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Adeje, Spain

El Rincón de Juan Carlos

CuisineCreative
Executive ChefJuan Carlos Padrón León
LocationAdeje, Spain
La Liste
Opinionated About Dining
Michelin

Two-Michelin-starred El Rincón de Juan Carlos elevates traditional Canarian cuisine to extraordinary heights on the fifth floor of Royal Hideaway Corales Beach, where the Padrón brothers craft an extensive tasting menu showcasing signature dishes like morcilla "turrón" and Carabinero prawn "empanadilla" against breathtaking Atlantic vistas.

El Rincón de Juan Carlos restaurant in Adeje, Spain
About

Fifth-Floor Perspective on the Canary Islands

From the fifth floor of the Royal Hideaway Corales Beach hotel in Adeje, the Atlantic spreads out in a way that makes the distance from mainland Spain feel less like geography and more like intent. The dining room at El Rincón de Juan Carlos occupies that position deliberately: refined above the resort corridor below, with ocean views that frame the meal before a single dish arrives. The approach up through the hotel, past the lower-floor restaurants including Il Bocconcino by Royal Hideaway, signals that this is a different register entirely.

Canarian Cooking as a Serious Subject

The Canary Islands have long occupied an awkward position in European food culture. Geographically African, politically Spanish, historically shaped by Atlantic trade routes, the archipelago developed a cuisine that doesn't map neatly onto the mainland tradition. Ingredients like mojo, gofio, local cephalopods, and the volcanic-soil produce of the islands reflect a foodway that is genuinely distinct, yet for decades was overshadowed by the region's dominance as a mass-tourism destination. The serious treatment of Canarian culinary identity at the level of two Michelin stars changes that framing considerably.

El Rincón de Juan Carlos positions itself within that reassessment. The kitchen's focus on traditional Canary Island recipes, approached from a creative perspective, is not a regional novelty act — it is a coherent argument that the archipelago's food culture deserves the same close reading as Basque or Catalan traditions. Spain's creative fine dining circuit, which includes restaurants like El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, and Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, has consistently leaned on deep regional roots as the engine of creative output. El Rincón de Juan Carlos operates from the same premise, with the Canaries as its specific archive.

The Padrón Brothers and a Family Food Culture

Spain has a strong tradition of familial kitchens extending into high-end dining. Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona is one prominent example of a sibling creative partnership that has attracted sustained Michelin recognition. El Rincón de Juan Carlos belongs to that same cohort. Juan Carlos and Jonathan Padrón, the sons of chefs and nephews of fishermen, represent a family relationship to ingredients that is biographical rather than theoretical. The seafood and Canarian produce that appear on the menu come with a generational context: these are not imported references but materials that shaped the cooks before they held a professional knife.

The sommelier roles, fulfilled by both brothers' wives, reinforce the family enterprise. The wine program operates in parallel with multiple pairing options attached to the single tasting menu, which means the beverage approach receives the same structural attention as the food. At this price tier, that integration is expected; the family model ensures consistency in execution across both tracks.

What the Tasting Menu Covers

A single, extensive tasting menu is the only format on offer. This is a common structural decision among two-star kitchens in Spain and France — restaurants like DiverXO in Madrid and Arpège in Paris similarly control the experience through a fixed progression. The absence of an à la carte option is a statement about creative coherence: the kitchen is telling a specific story, and individual ordering would fragment it.

La Liste's assessors, who awarded 90 points in both 2025 and 2026, noted dishes that illustrate the kitchen's range. An onion soup and "flan roto" combination, a daikon and Carabinero prawn empanadilla, and a caracola of celery with celery toffee and fried pine nuts show a menu that is willing to work with humble Canarian staples and reframe them through technical precision. The "turrón" of Canary Island morcilla with almond praline, identified as a signature preparation, takes a product associated with popular Canarian tradition and places it in a refined dessert context. The "sweet tree" served alongside petits fours suggests a sense of visual staging at the close of the meal , a decision about theatre that is consistent with how contemporary Spanish fine dining has approached the final act since the late Ferran Adrià era.

The Carabinero prawn in the empanadilla is worth noting as an ingredient signal. Carabineros are large, intensely flavoured red prawns associated with premium Spanish seafood cooking, appearing also in the tasting menus of Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María. Their presence here, paired with daikon in a form borrowed from Asian pastry tradition, reflects the kitchen's willingness to work with ingredients of high inherent quality and apply hybrid technique without losing sight of the Canarian brief.

Where El Rincón Sits in Adeje's Restaurant Scene

Adeje has accumulated a concentration of Michelin-starred restaurants that is disproportionate to its size, making it one of the more surprising fine dining postcodes in Europe. Within that local peer set, El Rincón de Juan Carlos sits at the leading of the formal hierarchy. Nub and La Cúpula operate at a comparable price tier (€€€€), while Donaire and San-Hô sit in the €€€ bracket with a single star each. The two-star distinction is currently singular in Adeje, which means guests seeking the highest formal recognition in the area have one address.

The hotel context matters for the competitive reading. Fine dining inside resort properties has historically struggled to sustain creative credibility, partly because the captive audience dynamic can reduce urgency. The sustained La Liste score , 90 points in consecutive years , and the two Michelin stars held across 2024 and 2025 suggest the kitchen has avoided that drift. The ranking at number 245 in Opinionated About Dining's Europe list for 2025 places it in a European context that extends well beyond the island, where competition at that level includes houses like Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen. That is meaningful external validation for a restaurant located in a resort hotel on an island better known for package holidays than culinary ambition.

Planning a Visit

El Rincón de Juan Carlos operates within the Royal Hideaway Corales Beach hotel in Adeje, at Avenida de la Virgen de Guadalupe 21, Santa Cruz de Tenerife. The restaurant occupies the fifth floor, with ocean views that are most effective during evening service. Given the single tasting menu format and the two-star standing, advance reservations are advisable; the kitchen works to a fixed format that requires preparation time, and the limited dining capacity typical of this type of room means availability can close weeks ahead for peak travel periods. Multiple wine pairing options accompany the menu, and the sommelier program is integral to the experience rather than optional. For a broader read of what the area offers, our full Adeje restaurants guide, our full Adeje hotels guide, our full Adeje bars guide, our full Adeje wineries guide, and our full Adeje experiences guide cover the destination in full.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I order at El Rincón de Juan Carlos?

There is no ordering decision to make: a single extensive tasting menu is the only format available. La Liste's assessors , who have rated the restaurant at 90 points across consecutive years , singled out the Canary Island morcilla turrón with almond praline as a signature preparation, alongside the Carabinero prawn empanadilla and the celery caracola. The kitchen's creative approach to traditional Canarian recipes, operating under two Michelin stars, means the menu is the argument. The multiple wine pairing options provided by the in-house sommelier program are worth committing to rather than bypassing.

What's the vibe at El Rincón de Juan Carlos?

Adeje's fine dining circuit is formal by Spanish resort standards, and El Rincón de Juan Carlos sits at the upper end of that register. The fifth-floor location in the Royal Hideaway Corales Beach hotel, the ocean views, the two Michelin stars, the €€€€ price point, and the exclusive tasting menu format produce an atmosphere that is measured and attentive rather than lively or casual. The family-run service model, with sommeliers who are personally connected to the kitchen, adds a particular consistency. Guests looking for something less structured in Adeje might consider San-Hô or Donaire, both of which operate at €€€ with a single star.

Is El Rincón de Juan Carlos a family-friendly restaurant?

At the €€€€ price tier in Adeje with a single mandatory tasting menu, it is not a practical choice for young children.

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