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Spanish Tapas

Google: 4.6 · 4,249 reviews

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CuisineSpanish
Executive ChefSimon Shaw
Price££
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityMedium
Michelin
The Good Food Guide

A Michelin Bib Gourmand holder since at least 2024, El Gato Negro occupies three floors on King Street, running from a street-level tapas bar through an open-kitchen counter to a rooftop terrace above. The cooking leans on Spanish classical technique — Josper-grilled meats, charcuterie boards, and a Iberian-led wine list — at a price point that sits well below Manchester's tasting-menu tier.

El Gato Negro restaurant in Manchester, United Kingdom
About

King Street, Three Floors, and the Case for Spanish Classics Done Properly

Manchester's dining scene has, over the past decade, pulled sharply toward the tasting-menu format. mana, Skof, and Adam Reid at the French occupy the upper bracket, where multi-course progression and wine pairings set the terms. Against that context, El Gato Negro on King Street occupies a different register entirely: Spanish tapas, Josper-grilled meats, and a room designed for sharing plates at a price range that sits firmly in the accessible tier. The gap between the two ends of Manchester's Michelin map is considerable, and El Gato Negro — holding a Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025 — is among the clearest illustrations of what that award is actually for.

Approaching from King Street's pedestrianised stretch, the ground floor opens directly onto pavement tables and a bar whose atmosphere is closer to a Sevilla side-street than a northern English city centre. That street-level energy is deliberate. The real structure of the venue reveals itself as you move upward: the first floor places counter seats directly in front of the open kitchen, a format that has become standard in serious tapas operations and here allows the Josper grill's smoke and char to work as theatre. The leading floor shifts register again, with a roof terrace suited to private events and the kind of group booking that benefits from a degree of separation from the main floor below.

Where the Bib Gourmand Sits in Manchester's Wider Picture

The Michelin Bib Gourmand is not a consolation award. It identifies restaurants offering food of a standard above the city average at a price that does not require financial pre-planning. In Manchester's current configuration, the starred venues , including those mentioned above , sit at ££££. El Gato Negro at ££ represents a meaningful alternative in the same city's Michelin-recognised portfolio. Alongside Another Hand and Bell, it anchors a tier of Manchester dining where the kitchen ambition is not diluted by the pricing structure.

Across the UK, the restaurants that hold this award most reliably tend to be those with a clearly defined cuisine focus rather than those attempting to range widely. The Spanish tapas format suits this criterion well: the canonical dishes are known quantities, quality is legible to the diner, and the margin for meaningful differentiation sits in sourcing and kitchen technique rather than concept. El Gato Negro's consistency across two consecutive Bib Gourmand cycles , 2024 and 2025 , reflects a kitchen that has found its register and held it. For comparable Spanish cooking earning international recognition beyond the UK, ZURRIOLA in Tokyo and Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk show how Spanish technique travels, though neither operates within anything like the same price framework.

The Menu: Classical Spanish With Josper Logic Running Through It

The editorial angle for El Gato Negro's menu is not innovation. It is execution within a well-defined Spanish idiom, and the distinction matters. The Josper grill , a closed charcoal oven used in many of the country's better Spanish kitchens , provides the underlying logic for a significant portion of the menu. Grilled lamb skewers with butter bean houmous and harissa yoghurt carry the char and smoke the equipment is designed to produce, while the chicken thighs with mojo picón demonstrate the degree to which a single condiment, correctly made, can anchor a dish. Hispi cabbage with parsnip purée and Picos Blue vinaigrette follows a more contemporary vegetable idiom but sits coherently within the same broadly Iberian frame.

Charcuterie boards arrive with orange-blossom honey and quince jelly , a pairing with deep roots in Spanish preserving tradition , and represent the kitchen operating in its most direct confident mode. Chargrilled octopus with new potatoes, capers, and shallots pulls toward the Galician preparation that has become one of the most recognisable dishes in the Spanish canon. The wine list is Iberian-led, and a glass of white Rioja alongside the octopus is the kind of pairing that requires no further explanation.

On the rice front: El Gato Negro's menu does not centre a traditional Valencian paella as its primary vehicle, which is an honest editorial position to take. The kitchen's emphasis is on the grill and tapas formats rather than the socarrat-focused rice tradition that strict Valencian orthodoxy demands , where the caramelised, slightly caught base layer is the point of the whole exercise, not an accident. What the menu does demonstrate is fidelity to Spanish classical ingredients and technique across a broad selection of recognisable dishes, which is a different but defensible proposition. The crema catalana as a dessert anchor rather than a crème brûlée variation is a choice that signals kitchen confidence in the canonical: it is a Catalan dish with its own texture and citrus-and-cinnamon profile, and it is not interchangeable with its French counterpart. Basque cheesecake with Turrón sauce, and an orange bomb with white chocolate mousse, orange coulis, and honeycomb complete a dessert section that takes the category seriously.

Three Floors, Counter Seats, and a Roof Terrace: The Physical Logic

The split-level format at El Gato Negro is not incidental to the experience , it determines it. The street-level bar functions as an arrival point and a venue in its own right on warmer evenings, when the pedestrianised King Street allows tables to extend outward. The first-floor counter seats facing the open kitchen are the reservation to pursue if you want proximity to the cooking process: in a tapas operation using a Josper, watching the grill work is part of the transaction. The top-floor terrace carries a different use-case, suited to groups and private events rather than the close-quarters counter experience below.

Chef Simon Shaw's name is associated with multiple Manchester ventures beyond King Street, which places El Gato Negro within a broader local hospitality context rather than as an isolated single-site operation. The King Street location itself, at 52 King Street M2 4LY, sits within the city's commercial core, accessible from both the financial district and the Northern Quarter without significant travel.

Planning Your Visit

El Gato Negro sits at the ££ price point , consistent with sharing plates and a couple of drinks per head at the lower end of the Michelin-recognised bracket in Manchester. The three-floor format means capacity is higher than a single-room tapas bar, but the first-floor counter seats are limited and worth requesting specifically when booking. The roof terrace is described as suited to private events, so groups planning a dedicated hire should factor that in separately. Service is conducted in English, but the kitchen is equipped to accommodate Spanish-speaking guests if preferred , an operational detail that says something about the seriousness with which the restaurant treats its source culture.

For a fuller picture of where El Gato Negro sits within Manchester's hospitality scene, see our full Manchester restaurants guide, our full Manchester hotels guide, our full Manchester bars guide, our full Manchester wineries guide, and our full Manchester experiences guide. For broader UK comparison, the country's highest-profile kitchens , The Fat Duck in Bray, The Ledbury in London, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow , operate at a different tier and price bracket, but together map the awards infrastructure within which El Gato Negro's consecutive Bib Gourmand recognition carries genuine weight.

What do regulars order at El Gato Negro?

Regulars orient toward the charcuterie boards, the grilled lamb skewers with butter bean houmous and harissa yoghurt, and chargrilled octopus with new potatoes, capers, and shallots. Chicken thighs with mojo picón are frequently noted alongside the mojo picón's capacity to carry the dish. On dessert, crema catalana is the consistent recommendation, with Basque cheesecake with Turrón sauce as a close alternative. The Iberian-led wine list, and specifically white Rioja alongside the seafood dishes, is a pairing that recurs in accounts of the meal.

Signature Dishes
salt cod croquetasbeef short ribJosper grill meatscrèma catalana
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At a Glance

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Trendy
  • Cozy
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Group Dining
  • Business Dinner
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Private Dining
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Views
  • Street Scene
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Buzzy and lively atmosphere across three levels with cosy interior, open kitchen counter seats, and warm decor.

Signature Dishes
salt cod croquetasbeef short ribJosper grill meatscrèma catalana