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Modern Galician Fine Dining
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A Coruña, Spain

Pedra Furada

CuisineContemporary
Price€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
Michelin

Pedra Furada sits steps from Playa del Orzán in central A Coruña, holding a 2025 Michelin Plate for contemporary sharing plates that apply European technique to Galician coastal produce. Dishes such as flame-seared mackerel with citrus and yellow chilli, and a smoked bouillabaisse, map the kitchen's approach: sharp method, Atlantic ingredients. Two tasting menus complement the à la carte.

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Address
Rúa Comandante Fontanes, 6, 15003 A Coruña, Spain
Phone
+34 621 38 41 76
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Pedra Furada restaurant in A Coruña, Spain
About

Atlantic Produce, European Technique: The Broader Story Behind Pedra Furada

A Coruña's dining identity has always been tied to the sea. The city sits on a peninsula in Galicia where the Atlantic shapes what ends up on the plate: razor clams, percebes, turbot, mackerel, and a regional shellfish culture that pre-dates any restaurant trend by centuries. What has shifted in the past decade is what kitchens do with that raw material. Across Galicia and the broader Spanish north, a generation of chefs trained in European technique, many in the Basque Country or abroad, have returned to apply that technical framework to a pantry that was already exceptional. The result is a style that is contemporary in method and Galician in source, evident at venues from Vigo to A Coruña's own Old Town. Pedra Furada is a modern Galician fine dining restaurant in A Coruña, Spain, with a 2025 Michelin Plate and a price of about $65 per person. Pedra Furada sits squarely inside this movement.

The address, Rúa Comandante Fontanes 6, places the restaurant a short walk from Playa del Orzán, A Coruña's in-city Atlantic beach. The physical proximity to the coast is not incidental. The kitchen's emphasis on marine ingredients reflects the wider Galician coastal-contemporary approach: sea-derived produce treated with the kind of precision associated with French or Nordic fine dining, but freed from the formality those traditions typically carry. Price point reinforces the accessibility: the €€ bracket positions Pedra Furada in the same tier as Terreo Cocina Casual and comparable to El de Alberto rather than the €€€ register occupied by Árbore da Veira.

Sibling Kitchens and a Shared Philosophy

Galicia's contemporary restaurant scene has produced a small cluster of venues that operate across cities while sharing kitchen philosophy rather than kitchen staff. Pedra Furada belongs to this pattern: it shares culinary DNA with Morrofino de Vigo, a known name in Vigo's mid-premium segment. The connection matters not as a branding note but as a quality signal. When kitchens share philosophy across cities and hold consistent recognition, it suggests the approach is deliberate and replicable rather than the product of a single location or a one-cycle trend. A 2025 Michelin Plate, the Guide's recognition marker for kitchens producing consistently good food, supports that reading.

Across Spain's broader contemporary dining scene, cross-city kitchen philosophies have become one mechanism by which high technique spreads outside the major nodes. Arzak in San Sebastián and Azurmendi in Larrabetzu represent the full Michelin-starred version of Basque-rooted expansion, while operations like Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María or Quique Dacosta in Dénia demonstrate how coastal Iberian kitchens can push technique and identity simultaneously at the highest tier. Pedra Furada operates at a more accessible register, but the conceptual lineage, applying rigorous technique to extraordinary regional seafood, is the same.

The Menu: Method Applied to the Atlantic Pantry

The à la carte is structured for sharing, a format that suits A Coruña's social dining culture and allows a table to move across multiple preparations rather than committing to a linear progression. Two set menus, named Pedra and Orixe, are available and served to the whole table, offering a more curated path through the kitchen's current thinking.

The dishes named in the venue's Michelin recognition are instructive. Flame-seared mackerel with cosium and a citrus jus with yellow chilli is technically precise: searing a naturally oily fish like mackerel demands control of heat and timing, and the pairing with acid (citrus) and moderate heat (yellow chilli) follows the logic of cutting through fat without overwhelming a delicate marine flavour. Cosium, a Galician cultivar used as a leafy green, anchors the plate in local produce. This is the local-global intersection in a single dish: European fire technique, Galician raw material, flavour logic that could as easily be discussed in a contemporary kitchen in Seoul or New York City.

Smoked bouillabaisse with fish of the day, celery root and dill extends this approach. Bouillabaisse is Provençal in origin, historically a fisherman's stew that absorbed the catch of the day and whatever aromatics were available. Bringing it into a Galician kitchen and smoking it introduces a northern European technique into a Mediterranean form, while fish of the day anchors it to whatever the Atlantic coast is producing at the time. Celery root and dill push the flavour profile further north, toward Scandinavian registers. The result is a dish that is simultaneously grounded in one of Europe's oldest fish-stew traditions and clearly contemporary in its reference set.

Where Pedra Furada Sits in A Coruña's Restaurant Scene

A Coruña's mid-premium contemporary segment has expanded in recent years. 55 Pasos and NaDo operate at a similar price point with Galician-creative positioning, while Taberna 5 Mares anchors the traditional seafood end of the market. A Espiga represents the farm-to-table strand of the same broader movement toward traceability and provenance. Pedra Furada's Michelin Plate and its Vigo sibling relationship give it a slightly stronger institutional footprint than many peers at the same price level, which is relevant for visitors making a short trip who want the reassurance of external validation rather than local word-of-mouth discovery alone.

Internationally, the approach of applying global contemporary technique to a hyperlocal coastal pantry has strong precedents. DiverXO in Madrid and El Celler de Can Roca in Girona represent the highest-tier expression of Spain's willingness to treat local raw material as a canvas for technique. Pedra Furada does not operate at that scale or price point, but it works within the same philosophical framework at a register that is practically accessible to a much wider range of visitors.

Planning Your Visit

The restaurant is located at Rúa Comandante Fontanes 6 in the 15003 postal district, within walking distance of both the Old Town and the waterfront. The €€ price bracket makes Pedra Furada a plausible option for multiple visits during a longer stay in the city. The tasting menus require the whole table to participate. Google reviewers rate the restaurant 4.7 from 315 reviews.

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Waterfront
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Elegant atmosphere with careful attention to detail in presentation and service.