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CuisineSpanish, Creative
Executive ChefDaniel González Mora
LocationSant Lluís, Spain
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

A country house south of Sant Lluís with more than 20 years under the same ownership, Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol holds a Michelin Plate and an Opinionated About Dining ranking for its grounded Menorcan cooking. The kitchen blends traditional regional technique with contemporary detail, and a dedicated rice section anchors a menu best explored at a shared, unhurried pace.

Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol restaurant in Sant Lluís, Spain
About

A Country Table in the Menorcan Interior

Arriving at Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol along the road south from Sant Lluís toward Punta Prima, the transition from resort-facing Menorca to something older and more rural is immediate. The property sits on a country lane, flanked by the dry-stone walls and scrubland typical of the island's southeastern interior. There is no urban dining-room theatrics here — the setting is a farmhouse, and the meal is shaped by that fact. Shade, open air, and an unhurried rhythm are part of the offering long before any plate arrives. In this part of the Balearic Islands, where summer tourism can compress everything into spectacle, that structural quietness is a deliberate choice.

The Architecture of a Shared Menorcan Meal

Spanish regional cooking — and Menorcan cooking specifically , is built around a logic of sharing. The island's table tradition descends from a larder shaped by geography: preserved meats, local cheeses, abundant seafood from the surrounding Mediterranean, and a rice culture that draws on centuries of agricultural and trading history. At Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol, that logic organises the menu. There is a dedicated section for rice dishes alongside the broader creative-regional carte, which means the table becomes a place to compose a meal rather than follow a fixed sequence. This is the small-plates and shared-dishes philosophy operating at a measured, countryside scale , not the fast-turnover tapas bar model of the mainland cities, but something slower and more committed to place.

The kitchen, under chef Daniel González Mora, works within traditional and regional Menorcan references while incorporating what Michelin's 2025 assessors describe as "modern Menorcan details." The result is cooking that respects recognisable local forms rather than dismantling them. For a point of comparison, the progressive technical ambition on display at places like Disfrutar in Barcelona or DiverXO in Madrid is not the model here. Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol positions itself at the opposite end of the Spanish creative spectrum , grounded in locality, read through a steady, long-practiced hand rather than through avant-garde provocation.

Twenty Years, One Table

The property's history adds a dimension that distinguishes it from newer rural-dining concepts. The site began as a picnic area in the 1960s, a function that already encoded the idea of eating in a natural setting as the point of the exercise, not a backdrop to something else. Daniel González Mora and hostess Nuria Pendás have operated the house for more than 20 years, a tenure that in the context of Balearic dining , where seasonal businesses open and close with the tourist cycle , represents genuine continuity. Spain's most decorated houses accumulate that kind of institutional weight over time: the decades-long running of Arzak in San Sebastián or the multigenerational project at El Celler de Can Roca in Girona are the benchmark for what sustained commitment produces. Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol operates at a different price point and ambition level, but the principle , that a kitchen and a house become more coherent the longer the same hands run them , applies here too.

That coherence shows in the recognition the restaurant has accumulated. A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 places it within the tier of houses the Guide considers worth attention without awarding stars , a category that in Spain now includes a substantial number of serious regional kitchens doing culturally grounded work. The Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe ranking (2023 recommended, 2024 ranked at 578) adds a second, independent data point: OAD's casual Europe list tends to reward cooking that delivers consistent value relative to its register, which aligns with what the €€€ price bracket here signals.

Wine, Region, and the Shared Table

Nuria Pendás manages the front of house and, according to the restaurant's own record, has assembled a broad international wine selection alongside the regional offering. In the shared-dishes format that Menorcan cooking naturally invites, the wine list functions as a second layer of composition , something to move through a meal rather than pair rigidly against it. The island produces its own wines, and the Balearics more broadly are generating growing interest from producers working with indigenous varieties. Whether the list leans into that local thread or curates more widely is not confirmed in available data, but a selection described as "complete" at an international scope suggests a serious cellar rather than a perfunctory one. For those with deeper interest in Spain's wine geography, the broader context spans from the Atlantic-facing work at Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María to the Valencian naturalism at Ricard Camarena in València.

Where This Sits in Sant Lluís and Beyond

Sant Lluís is the southernmost municipality of Menorca, quieter and less visited than Ciutadella to the west or Maó to the north. Its dining scene is limited in volume, and restaurants of this consistency , sustained awards recognition, a settled kitchen, a distinctive physical setting , are scarce. For visitors based along the Punta Prima or Son Bou coastline, the restaurant is a logical anchor for a lunch or dinner that steps outside the resort circuit entirely. Across the island, the broader picture of where to eat, sleep, and explore is covered in our full Sant Lluís restaurants guide, as well as guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in Sant Lluís.

For context within Spanish creative cooking more broadly, the peer set is wide. The cerebral precision at Mugaritz in Errenteria, the Basque monumentalism of Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, or the Levantine creative work at Quique Dacosta in Dénia all represent the €€€€ apex of the genre. Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol sits in a different register , one step down in price and ambition, but operating with distinct regional integrity. Within the Spanish-Creative tier at a more accessible price, comparable reference points include Hisop in Barcelona and Coque in Madrid, or the Extremaduran refinement at Atrio in Cáceres and the technical ambition at Azurmendi in Larrabetzu.

Planning Your Visit

Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol operates Tuesday through Saturday for both lunch (11:30 am to 5:00 pm) and dinner (7:30 to 10:30 pm), with the same hours applying Monday; the restaurant is closed on Sundays. The address , Camí des Pujol, 14, accessed via the km 6 marker on the road to Punta Prima , requires a car or arranged transport; this is not a venue you arrive at on foot or by taxi from a central square. The €€€ price range places it in the mid-to-upper bracket for island dining, consistent with Michelin Plate recognition in a regional context. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 across 885 reviews, a volume that is substantial for a rural property of this type and suggests a consistent experience rather than a polarising one. Booking in advance is advisable, particularly across the summer months when the island's visitor population increases sharply.

Frequently Asked Questions

What dish is Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol famous for?
The rice dishes are the most distinctive structural element of the menu , the kitchen maintains a fixed dedicated section for them, which in a Menorcan coastal context means preparations rooted in the island's agricultural and Mediterranean pantry. Michelin's assessors specifically note the creative regional Menorcan character of the cooking, with chef Daniel González Mora working within traditional forms while adding contemporary detail. No individual signature dish is confirmed in available records.
What is the vibe at Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol?
The setting is a country house on the rural edge of Sant Lluís , relaxed and unhurried, with the physical environment doing much of the work. It holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and an OAD Casual Europe ranking, so the cooking is taken seriously, but the atmosphere reads as lunch-in-the-countryside rather than formal dining room. At €€€, it sits in the mid-to-upper range for Menorca, and Nuria Pendás manages the hospitality with a long-established rhythm after more than two decades at the property.
Is Sa Pedrera d'es Pujol child-friendly?
The country house format and the shared, unhurried pace of service suggest a setting that can accommodate families more comfortably than a tasting-menu-only room would. That said, the €€€ price range and the kitchen's focus on traditional Menorcan cooking with creative detail may be better suited to older children with a broader palate. If dining with young children, the lunch service (11:30 am to 5:00 pm) allows for a more flexible, lower-pressure timing than the evening sitting.
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