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Pau has held the Michelin Bib Gourmand in consecutive years (2024 and 2025), making it one of the clearest arguments for Benicarló's quiet but growing reputation on Spain's Mediterranean dining circuit. Chef Rocío Martínez runs an owner-operated room where rice dishes built on local Castellón produce anchor a menu offered across multiple formats, from a weekday executive lunch to a more open evening à la carte.

Walk into Pau on a weekday lunchtime and what you encounter is a room that has decided not to perform. The music sits at a level that allows conversation rather than filling silence. The setup is modern and relaxed, Mediterranean in the way that the Spanish coast understands the word: light materials, a lack of ceremony, and an atmosphere that treats the food as the reason you are here rather than the backdrop to an experience. Owner-chef Rocío Martínez is often visible between the kitchen and the dining room, explaining dishes as they arrive. That kind of proximity between the person who cooked your meal and the table where you eat it has become less common at any level of Spanish dining, and at Pau it reads as a structural choice rather than a casual one.
Rice, Product, and the Castellón Pantry
Rice cookery along the Spanish Mediterranean is among the most technically demanding and regionally specific traditions in the country. The rice dishes of the Valencia region and its northern neighbours in Castellón operate under a different logic than the soupy Catalan arrossos to the north or the more theatrical paellas of the tourist coast: the focus falls on the socarrat, the toasted base layer, on calibrated stock reduction, and on the quality of whatever protein or vegetable the rice is carrying. Benicarló sits in a stretch of coast that supplies both the seafood and the agricultural produce — the town is among the more recognised sources of artichoke in eastern Spain — that make locally grounded rice cookery credible rather than aspirational. Pau works within that context. The rice dishes here draw on the Castellón supply chain, and the Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, reflects a judgment about value relative to quality that applies directly to that commitment to local product.
The Bib Gourmand designation is worth framing precisely. It does not indicate fine-dining scale or ambition in the tasting-menu sense; it indicates that Michelin's inspectors found quality-to-price value that warranted formal recognition. At Pau's single-euro price tier, that recognition positions the restaurant inside a competitive set defined by honest cooking, sourcing discipline, and execution consistency rather than by spectacle. The same designation at this price point is rarer than it looks on a list. For comparison, Spain's multi-starred rooms , El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Disfrutar in Barcelona, Arzak in San Sebastián, DiverXO in Madrid, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, Mugaritz in Errenteria, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María , operate in a different category entirely, defined by tasting-menu architecture and destination dining logic. Pau operates closer in spirit to Ricard Camarena in València's commitment to regional product, though at a fraction of the price and without the same degree of fine-dining formalism. Within Benicarló itself, Raúl Resino offers a more creative, higher-price reference point for the town's culinary range.
Format and Flexibility
The menu structure at Pau is more considered than a single prix-fixe or an open à la carte would allow. At lunch, three menus run in parallel, including an executive-style option that suits the midday rhythm of a working coastal town. In the evening, two menus are available, with the option to order from the à la carte alongside them. That kind of layered access is relatively unusual at this price level: most restaurants at the single-euro tier commit fully to one format or the other, either a fixed lunch menu or a direct à la carte. Pau's structure suggests confidence in the kitchen's range and an understanding that different guests arrive with different appetites for structure. A local who eats here regularly will use the format differently than a visitor planning the meal as a destination lunch.
Google reviewer scores of 4.5 across 1,139 reviews add a different kind of signal to the Michelin recognition: that the kitchen delivers consistently enough to earn that average across a high volume of visits. A restaurant that performs at Bib Gourmand level on the night Michelin inspects but disappoints otherwise does not maintain a 4.5 across four-digit review counts. The two data points together suggest operational reliability rather than occasional excellence.
Benicarló and the Wider Rice Tradition
Rice dish specialists along the Spanish Mediterranean coast exist on a spectrum from strictly traditional to openly experimental. At the traditional end sit rooms like Arrocería Maribel in El Palmar, operating inside the Valencia rice belt with minimal deviation from convention. At a more experimental register, Quique Dacosta in Dénia has spent years using the Alicante rice tradition as raw material for avant-garde thinking. Pau occupies a middle position that Michelin's own language identifies: cooking that showcases local products with a hint of creativity. The balance leans toward the product rather than the technique, which is the appropriate emphasis at this price tier and in this specific coastal setting. Further north, Antoni Rubies in Artesa de Lleida demonstrates that rice cookery in the broader Catalan-Valencian arc extends inland as well as along the coast.
Benicarló is not a town that draws international food tourism at the scale of San Sebastián or Valencia, which is precisely why a consecutive Bib Gourmand matters for a visitor deciding how to spend a meal here. The award functions as an external reference point in a place where local word-of-mouth has historically done most of the navigation work.
Planning a Visit
Pau is located on Avinguda del Marquès de Benicarló, 11, in central Benicarló, a town on the Castellón coast roughly equidistant between Valencia and Tarragona. The format that suits most first-time visitors is the weekday lunch, where the executive menu offers the most direct access to the kitchen's strengths at the lowest commitment. The musical ambience is noted in Michelin's own write-up as part of the room's character, which signals that the atmosphere has been considered as part of the offer rather than left to accident. No phone or website data is currently held in our records; booking through a platform or arriving in person to check availability is the practical approach for now.
For a full account of where Pau sits within the town's broader eating and drinking options, see our full Benicarló restaurants guide. For accommodation, our Benicarló hotels guide covers current options. The town's bar scene is mapped in our Benicarló bars guide, and for those interested in the regional wine and agriculture context, our Benicarló wineries guide and our Benicarló experiences guide provide further reference.
What Should I Order at Pau?
The rice dishes are the clearest reason to come. Michelin's own assessment singles them out explicitly, and the kitchen's sourcing from the surrounding Castellón region means that the supporting ingredients , whether seafood from the local coast or vegetables from the area's agricultural output , are chosen to carry the dish rather than fill it. The multi-menu format means you do not have to commit to a single structure: at lunch, the executive menu is the efficient route; in the evening, the à la carte access alongside the set menus allows for more selective ordering. At a single-euro price tier with back-to-back Bib Gourmand recognition, the question is less what to order and more whether you have left enough time to eat without rushing.
Peer Set Snapshot
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pau | Rice Dishes | € | Bib Gourmand | This venue |
| Aponiente | Progressive - Seafood, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Seafood, Creative, €€€€ |
| Arzak | Modern Basque, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Modern Basque, Creative, €€€€ |
| DiverXO | Progressive - Asian, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Asian, Creative, €€€€ |
| El Celler de Can Roca | Progressive Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive Spanish, Creative, €€€€ |
| Quique Dacosta | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
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