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Modern Spanish Creative Fine Dining
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Permanently Closed
Salinas, Spain

Éleonore

CuisineCreative
Price€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Michelin

Éleonore holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and a 4.9 Google rating from 226 reviews, positioning it among the more considered creative tables in the Valencian Community. The kitchen works within a creative format that reflects the coastal and agricultural character of the Salinas area. For a small town, it punches well above its weight in the regional dining conversation.

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Address
Pablo Laloux, 13, Bajo Norte, 33405, Salinas (Asturias), Spain
Phone
+34 672 42 70 70
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Éleonore restaurant in Salinas, Spain
About

Salinas sits in the interior of Alicante province, a small municipality whose identity is shaped by salt flats, rice fields, and a coastal agricultural tradition that predates the tourism economy entirely. Arriving at Éleonore, you are already inside that context: the physical setting is not the abstracted luxury of a resort dining room but something more grounded in where the food actually comes from. That connection between place and plate is, in the Valencian Community, increasingly the marker that separates restaurants worth the detour from those simply occupying a scenic address.

Creative Cooking in a Region That Takes Its Ingredients Seriously

The Valencian Community has a credible claim to being one of the most ingredient-driven regions in Spain. The rice paddies of the Albufera, the salt pans of the southern coast, the citrus groves and vegetable gardens of the huerta: these are not marketing abstractions but working agricultural systems that supply kitchens across the region. At the serious end of the local dining scene, the question of sourcing is almost philosophical. Does the kitchen treat proximity as a genuine discipline, or as decoration on the menu text?

Éleonore operates under a creative format, which in this context signals a willingness to interpret rather than simply reproduce. Across Spain, creative cuisine has become the lingua franca of ambitious restaurants, from DiverXO in Madrid to El Celler de Can Roca in Girona. But at the three- and four-star level those kitchens operate with international supply chains and brigade structures that have little to do with the agricultural specificity of a place like Salinas. A creative kitchen at the €€€ price point in a small Alicante municipality is solving a different problem: how to work with what the land and sea nearby actually produce, and how to find the culinary language for it.

The Michelin Plate awarded in 2024 is the appropriate trust signal here. It does not claim the kind of technical virtuosity that draws diners to Mugaritz in Errenteria or Azurmendi in Larrabetzu. What it does indicate is that Michelin's inspectors found cooking worth acknowledging: consistent kitchen standards and a sense of direction. That is a meaningful signal for a restaurant in Salinas.

The Sourcing Argument in Coastal Inland Alicante

The area around Salinas is defined by salt production and the agricultural terraces that climb the surrounding hills. Historically, salt from this zone supplied kitchens and curing operations across southeastern Spain, and the local produce culture, including almonds, olive oil, and the particular vegetables of the Alicante interior, has always been shaped by that proximity to a serious ingredient economy. Restaurants in the Valencian Community that commit to regional sourcing are not inventing a narrative: they are re-engaging with supply relationships that were severed, in many cases, by the mid-century shift to industrialised food systems.

For a creative kitchen, this matters because ingredient quality is the constraint that forces invention. Quique Dacosta in Dénia, operating further up the Alicante coast, has built a three-Michelin-star programme explicitly around the marine and agricultural vocabulary of the Costa Blanca. That approach, working outward from the specificity of place rather than importing a global creative vocabulary and applying it to local produce, has become the signature move of the more rigorous end of Valencian fine dining. Éleonore, operating at a different scale and a more accessible price point, sits within the same regional conversation even if it is not playing at the same competitive tier.

The comparison is instructive rather than diminishing. Ricard Camarena in València or Arzak in San Sebastián. There is a distinct role for restaurants that bring genuine culinary intention to communities that are not on the standard fine-dining circuit.

Where Éleonore Sits in the Salinas Dining Scene

Salinas is not a large town, and its restaurant offer reflects that. The dining culture here is shaped by proximity to agricultural production rather than by visitor volumes. For context on how the local scene compares across categories, our full Salinas restaurants guide maps the broader picture. The farm-to-table tradition in this part of Alicante has a notable expression at Real Balneario, where the sourcing argument is made through a different format and menu register.

Éleonore sits at the more considered end of local options. The €€€ pricing places it above casual local dining but well below the four-star price tier of Spain's leading creative restaurants. For visitors also exploring the broader region, Salinas offers a useful base for further exploration.

Planning a Visit

Booking ahead is advisable. Salinas is accessible by road from Alicante, and a visit pairs logically with broader exploration of the southern Valencian Community's agricultural and coastal zones, including the salt flat landscapes that give the town its name and its culinary character.

Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and Arpège in Paris represent the upper tier of the same creative cuisine conversation, with sourcing philosophies that have influenced kitchens across Europe including in Spain.

Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, each of which defines a different strand of what creative cooking means in a regional Spanish context.

Signature Dishes
Oricio and soyCaviar with asparagusLemon dessertStrawberry dessert
Frequently asked questions

How It Stacks Up

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Intimate
  • Scenic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Celebration
Experience
  • Waterfront
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Waterfront
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Serene and elegant with sea views, carefully selected music, warm welcoming atmosphere, and open kitchen.

Signature Dishes
Oricio and soyCaviar with asparagusLemon dessertStrawberry dessert