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CuisineGelato
Executive ChefJordi Roca
LocationGirona, Spain
Opinionated About Dining

Rocambolesc is Girona's gelato counter from Jordi Roca, the dessert mind behind El Celler de Can Roca. Ranked #34 on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in Europe list in 2024, it occupies a distinct tier in the city's food scene: serious technique, accessible format. Open daily from 10:30am on Carrer de les Hortes, it draws both locals and visitors making the broader Girona circuit.

Rocambolesc restaurant in Girona, Spain
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The Gelato Counter That Critical Guides Take Seriously

On Carrer de les Hortes, a short walk from Girona's cathedral quarter, there is a gelato shop that has appeared on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in Europe list three years running: ranked #43 in 2023, climbing to #34 in 2024, and placing at #60 in 2025. That kind of sustained, cross-year recognition from a guide that applies the same analytical rigour to cheap eats as it does to tasting menus tells you something specific about Rocambolesc. It is not simply a well-made local gelateria. It is a venue that critics with high standards return to, benchmark against peers across the continent, and continue to rank.

The wider context matters here. OAD's Cheap Eats in Europe list draws from a large pool of informed diners and critics; a single placement can reflect a good season, but three consecutive years in the top 60 suggests something more durable. For a gelato counter in a mid-sized Catalan city to hold that position against entries from Rome, Naples, Paris, and Copenhagen is a credentialling fact, not a marketing claim.

Where This Fits in Girona's Food Hierarchy

Girona occupies an unusual position in Spain's fine dining geography. The city is home to El Celler de Can Roca, the three-Michelin-starred restaurant that placed at the very leading of the World's 50 Best Restaurants list and remains one of the reference points for creative Spanish cuisine alongside peers like Disfrutar in Barcelona, Arzak in San Sebastián, DiverXO in Madrid, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María. Rocambolesc is connected to El Celler through Jordi Roca, whose role at the restaurant is desserts and pastry, a discipline that has driven some of the most discussed food at that table. The gelato counter is, in that sense, an extension of a specific technical lineage into an open-access, walk-in format.

That lineage places Rocambolesc in a different peer conversation than the city's other serious restaurants. Massana and Divinum operate at the Michelin-starred and contemporary cuisine tiers respectively; Cipresaia and Nexe occupy the creative and contemporary middle ground. Rocambolesc sits apart from all of them by format: no reservation, no set menu, no dress considerations, and a price point that invites a spontaneous stop rather than a planned booking. The critical recognition it has accumulated is therefore all the more pointed — it is not arriving on the strength of a tasting menu experience or a dining room that asks for commitment. It earns its place on critical lists through the product alone.

The Gelato Format and What It Signals

Gelato as a serious critical category is still an evolving conversation in northern Europe and the United States, but in Italy — and increasingly in Spain , the distinction between artisan gelato with genuine technical ambition and the mass-produced equivalent has been a live debate for decades. Venues like Gelupo Gelato in London and Il Laboratorio del Gelato in New York City have helped establish the idea in English-speaking markets that a gelato counter can merit the same evaluative attention as a restaurant. Rocambolesc's consistent presence on a Europe-wide cheap eats ranking suggests it is operating at the upper end of that artisan tier, where technique, ingredient sourcing, and flavour precision are the differentiators.

The connection to El Celler's dessert programme gives Rocambolesc a specific kind of credibility: the skills being applied here are not those of a generic pastry background but of a kitchen that has, for years, been at the front of what Spanish haute cuisine does with sugar, texture, and cold technique. Whether that translates directly into the gelato counter's day-to-day output is a matter of ongoing critical assessment , and the OAD rankings suggest the answer is yes, consistently.

The Physical Experience and When to Go

The address on Carrer de les Hortes places Rocambolesc in the older part of Girona, where the medieval street grid and stone architecture create the backdrop that draws most visitors to the city in the first place. The shop opens at 10:30am every day of the week, which is earlier than most gelato counters and reflects both local café culture and the tourist patterns of a city that pulls visitors through its old town on foot. Friday and Saturday hours extend to 11:30pm; the rest of the week closes at 11pm. Those late hours matter in the context of a Girona evening: if you are finishing dinner at one of the city's serious restaurants, a late walk to Rocambolesc is a realistic option rather than an afterthought requiring early planning.

Shop's Google score of 3.8 across 433 reviews is worth reading carefully. That figure reflects the full range of visitor expectations, including those who may not be calibrated for what artisan gelato actually represents in terms of price-to-output. For visitors coming with awareness of the OAD rankings and the El Celler connection, the relevant data point is the sustained critical recognition rather than the aggregate visitor score, which tends to dilute specialist quality signals in this format. See our full Girona restaurants guide for broader context on how the city's food scene maps across price points and formats.

Planning the Visit in Context

Rocambolesc functions well as part of a wider Girona day rather than a standalone destination, though the critical rankings give it enough independent weight to justify a specific stop. The shop is open seven days a week with no booking required and no minimum spend implied by the format. For visitors building a Girona itinerary that includes El Celler or one of the city's other serious tables, the gelato counter is a logical complement at a radically different price point. For those who are not doing the full tasting menu circuit, it is an accessible entry point into what the Roca family's culinary thinking produces at a walk-in scale. Full planning resources for the city are available through our Girona hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

What People Recommend at Rocambolesc

Because Rocambolesc's menu is not published in the venue database and changes with the seasons, EP Club does not list specific flavours or formats here. What the OAD rankings and the venue's El Celler de Can Roca connection confirm is that the approach sits at the serious end of the artisan gelato spectrum, where creative flavour combinations and technical precision in texture and temperature are the standard. Visitors consistently cite the gelato itself as the draw rather than any single fixed item, which is consistent with a counter-format venue where the output varies and the craft is the constant. For the most current menu information, visiting in person or checking the venue's own channels directly is the only reliable approach , EP Club does not publish flavour details it cannot verify from a confirmed source.

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