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CuisineModern Spanish, Creative
Executive ChefRicard Camarena
LocationValència, Spain
Opinionated About Dining
Michelin
La Liste
World's 50 Best
The Best Chef
Star Wine List
We're Smart World

Two Michelin stars, a green Michelin star, and a top-10 ranking among the world's vegetable-forward restaurants place Ricard Camarena at the top tier of Spanish fine dining. Set inside the refurbished Bombas Gens arts complex in La Saïdia, the restaurant runs set menus built entirely around seasonal produce and Valencia's agricultural traditions. Dinner service runs Tuesday to Saturday; Friday and Saturday also offer lunch.

Ricard Camarena restaurant in València, Spain
About

A Former Factory, a Serious Kitchen

The Bombas Gens complex on Avenida de Burjassot began life as a hydraulic pump factory in the 1930s. Its reinvention as a combined arts centre and fine-dining destination says something about how Valencia has repositioned itself over the past decade: the city that once exported citrus and ceramic tiles now exports cultural ambition. Ricard Camarena occupies the rear of the complex, past a contemporary foyer and a private bar where the meal begins with hors d'oeuvres before guests move through to the modern dining room. The open-plan kitchen is visible throughout, which in Spain's leading creative restaurants has become less a theatrical gesture and more a statement of transparency. You are not being invited to watch a performance; you are being shown how the work is done.

Within Valencia's fine-dining bracket, the restaurant sits at the apex of what is a genuinely competitive local tier. El Poblet operates nearby with its own creative Spanish programme at the same price point, while Fierro (Modern Cuisine) and Fraula (Contemporary) represent a younger, smaller-format wave of creative cooking in the city. Ricard Camarena sits above that cohort on credential alone: two Michelin stars held through 2024 and 2025, a green Michelin star for sustainability practices, a 2023 entry at number 96 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list, and 97 points from La Liste in 2025, adjusting slightly to 95 points in the 2026 edition. Those figures place it comfortably within Spain's upper tier alongside houses like Quique Dacosta in Dénia and El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, even if it operates with less international name recognition than those two.

Vegetables as the Structural Argument

Spain's creative restaurant scene built its international reputation largely on protein. The Basque and Catalan vanguard of the 1990s and 2000s, from Arzak in San Sebastián to the molecular experiments that defined elBulli's legacy, placed seafood and meat at the centre of the tasting menu logic. The current generation has been slower than Nordic counterparts to shift that hierarchy. Ricard Camarena is the clearest exception in the Valencian Community, and one of the more consequential ones nationally.

The kitchen's commitment to vegetables is structural, not decorative. Sauces are made from vegetable offcuts, no leaf goes unused, and the seasonal menu shifts with the rhythms of the huerta, the irrigated agricultural plain that has supplied Valencia's kitchens for centuries. We're Smart, a specialist guide tracking vegetable-forward restaurants globally, ranks Ricard Camarena in the world's top 10 for plant-led cuisine. That ranking is not based on the absence of animal products but on the coherence and technical depth of the vegetable work. The Cocinero del Año distinction awarded at Madrid Fusión 2021, shared with seven other chefs for green activism, reinforced a wider point about where Spanish fine dining was heading, rather than being a singular accolade for the restaurant alone. Still, the framing matters: in Spain, where jamón remains the default luxury food reference and where a meal without cured pork is often treated as a compromise, building a two-star reputation on seasonal vegetables represents a direct argument against that hierarchy.

This is worth understanding in the context of Spanish dining tradition. Jamón ibérico de bellota, the cured rear leg of acorn-fed Iberian pigs, sits at the centre of Spain's culinary self-image in a way that has no precise equivalent in other food cultures. It appears on tasting menus at DiverXO in Madrid, at Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and at essentially every fine-dining table in the country as either a course, a garnish, or a conceptual reference point. The curing tradition, with its geographic denominaciones de origen from Jabugo to Guijuelo, carries the same cultural weight in Spain that AOC wine classifications carry in France. Against that backdrop, a kitchen that systematically builds its tasting logic around Valencia's market gardens is making a conscious editorial choice about what regional identity means. It is not anti-jamón; it is pro-huerta, which in this context amounts to the same thing.

How This Fits the Broader Spanish Fine-Dining Picture

Spain's two- and three-star restaurants cluster in a few geographic pockets: the Basque Country, Catalonia, and Madrid account for the majority. Valencia has historically punched below its culinary weight at the leading level, despite having one of Spain's most productive agricultural regions and a seafood tradition that predates the rest of the country's rice cooking. Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María changed what was possible for creative fine dining outside those established poles; Ricard Camarena has done the same for Valencia specifically.

Within the current generation of Modern Spanish creative restaurants, there is a meaningful split between those that emphasise technical spectacle and those that build menus around ingredient sourcing and restraint. Casa Marcial in Arriondas and Deessa in Madrid represent different points on that spectrum. Ricard Camarena sits closer to the restraint end: the complexity is in the sourcing and the sauce work, not in tableside theatrics. Opinionated About Dining, which aggregates critic votes across Europe, ranked the restaurant at 269th in Europe in 2024 and 291st in 2025, movements that reflect the competitive density of the category rather than any decline in the kitchen's output.

What to Know Before You Go

The restaurant operates a tight weekly schedule. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday from 8pm, with last bookings at 9:30pm. Lunch service operates only on Friday and Saturday, from 1:30pm, with the same closing window. Mondays and Sundays are closed. The price range sits at €€€€, consistent with its two-star peers across Spain. For context, El Poblet and Fierro operate in comparable brackets, though El Poblet sits at the same top tier while Fierro and La Salita offer slightly different formats and entry points. If you are building a wider stay around the restaurant, our full València hotels guide covers the city's accommodation range, and our full València bars guide maps the city's drinking options, which pair well with a pre- or post-dinner itinerary given the La Saïdia neighbourhood's position north of the old city centre.

The Bombas Gens address at Av. de Burjassot, 54 is slightly removed from the tourist core of central Valencia, which has the practical benefit of avoiding the compression of the historic centre on busy evenings. The arts complex setting means the arrival and the pre-dinner bar experience function as part of the meal's structure, not as waiting-room logistics. Guests arriving for dinner enter a sequence that has been thought through from the foyer inward.

For visitors structuring a broader food trip through the region, our full València restaurants guide covers the city's creative, traditional, and neighbourhood-level options. The Valencian Community's range extends further south and west: our full València wineries guide covers the DO Valencia and DO Utiel-Requena appellations that supply many of the city's better wine lists, and our full València experiences guide addresses the market, huerta, and cultural programming that contextualises what you are eating. A visit to the Mercat Central before a dinner here is not incidental: the same agricultural supply chain runs through both. For Japanese-influenced dining of a different register, Kaido Sushi Bar represents the city's most technically serious Japanese counter and sits at a different but comparable level of commitment.

What You Are Actually Booking

Two Michelin stars and a green star at a four-price-tier restaurant in a converted industrial arts complex, running a seasonal vegetable-led tasting menu through a kitchen with full visibility and a pre-dinner bar sequence built into the format. The 4.7 rating across 1,102 Google reviews suggests a consistency that is unusual at this level of ambition. The World's 50 Best number 96 placement in 2023 brought international attention that the restaurant's relatively modest public profile had previously underplayed. What the awards collectively point to is a kitchen that has built its reputation on a single coherent argument about what Valencian fine dining should look like, and has sustained that argument across multiple award cycles without revision.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I eat at Ricard Camarena?
The restaurant runs set menus rather than à la carte, so the decision is less about individual dishes and more about which menu format to book. The kitchen structures its offering around seasonal vegetables sourced from Valencia's huerta, using the whole plant to build sauces and, in some cases, beverages. The menu shifts with the season, so the specific courses change across the year. What remains constant is the vegetable-first logic: this is not a menu where a protein course anchors the sequence. We're Smart's top-10 global ranking for vegetable-forward restaurants and the green Michelin star both confirm that the commitment is systemic. If you are visiting as part of a broader Spanish fine-dining circuit that includes heavier Basque or Castilian cooking, the contrast is intentional and instructive. See also our notes on the cuisine in the main text above.

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