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CuisineMediterranean Cuisine
LocationDénia, Spain
Michelin

A Michelin-starred address on Dénia's port square, Peix & Brases splits across two formats: a ground-floor gastro-bar serving fusion-inflected Mediterrasian plates, and a first-floor dining room anchored by open-grill Mediterranean cooking, savoury rice dishes, and two tasting menus. Positioned in the €€€ tier, it draws on the Costa Blanca's ingredient depth while sitting well below the creative-cuisine register of Quique Dacosta nearby.

Peix & Brases restaurant in Dénia, Spain
About

Where the Port Meets the Grill

Stand at Plaça Benidorm on a mid-morning in Dénia and the sequence of sensory cues is hard to miss: salt air off the fishing boats, the call of gulls circling the unloading quay, and the faint char from kitchens already stoking their grills before the lunch service begins. The port square has always been the working heart of Dénia's food culture, where trawlers still come in with red prawns (gambas rojas) that command serious prices at restaurants up and down the Costa Blanca. Peix & Brases sits almost directly opposite that port activity, and the positioning is deliberate. The proximity to the quay is not atmospheric dressing — it is a sourcing logic.

Dénia occupies an unusual position in Spanish dining. It sits far enough from Valencia to sustain its own culinary identity, yet close enough to draw comparisons with the city's rice culture. The town also hosts Quique Dacosta, a three-Michelin-star operation at the creative end of the Costa Blanca spectrum. Peix & Brases earned its own Michelin star in 2024, but it operates in a different register entirely: traditional Mediterranean cooking refined rather than reinvented, with an open grill as the centrepiece rather than a laboratory.

Two Floors, Two Distinct Propositions

The format at Peix & Brases reflects a split that has become more common among serious Spanish coastal restaurants in the past decade: a ground-floor gastro-bar running an informal, accessible programme, and an upper dining room carrying the gastronomic weight. The division lets the kitchen serve two different types of diner without diluting either experience.

Downstairs, the gastro-bar operates what the restaurant calls a Mediterrasian format — a fusion-inflected approach that pulls from Mediterranean and Asian reference points. This is the looser, more improvisational side of the kitchen. Upstairs, the tone changes. The first-floor dining room takes the à la carte seriously, with a menu built around the open grill, savoury rice dishes, and seasonal produce sourced at its peak. Two dedicated tasting menus , Esencia and Degustación , run alongside the carte for guests who want the kitchen to sequence the meal. Access to a rooftop terrace from the upper floor makes the spatial sequence a feature in itself, particularly during the long Valencian Community summer evenings when the light holds past nine o'clock.

The Herb Register of the Costa Blanca Kitchen

Mediterranean cooking at this latitude is not a uniform thing. The Costa Blanca sits in a zone where the aromatic herb traditions of Spain's interior , rosemary, thyme, wild fennel , meet the brighter basil and oregano registers that come in with the fishing and agricultural communities tracing lines back to the Balearics and the broader western Mediterranean. Open-grill cooking at this level depends on understanding how those herb profiles behave under direct heat: thyme and oregano char quickly and turn bitter if applied too early, while fresh basil and softer herbs are almost always added after the grill work finishes. A kitchen that handles this well signals real command of the ingredient base, not just quality sourcing.

That herb literacy extends into the rice dishes, which are the other anchor of the Peix & Brases upper-floor menu. The Valencian rice tradition allows for considerable variation in aromatic base , the sofregit that starts most serious rice dishes can carry rosemary, dried herbs, or nothing beyond allium and tomato, depending on what the main protein demands. A red prawn rice reads differently to an artichoke and cod version in this department, and the kitchen's positioning around top-quality seasonal ingredients implies an approach that changes those bases with the market rather than locking them to a fixed recipe.

Where Peix & Brases Sits in the Dénia Field

The Michelin star, awarded in 2024, places Peix & Brases in a tier that separates it from Dénia's broader offering of seafood restaurants and tapas bars. El Faralló and El Pegoli sit in the marisquería category, focused on shellfish and direct seafood presentation rather than the grill-and-rice format Peix & Brases operates. El Baret de Miquel occupies the tapas register. Quique Dacosta, at €€€€ and three stars, operates in a creative-cuisine category with no direct overlap in format or price.

Within the €€€ tier, Peix & Brases has the clearest Michelin credential of the mid-range Dénia field. For visitors calibrating their spend across a multi-day stay, the two-floor structure is also useful: the gastro-bar format downstairs runs at a lower commitment level than the full dining room upstairs, allowing a single property to work for different nights or different appetites within the same trip.

Against a broader Mediterranean peer set, the kitchen sits in company with addresses like La Brezza in Ascona and Arnaud Donckele & Maxime Frédéric at Louis Vuitton in Saint-Tropez , restaurants that use Mediterranean ingredient logic as a serious technical framework rather than a loosely applied aesthetic. Spain's Michelin-starred field more broadly includes addresses such as Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, Arzak in San Sebastián, DiverXO in Madrid, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Disfrutar in Barcelona, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria , the range illustrates how far Spanish fine dining has distributed geographically and stylistically from its Basque origins. Peix & Brases at one Michelin star is part of a coastal Mediterranean strand of that expansion that has been gaining recognition steadily.

Practical Planning

Peix & Brases holds a Google rating of 4.4 across more than 1,300 reviews, a sample size that gives the score meaningful weight. Service runs Tuesday through Sunday for both lunch (1:00 PM to 3:30 PM) and dinner (8:00 PM to 10:30 PM), with Monday closed throughout the week. The dual-session format is standard for serious Spanish coastal restaurants, where the midday meal remains a genuine dining occasion rather than a lighter interlude. For visitors arriving by ferry from Ibiza or Mallorca, the port location makes timing relatively easy to work around arrival schedules. The address , Plaça Benidorm, 18 , places the restaurant directly on the port square, walkable from Dénia's old town and most of its central accommodation.

For a broader view of where Peix & Brases fits within Dénia's wider food and hospitality field, the EP Club guides for restaurants, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences cover the full range of options across the town.

FAQ

What should I eat at Peix & Brases?
The menu architecture points toward two areas: the open-grill preparations and the savoury rice dishes, both anchored by the seasonal, port-adjacent sourcing that defines the upper-floor dining room. The Esencia and Degustación tasting menus are the most structured way to cover both registers in a single sitting, with the kitchen controlling the sequence and ingredient selection based on what is available that service. If a full tasting menu is not the goal, the à la carte on the first floor gives access to the same ingredient quality with more autonomy over pacing. The ground-floor gastro-bar's Mediterrasian format is a separate programme , more suitable as a standalone lighter visit than as an alternative to the dining room experience for first-time guests. The restaurant holds one Michelin star (2024), which applies to the kitchen's output across both menus and the carte rather than to one specific format. See also: Quique Dacosta for Dénia's three-star creative-cuisine benchmark, and the full Dénia restaurants guide for the complete field.

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