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Mudrá on Calle de Recoletos brings Matthew Kenny's plant-based restaurant concept to Madrid, marking the brand's first European franchise location. The à la carte menu runs from artichoke tiraditos to sushi rolls, all built on minimally processed vegetables and fruit. Holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, and rated 4 radishes by We're Smart Green Guide, it occupies a mid-price tier (€€) inside one of the capital's most central addresses.
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- Address
- Mudrá Plant Based Food, Calle de Recoletos, 13, 28001 Madrid, Spain
- Phone
- +34 911 90 75 19
- Website
- mudramadrid.com

Plant-Based Dining in Madrid's Recoletos Quarter
Mudrá is a vegetarian restaurant on Calle de Recoletos in Madrid, with a €€€€ price tier and a Modern Plant-Based Fusion menu. This is a neighbourhood of marble facades, diplomatic offices, and the kind of all-day cafe terraces where waiters still wear waistcoats. Mudrá sits inside that environment as a quiet departure: light-filled, pared back in palette, and organised around a philosophy of minimal processing rather than spectacle.
The name comes from the Sanskrit term for gesture or pose, a reference to the hand and body positions used in yoga practice. That framing signals the register the room occupies: deliberate, considered, and oriented toward a different kind of attention than the theatrical tasting menus that dominate Madrid's upper tier. Where restaurants like DiverXO or DSTAgE deploy drama as a primary tool, Mudrá works through restraint.
The Sensory Register: What the Room Communicates
Plant-based restaurants in European capitals have tended to split into two camps: the ascetic and the theatrical. The ascetic version leans into raw materials and white walls, communicating virtue through deliberate spareness. The theatrical version compensates for the absence of meat with elaborate technique and presentation designed to signal effort. Mudrá's approach, informed by the Matthew Kenny culinary framework, sits closer to the theatrical end without tipping into excess. Colour is the primary sensory signal: the vegetable-forward menu generates plates that read visually before they register on the palate.
The dining room on Recoletos reflects the product orientation. Natural materials, considered lighting, and a spatial logic that does not feel clinical. For a street defined by grand scale, the interior communicates at a more intimate frequency.
Where Mudrá Sits in Madrid's Dining Structure
Madrid's restaurant scene in the upper tiers is heavily meat-centred. The city's most decorated addresses, from Coque to Deessa, work within a framework where protein is the structural anchor of a meal. The vegetable-forward counter-current exists in Madrid, most visibly at El Invernadero, Rodrigo de la Calle's greenhouse-concept restaurant, which has pushed vegetable cookery into serious critical territory. Mudrá operates in a different register from El Invernadero: where the latter pursues fine-dining credentials and tasting menu depth, Mudrá works with an à la carte format and a mid-range price point (€€) that puts it in reach of a broader dining public.
That positioning matters for understanding what Mudrá actually is. This is not a special-occasion destination in the way that Madrid's Michelin three-star tier functions. It is closer to a neighbourhood-scale argument about what a vegetable-centred menu can achieve at a price point that does not require a particular kind of occasion to justify. In a city where the dominant culinary narrative runs through Aponiente, Arzak, El Celler de Can Roca, Quique Dacosta, Azurmendi, and Disfrutar, the mid-price plant-based option represents a structural gap that Mudrá is occupying deliberately.
The Menu: Technique at the Service of Ingredients
The à la carte at Mudrá draws on a plant-based food philosophy that prioritises minimal processing. The stated aim is to retain the nutritional integrity and sensory character of ingredients rather than transform them beyond recognition. This produces a menu architecture that spans cultural references: artichoke tiraditos borrow the Peruvian acid-cure technique and apply it to a vegetable substrate; Japanese ceviche and sushi rolls extend the same cross-cultural logic into the Japanese pantry.
This kind of pan-cultural plant-based cooking has precedents at the premium end of the global vegetarian category. Fu He Hui in Shanghai applies Chinese temple cuisine logic to high-end vegetarian tasting menus. Lamdre in Beijing works within a similarly disciplined vegetable-forward framework. Mudrá's point of difference is the à la carte accessibility and the European context: this is the Matthew Kenny network's first franchise position on the continent, which gives it a specific significance as a proof-of-concept for whether this style of dining translates into Madrid's eating culture.
We're Smart Green Guide awarded Mudrá four radishes out of a possible five. The Michelin Plate in 2024 and 2025 confirms the cooking's technical standing.
The European Franchise Context
Franchise models in fine and premium dining carry a specific credibility risk: the original concept's coherence can degrade across locations when the founding logic is reduced to a brand manual. The Madrid outpost's We're Smart recognition and consecutive Michelin Plates suggest that the quality signal has survived the translation. Whether the franchise model scales further into Europe will depend on whether cities with stronger vegetable-forward dining cultures, such as London or Amsterdam, represent more natural audiences than Madrid. For now, Recoletos is the only address.
Know Before You Go
- Address: Calle de Recoletos, 13, 28001 Madrid, Spain
- Price range: €€ (mid-range)
- Cuisine: 100% vegetarian, plant-based à la carte
- Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025; We're Smart Green Guide, 4 radishes
- Google rating: 4.5 from 1,312 reviews
- Booking: Reservations are essential
- Nearest context: Central Madrid, Recoletos corridor between Paseo del Prado and Salamanca district
Explore Further in Madrid
Mudrá occupies a specific lane within a city that rewards lateral exploration. For the broader picture of where Madrid's restaurants, bars, hotels, and experiences sit, see our full Madrid restaurants guide, our full Madrid hotels guide, our full Madrid bars guide, our full Madrid wineries guide, and our full Madrid experiences guide.
City Peers
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mudrá | Modern Plant-Based Fusion | $$$$ | Recoletos |
| La Morena | Cádiz-Japanese-Latin American Fusion | $$$ | Nueva Espana |
| Contrastes by Diego Ferreira | Modern Global Fusion | $$$$ | Goya |
| Bao Li | Modern Cantonese | $$$$ | Cortes |
| Per Sé Bistró | Modern Fusion Bistro | $$$$ | Chueca |
| Doppelgänger Bar | Creative Asian-Spanish Fusion | $$$ | Lavapies |
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