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Jaraíz de la Vera, Spain

La Finca - Villa Xarahiz

CuisineRegional Cuisine
Executive ChefXavier Yeung
Price
Michelin

A Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised family restaurant in the heart of Extremadura's La Vera region, La Finca - Villa Xarahiz pairs regional depth with genuine ambition. Siblings Pilar and Víctor run both restaurant and guest rooms, offering à la carte service, daily specials, and tasting menus of seven or twelve courses built around Iberian meats, suckling pig, and the area's most celebrated comfort dishes. Víctor's collection of over 150 rums adds an unexpected dimension to the experience.

La Finca - Villa Xarahiz restaurant in Jaraíz de la Vera, Spain
About

Where La Vera's Larder Meets Considered Technique

The road through La Vera climbs into tobacco-scented air and terraced hillsides before Jaraíz de la Vera announces itself as the region's working heart. This is not a part of Extremadura built for tourism in any theatrical sense. It is agricultural, unhurried, and fiercely local in its food culture. Paprika-smoked pork, slow-roasted kid, dense pork-fat-fried breadcrumbs: the cooking here belongs to a tradition that predates restaurant culture entirely. Against that backdrop, a family operation earning back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025 is less a surprise than a confirmation that the region's ingredients were always capable of more formal expression.

La Finca - Villa Xarahiz sits along the EX-203, the road that traces the southern edge of the Sierra de Gredos. The property includes rooms for guests who want to extend their time in the valley, which is an increasingly sensible proposition given how much the surrounding countryside rewards a second day. For those arriving purely to eat, the restaurant offers a format that covers both spontaneity and structure: a full à la carte with daily recommendations, or a tasting menu at either seven or twelve courses.

The Siblings and the Scene They Inherited

Family-run restaurants in rural Spain often carry the weight of a previous generation's reputation, and the transition between that generation and the next is where most either stagnate or sharpen. At La Finca - Villa Xarahiz, siblings Pilar and Víctor have navigated that transition toward the sharper end. The kitchen's daily recommendations — documented as including black pudding fritters with green chilli foam and aubergine with miso — signal a willingness to work beyond regional orthodoxy without abandoning it. The Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded for value alongside quality, is the institutional signal that this approach is landing.

What the sibling model produces here is a division that works in the restaurant's favour. The front and operations carry the warmth and attentiveness typical of family-run houses, while the kitchen shows enough technical range to justify the tasting menu format. That range, evidenced by the foam and miso treatments alongside the traditional suckling pig and young local goat, sits in the broader movement across Spanish regional dining where a younger generation is applying classical European and Asian technique to deeply local produce without making the produce feel like an afterthought.

Within Extremadura, this positions La Finca - Villa Xarahiz in a narrow but growing tier. Atrio in Cáceres operates at the other end of the price and format spectrum, with three Michelin stars and a wine cellar that has defined Extremaduran fine dining for decades. La Finca occupies the accessible middle ground: serious enough in technique and recognition to warrant a deliberate visit, priced at the single-euro tier that makes it genuinely inclusive. Spain's regional dining culture has long supported this kind of layered offer, from the €€€€ operators like El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, and DiverXO in Madrid down through Bib Gourmand-recognised houses that do the harder work of making the same territory legible to a broader audience. La Finca belongs to that second category with credibility.

What the Tasting Menus Actually Cover

The twelve-course menu is the fuller statement of what the kitchen can do. The seven-course format is the more practical option for a midday meal, particularly if rooms are not booked and the drive back to Plasencia or Cáceres is on the agenda. Both menus draw from the same pool of Extremaduran produce: Iberian meats that carry the weight of the region's dehesa landscape, suckling pig prepared in the tradition of the Castilian meseta, and young local goat that in this part of Spain is a spring staple rather than an exotic novelty.

The dish most cited in the local record is Grandma Fidela's migas, a version of the Extremaduran breadcrumb dish that has reportedly built a following extending well beyond the immediate area. Migas as a category is almost impossible to make interesting on paper , stale bread, fat, garlic, a supporting cast of chorizo or peppers , but its execution separates the perfunctory from the genuinely skilled. Its presence on a tasting menu alongside dishes with foam and miso treatments is a deliberate statement about what the kitchen values: technical range does not require abandoning the dish that defines a grandmother's cooking.

À la carte daily recommendations function as a live reading of what is seasonal and what the kitchen is working on. This format suits the restaurant's location: La Vera's produce changes meaningfully across the year, and a fixed menu would lose the spontaneity that distinguishes restaurants rooted in their territory from those performing regionality from a fixed script.

Víctor's Rum Collection and the After-Dinner Case

Detail that makes La Finca - Villa Xarahiz genuinely distinctive among comparable Extremaduran houses is Víctor's rum collection. Over 150 varieties is a serious commitment for any restaurant, and at this price tier and in this geography it is extraordinary. Rum collecting at this depth tends to be a pursuit of Caribbean and Central American provenance diversity rather than a single-producer focus, and at a rural Spanish restaurant it suggests a personal obsession that has been given institutional expression. For guests staying on-site, this turns the post-dinner hour into something worth planning for. For those driving, it is a reason to book a room.

Planning a Visit

La Finca - Villa Xarahiz is located on the EX-203 road at kilometre 32, outside Jaraíz de la Vera in the province of Cáceres. Jaraíz is the largest town in La Vera and the practical base for exploring the valley, including the Monasterio de Yuste where Charles V spent his final years. The restaurant's Google rating of 4.3 across 766 reviews gives a reliable picture of consistent reception across a broad range of visitors rather than a narrow enthusiast base. Rooms are available for those who want to extend the visit into the following day, which is recommended if the twelve-course menu and Víctor's rum list are both on the agenda. For everything else the region offers, see our full Jaraíz de la Vera restaurants guide, our full Jaraíz de la Vera hotels guide, our full Jaraíz de la Vera bars guide, our full Jaraíz de la Vera wineries guide, and our full Jaraíz de la Vera experiences guide.

For context on how the Bib Gourmand tier functions across different regional European settings, the approach at Fahr in Künten-Sulz and Gannerhof in Innervillgraten offer instructive parallels: family operations in rural areas using regional produce with enough technical seriousness to earn institutional recognition without moving toward the price tier of Spain's headline addresses like Azurmendi, Mugaritz, Aponiente, Cocina Hermanos Torres, Quique Dacosta, or Martin Berasategui.

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