Google: 4.5 · 2,629 reviews

In Madrid's Salamanca district, Ronda 14 occupies a specific and contested niche: the Peruvian-Japanese fusion counter that regulars treat as a neighbourhood fixture rather than a destination experiment. Ranked #874 on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual Europe list and carrying a 4.5 Google rating across more than 2,500 reviews, it holds its ground in a city where the fusion category is crowded and credibility is earned slowly.
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What Salamanca's Regulars Already Know
The Salamanca district runs on repetition. Its residents return to the same addresses week after week with the quiet conviction of people who have already done the research and stopped looking. Ronda 14, on Calle del General Oráa, benefits from exactly that dynamic. Its 4.5 Google rating across more than 2,500 reviews is not the signature of a restaurant that converts tourists once; it is the accumulated testimony of a neighbourhood that keeps showing up.
Peruvian-Japanese fusion — the nikkei tradition — has a complicated reputation in European cities. At its weakest, it operates as a surface-level marriage of two fashionable cuisines: tiradito plating that mimics sashimi presentation without the discipline, ceviche brightened with yuzu instead of ají amarillo, the whole exercise lacking commitment to either side of the hyphen. At its strongest, as in Lima's established nikkei houses, the combination produces something with its own internal logic: Japanese precision applied to South American acidity, texture discipline meeting citrus heat. Ronda 14 occupies the latter register, which explains why Salamanca's habitués , a group not easily won over by novelty for its own sake , have made it a standing reservation.
The Nikkei Tradition in a European Context
To understand what Ronda 14 is doing in Madrid, it helps to understand where nikkei cuisine comes from. The Japanese immigration to Peru that began in the late nineteenth century produced, over several generations, a hybrid culinary tradition that is now codified and taken seriously at the highest levels. Maido in Lima has appeared consistently near the leading of Latin America's 50 Best restaurants; the tradition it represents has its own techniques, its own vocabulary, its own hierarchy of ingredients. When that tradition travels to Europe, it arrives in a city where the reference points are few and the audience has to be educated while it is being fed.
Madrid is not the obvious home for this. Barcelona has the larger Japanese community and the more developed Asian-fusion infrastructure. San Sebastián has Arzak and a Basque canon that leaves limited appetite for outside influences at the leading end. Madrid's creative fine dining , DiverXO, Coque, Deessa, DSTAgE, Paco Roncero , is Spanish-rooted, technically ambitious, and largely inward-looking. Ronda 14 does not compete in that tier. It competes for the regular weeknight slot, the business lunch that wants something more considered than standard Mediterranean, the couple in Salamanca who have already cycled through the obvious choices.
That is a different and arguably harder position to hold. A tasting menu destination can rely on occasion dining and destination seekers. A neighbourhood restaurant with an unusual cuisine has to earn the same table back every other week, which requires consistency at a level that spectacle dining rarely demands.
Where Ronda 14 Sits in Madrid's Broader Scene
Opinionated About Dining's 2025 ranking places Ronda 14 at #874 in the Casual Europe category , a list that covers an enormous geographic and stylistic range. In Madrid specifically, the OAD casual tier includes a mix of traditional Spanish cooking and international addresses; landing on that list at all signals a level of sustained quality that OAD's survey methodology, which aggregates votes from experienced diners rather than professional critics alone, tends to reward reliably.
The comparison set for Ronda 14 is not DiverXO or Disfrutar in Barcelona. The relevant peer group is the mid-tier international addresses in Salamanca and Chamberí that serve a clientele with high baseline expectations and low tolerance for inconsistency. Against that peer group, the 2,545-review volume at 4.5 is meaningful , it suggests a kitchen that performs without significant variance across many covers and many months.
For context on what Spanish fine dining looks like at the leading end, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María represent the country's most decorated kitchens. Ronda 14 is not in conversation with those addresses, which is worth stating plainly: it is a well-executed casual restaurant in a prosperous Madrid neighbourhood, not a destination in the national fine dining sense. That clarity about category is what makes it useful.
Chef Mario Céspedes and the Kitchen's Credentials
Mario Céspedes leads the kitchen. In the nikkei tradition, the relevant credential is not Michelin lineage but fluency in both source cuisines , the ability to handle Japanese knife discipline and Peruvian acidity with equal conviction rather than defaulting to one and borrowing loosely from the other. At restaurants where that fluency is present, the menu tends to show restraint: fewer ingredients per dish, cleaner acid profiles, textures that hold rather than soften. Where it is absent, the food announces its influences too loudly and the combination reads as decoration rather than technique. The review record at Ronda 14 points toward the former.
The Regulars' Case
What keeps a Salamanca regular returning to a nikkei restaurant rather than defaulting to the neighbourhood's abundant traditional Spanish options? Partly it is the contrast: the acid-forward profiles of tiradito and ceviche read differently from Spanish cooking's fat and umami anchors, and a palate that eats well and widely tends to appreciate that kind of reset. Partly it is the format: a casual nikkei address operates at a different price and pacing register than a formal tasting menu, which means it fits more occasions in the calendar.
The 2,545 Google reviews also imply a customer base that spans years rather than months , a volume that accumulates through repetition, not one-time visits from tourists following a list. That pattern is the most reliable signal a casual restaurant can send.
For anyone building a Madrid itinerary around the full range of the city's dining , from neighbourhood fixtures like Ronda 14 through to the creative fine dining addresses and the broader hospitality infrastructure , see our full Madrid restaurants guide, our full Madrid hotels guide, our full Madrid bars guide, our full Madrid wineries guide, and our full Madrid experiences guide. For nikkei and Japanese-influenced dining at the far end of the ambition spectrum, Atomix in New York City and Le Bernardin in New York City offer different points of reference for what precision-led cooking from outside the European tradition looks like when fully realised.
Planning Your Visit
| Detail | Ronda 14 | DiverXO | Deessa |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Peruvian-Japanese (nikkei) | Progressive Asian-Creative | Modern Spanish, Creative |
| Price tier | Not confirmed | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Format | Casual neighbourhood restaurant | Full tasting menu | Full tasting menu |
| OAD recognition | Casual Europe #874 (2025) | Top tier | Top tier |
| Google rating | 4.5 (2,545 reviews) | Not listed | Not listed |
| Address | C. del Gral. Oráa, 25, Salamanca | Madrid | Madrid |
Ronda 14 is located at Calle del General Oráa 25 in the Salamanca district. Booking details and current hours are leading confirmed directly with the restaurant, as those specifics are not held in our database.
- tiradito
- ceviche
- wagyu nigiri
- gyozas
- baos
- cachopines
- sushi rolls
- gunkans
Cuisine-First Comparison
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ronda 14 | Peruvian-Japanese fusion | Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #874 (2025) | This venue |
| DiverXO | Progressive - Asian, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Asian, Creative, €€€€ |
| Deessa | Modern Spanish, Creative | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Spanish, Creative, €€€€ |
| Smoked Room | Progressive Asador, Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Progressive Asador, Contemporary, €€€€ |
| Coque | Spanish, Creative | Michelin 2 Star | Spanish, Creative, €€€€ |
| Paco Roncero | Creative | Michelin 2 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
At a Glance
- Modern
- Trendy
- Elegant
- Lively
- Date Night
- Group Dining
- Casual Hangout
- Special Occasion
- Family
- Open Kitchen
- Standalone
- Craft Cocktails
- Beer Program
- Local Sourcing
Modern and attractive with a welcoming, casual atmosphere across two floors; described as tranquil and inviting with simple, contemporary décor suitable for both informal gatherings and special occasions.
- tiradito
- ceviche
- wagyu nigiri
- gyozas
- baos
- cachopines
- sushi rolls
- gunkans














