely travels far before it reaches a plate.

The physical approach sets expectations accurately. The address on Avenida de los Geranios puts you in a residential pocket of the village, away from the seafront promenade bustle of larger Costa del Sol towns. The room reads as minimalist and family-run because it is both: a space where the cooking is the argument, not the decor.

Where the Ingredients Come From, and Why That Matters

Spain's southern Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts produce seafood of real range , the proximity to the Strait of Gibraltar means cold-water and warm-water species overlap in local catches, and the rocky Costa Tropical shoreline yields ingredients that are genuinely specific to the zone. El Conjuro's menu is built around that coastal produce, supplemented by select meats and a considered use of Asian condiments that appears throughout contemporary Spanish cooking influenced by the generation of chefs who trained alongside or watched the Basque and Catalan avant-garde.

The house classics on record illustrate the sourcing logic directly. Ortiguillas , sea anemones, pulled from local rocks and fried , appear regularly on the menu. They are hyper-local in the most literal sense: a product with almost no distribution beyond the immediate region, requiring both proximity to source and a kitchen confident enough to make them a signature rather than a novelty. The kimuchi tuna preparation places the same coastal fish inside a fermented-condiment tradition imported from East Asia, a move that has become a recognizable pattern in Spanish modern cooking from Quique Dacosta in Dénia down through smaller regional restaurants. Here, the combination reflects a kitchen thinking about contrast and fermentation, not simply following a trend.

The fried egg with cured yolk signals a different kind of sourcing discipline: the kind that treats humble ingredients with the same technical attention given to premium seafood. Curing a yolk requires time, precision, and a reason. In the context of a menu that also runs an offal section, it suggests a kitchen interested in the full range of animal and agricultural products rather than the prestige cuts alone.

The Menu's Architecture

Menu at El Conjuro divides into distinct registers. There are the house classics that appear consistently, the offal section that marks the kitchen's willingness to go beyond crowd-pleasing territory, and the rice dishes for two , a format that demands both planning and commitment, since most of them are only available on reservation. That last detail matters for anyone visiting without a booking: arrive without one and you may find the most substantial dishes on the menu unavailable.

Rice cooked for two, in the Spanish tradition that stretches from Valencian socarrat culture through the Alicantine caldosos, is a format requiring a minimum diner count and a fixed preparation time. It is not adaptable to late requests. El Conjuro's decision to anchor part of its menu to this format is a statement about how the kitchen wants to operate , at a rhythm that produces technically correct food rather than food delivered fast. The rice section alone gives the restaurant a distinct identity among coastal Andalusian kitchens, most of which either ignore the form or treat it as a secondary offering.

The broader contemporary Spanish dining scene that El Conjuro sits within stretches from the three-Michelin-star tier , Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, DiverXO in Madrid, Mugaritz in Errenteria, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte - Oria, Ricard Camarena in València, and Atrio in Cáceres , down through mid-tier contemporary kitchens operating at the €€€ price point in smaller cities and coastal towns. El Conjuro operates in that lower tier geographically and by price, but its Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, combined with listing in Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe 2025, places it in a recognised peer group of serious regional kitchens rather than the anonymous coastal restaurant mass.

Recognition and What It Signals

A Michelin Plate is not a star, but it is a declaration that the inspectors consider the cooking worth recording. In a coastal village of this size, consecutive Plate recognition across 2024 and 2025 is a meaningful credential. The Opinionated About Dining listing , a guide with a specific editorial voice and a reputation for identifying kitchens outside the conventional recognition circuit , adds a second independent data point. Together, they position El Conjuro as a kitchen that has drawn attention from two distinct evaluation frameworks, which is a more reliable signal than a single award from a single source. For context on how Spanish modern cooking is assessed internationally, see our coverage of Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai, which illustrates how Scandinavian and Spanish influence on contemporary technique has spread well beyond its origin cities.

Google reviewers place El Conjuro at 4.5 from 1,190 reviews, a sample large enough to carry statistical weight. At €€€ pricing on the Costa Tropical, that volume of review at that rating suggests a restaurant drawing both committed visitors and a returning local base.

Planning a Visit

Calahonda sits on the Costa Tropical of Granada province, between Motril to the east and Salobreña to the west, roughly 70 kilometres east of Málaga. The village is accessible by car from the A-7 coastal road. Phone and website information are not publicly available in current records, so booking is leading approached by arriving directly or checking current contact details through a search closer to your visit date. If the rice dishes are the reason you are making the trip , and they may well be , contact the restaurant to confirm reservation requirements before you travel. Given that most rice dishes require advance notice, treating the booking as mandatory rather than optional is the practical approach. See our full Calahonda restaurants guide for further context on the local dining scene, and our Calahonda hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for building a broader stay around a meal here.

Signature Dishes
Kimuchi tunaOrtiguillasGrilled octopus
Frequently asked questions

In Context: Similar Options

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

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Minimalist
  • Cozy
  • Intimate
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Minimalist dining room with cozy, home-like atmosphere and natural light in a quiet coastal village setting.

Signature Dishes
Kimuchi tunaOrtiguillasGrilled octopus