Skip to Main Content

UpcomingDrink over $25,000 of Burgundy at La Paulée New York

← Collection
CuisineTraditional Cuisine
LocationBilbao, Spain
Michelin

Inside Bilbao's Tayko hotel, Ola Martín Berasategui holds a Michelin star and occupies a dining room of exposed brick and concrete beams in the city's historic quarter. Two tasting menus channel the cooking of Martín Berasategui through head chef Raúl Cabrera, with Basque seafood preparations at the centre. Open for lunch Thursday through Sunday and dinner Thursday through Saturday, it sits at the formal end of Bilbao's restaurant spectrum.

Ola Martín Berasategui restaurant in Bilbao, Spain
About

A Dining Room That Earns Its Address

The Casco Viejo side of the Nervión has a particular quality on a Thursday lunchtime: the river catches the light between the old stone buildings, and the foot traffic outside the Tayko hotel has a purposeful slowness that belongs to cities confident in their food culture. Step inside Ola Martín Berasategui and the architecture does the first part of the work. The room is set within what was the first building in Bilbao's historic quarter to be constructed using exposed brickwork and concrete beams, and the restaurant makes no attempt to conceal either. Those raw materials, usually associated with industrial intervention, here create something closer to a serious working kitchen translated into a dining space — which, given the cooking that arrives from it, turns out to be an accurate description.

Bilbao's fine dining offer has consolidated around a cluster of Michelin-recognised addresses in the last decade, each occupying a distinct register. Nerua Guggenheim operates inside a Frank Gehry building and leans into progressive minimalism. Mina and Islares represent the creative end of the four-euro-sign bracket. Ola sits in a different position: it is the outpost of the Martín Berasategui network, the most decorated Spanish chef alive by total Michelin star count, and its role is to deliver that tradition faithfully rather than extend it experimentally. That is not a limitation. It is a curatorial choice, and in a city already producing its own wave of culinary ambition, the presence of a classically grounded Basque counter at this level adds range rather than redundancy.

The Logic of the Tasting Menu Format

Meal pacing at this address follows the formal Spanish lunch model, where time is structural rather than incidental. The kitchen offers two tasting menus: the 'Ola' menu and 'Lo mejor de la cocina de Martín Berasategui' ('The Leading of Martín Berasategui's Cuisine'). The second is the more instructive choice for anyone approaching this address for the first time, functioning as an edited retrospective of a cooking canon that has accumulated across several decades and multiple restaurants in San Sebastián, Barcelona, and beyond. For context, Arzak in San Sebastián represents the kind of generational cooking authority that Basque cuisine exports internationally; Berasategui's body of work belongs to the same tier, and Ola is where Bilbao accesses it.

The ritual of the longer menu demands a particular kind of commitment. Service is structured across the lunch window (1 PM to 3 PM, Thursday through Sunday) and dinner (8:30 PM to 10 PM, Thursday through Saturday). Monday and Tuesday are closed, Wednesday lunch only. The compressed service hours concentrate the kitchen's focus, and the pacing between courses at this category of restaurant — €€€€ pricing aligns it with Mina and Islares rather than the mid-market seafood houses , is calibrated to allow each plate to land as a discrete moment rather than part of a continuous flow.

Basque Seafood at the Centre

The Basque Country's relationship with seafood is older and more technical than almost any other coastal European tradition. Kokotxas , the gelatinous chin fillets of hake or cod, prepared in their own collagen until they form a trembling pil-pil sauce , are among the most demanding preparations in the regional canon. Their presence here, alongside cod with a red prawn Vizcaína sauce, places the kitchen squarely within that tradition rather than commenting on it from a distance. The Vizcaína sauce, built from dried choricero peppers, is one of the defining flavour signatures of inland Basque cooking applied to coastal ingredients; finding both on the same plate is a statement about the coherence of the region's pantry.

For comparison, Zarate handles Basque seafood at a slightly lower price point and with less formal structure. La Despensa del Etxanobe operates in a more accessible register. Ola's positioning in the €€€€ bracket is justified by the formality of the tasting format and the depth of the culinary lineage behind it, not simply by ingredient cost. Internationally, the seafood-forward traditional approach has parallels at Auga in Gijón and, at a very different scale, at Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María.

The Disciple Model in Spanish Fine Dining

Spain's starred restaurant system has a particular mechanism that does not have a direct equivalent in French or Japanese fine dining: the disciple network. A chef with sufficient standing trains a cohort, and selected graduates carry the house style into satellite kitchens, sometimes in other cities. The output is not a franchise , the cooking requires genuine skill and fidelity , but it does mean that a Michelin-starred room can deliver a named chef's vision without that chef being present every service. Azurmendi in Larrabetzu represents another Basque iteration of serious, place-rooted cooking with its own identity; Ola functions differently, as a deliberate transmission of an existing vocabulary rather than the development of a new one.

Head chef Raúl Cabrera, known in the kitchen as Pintxo, trained within the Berasategui system and runs Ola as an extension of that practice. The Google rating of 4.5 across 794 reviews, for a restaurant in this category and at this price point, is a meaningful signal: fine dining at €€€€ in Spain attracts critical guests who arrive with calibrated expectations. A sustained 4.5 suggests the execution holds across service rather than peaking occasionally. For comparison, the broader Bilbao starred scene at venues like Al Margen and Lasai occupies adjacent positions in the city's formal dining tier, each with distinct personalities. San Mamés Jatetxea and Las Lías Bilbao serve the city's broader formal dining market at various registers.

Planning a Meal Here

The Tayko hotel address on Erribera Kalea places the restaurant in the Ibaiondo district at the edge of the old town, alongside the Nervión. For guests staying elsewhere in the city, the location is accessible on foot from the Casco Viejo metro station. Reservations should be made in advance, particularly for Saturday lunch and Friday dinner, which are the busiest service windows in the weekly schedule. The Wednesday lunch service, which runs as the only midweek opening, is often overlooked and may offer more flexibility for short-stay visitors.

Guests arriving for a tasting menu at this price tier should allocate two to two and a half hours for the meal. The dinner service beginning at 8:30 PM aligns with standard Spanish fine dining timing, later than most northern European visitors expect but paced to allow an aperitivo hour beforehand. The broader Bilbao eating scene is well documented in our full Bilbao restaurants guide. For accommodation in or near the Tayko or elsewhere in the city, our full Bilbao hotels guide covers the relevant options. The bar and pintxos circuit in the Casco Viejo is mapped in our full Bilbao bars guide, and our full Bilbao wineries guide and our full Bilbao experiences guide round out the city's broader offer for multi-day visitors.

Within the Spanish starred dining network, Ola sits below the headline properties of the Berasategui group in terms of scale and star count, but it is the most accessible point of entry into that cooking for a Bilbao visit. Visitors already planning to cover the wider circuit of Spanish fine dining, including DiverXO in Madrid, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, or Quique Dacosta in Dénia, will find Ola represents a coherent and regionally grounded counterpoint. For those focused on traditional Basque preparations handled with formal precision, Auberge Grand'Maison in Mûr-de-Bretagne offers an interesting comparative reference across the border for the same culinary seriousness applied to a different Atlantic tradition.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Ola Martín Berasategui known for?

Ola Martín Berasategui holds a Michelin star (2024) and is the Bilbao expression of chef Martín Berasategui's cooking tradition, delivered through head chef Raúl Cabrera. The restaurant is known for two tasting menus , including 'Lo mejor de la cocina de Martín Berasategui' , built around Basque seafood preparations, particularly within the formal, ingredient-focused style that defines the Berasategui school. It occupies the €€€€ tier of Bilbao's fine dining market, inside the Tayko hotel alongside the Nervión river.

What is the signature dish at Ola Martín Berasategui?

The kitchen's most discussed preparations are the kokotxas and slices of cod with a red prawn Vizcaína sauce. Both dishes are rooted in Basque coastal tradition: kokotxas require precise handling of the gelatinous chin fillet of hake or cod, while the Vizcaína sauce, built from dried choricero peppers, represents the inland Basque flavour vocabulary applied to seafood. Both appear within the tasting menus rather than as standalone à la carte options.

Collector Access

Need a table?

Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.

Access the Concierge