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Logroño, Spain

Sabores

CuisineContemporary
LocationLogroño, Spain
Michelin

On Plaza del Mercado in the heart of Logroño, Sabores holds back-to-back Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) for contemporary cooking rooted firmly in Rioja's larder. Two chefs run a relaxed, approachable room where the price sits at €€, making serious technique accessible without ceremony. It is one of the more coherent expressions of the regional ingredient-first movement in La Rioja's mid-tier dining scene.

Sabores restaurant in Logroño, Spain
About

Where the Market Square Sets the Mood

Plaza del Mercado in Logroño carries a particular kind of daytime energy: produce vendors, foot traffic between the old city's narrow lanes, and the low hum of a square that has been feeding people in one form or another for generations. Sabores occupies a ground-floor space on the plaza at number 2, a position that immediately frames what the kitchen is doing before a single dish arrives. The address is not incidental. In a city where the relationship between the land and the table is taken seriously at every price point, sitting directly beside a market square signals an allegiance to ingredient sourcing that the cooking then has to justify.

The room itself reads young and unguarded, a deliberate counter-signal to the white-tablecloth formality that once defined Spanish fine dining at this level. The feel is closer to a neighbourhood restaurant that happens to be executing at a Michelin-recognised standard than to a destination built around occasion dining. That accessibility is part of the editorial argument Sabores is making about what contemporary cooking in a wine capital can look like.

The Sensory Logic of a Rioja Kitchen

Contemporary Spanish cooking at the €€ price point rarely achieves the kind of formal recognition Sabores has accumulated. Back-to-back Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025 indicate consistent technique and presentation discipline across two full inspection cycles, not a single strong year. For a two-chef operation in a mid-sized city, that kind of sustained recognition places Sabores in a specific tier: serious enough to warrant critical attention, relaxed enough to remain part of the daily rhythm of the city.

The cooking draws from Rioja's ingredient repertoire, with occasional references to broader Spanish or international technique. This is not the maximalist sensory overload associated with the country's most theatrical kitchens, places like DiverXO in Madrid or El Celler de Can Roca in Girona. Nor does it position itself in the Basque-inflected heritage register of Arzak in San Sebastián. Sabores works from a quieter premise: that Rioja's vegetables, meats, and preserved goods, presented with care and precision, can hold the plate without elaborate intervention. Meticulously presented, as the Michelin notation records, but grounded rather than theatrical.

The visual register of a dish matters as much as the flavour logic in kitchens operating at this standard, and the language of contemporary plating — clean lines, considered negative space, deliberate colour — is what distinguishes a Michelin Plate operation from the broader mid-market in any Spanish city. That attention to how a plate looks before anyone touches it is part of the sensory experience Sabores constructs, even in a relaxed room.

How Sabores Sits in Logroño's Dining Tier

Logroño punches considerably above its population size in restaurant quality, largely because La Rioja's wine economy has created a sophisticated local dining culture and a steady stream of visitors with high expectations. The city's serious restaurant bracket now spans several distinct registers. At the higher end of the price scale, Kiro Sushi operates at €€€€ with a Japanese focus that sits apart from the Spanish mainstream. Ajonegro (Fusion) and Ikaro (Creative) both hold €€€ positions with internationally influenced menus. At the same €€ tier as Sabores, La Cocina de Ramón (Traditional Cuisine) takes a more classically rooted approach to regional cooking.

Sabores fits into the gap between those two poles: applying contemporary technique and Michelin-level presentation discipline without moving into the higher price bracket or abandoning the city's ingredient identity. It shares a city with Juan Carlos Ferrando, and together these addresses suggest that Logroño's dining scene has developed enough critical mass at the mid-to-upper tier to make it a credible food destination independent of its wine reputation.

For broader reference, the approach Sabores represents , tightly sourced, regionally anchored contemporary cooking at an accessible price , appears across Spain's secondary food cities in different registers. Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María and Quique Dacosta in Dénia demonstrate what the ingredient-forward Spanish model can reach at its most ambitious. Azurmendi in Larrabetzu shows a similar regional commitment in the Basque country. Sabores operates at a different scale and price point, but the underlying logic , that a region's produce, handled with skill, is sufficient material for serious cooking , connects it to a broader strand in contemporary Spanish gastronomy.

Internationally, the same sensory premise appears in kitchens like Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City, where contemporary technique meets a specific local or regional ingredient identity. The format looks different across those contexts, but the discipline of restraint , choosing what not to do as much as what to do , is consistent.

Planning a Visit

Sabores is located at Plaza del Mercado 2, bajo 3, in central Logroño, within walking distance of most of the city's accommodation and directly accessible from the old town. The €€ price point makes it one of the more approachable Michelin-recognised options in the city. Given the small format typical of two-chef operations and the Google rating of 4.8 across 472 reviews, booking in advance is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings during the wine harvest season in autumn when Logroño sees its highest visitor numbers. Specific hours and booking methods are not confirmed in our data, so checking current availability directly with the venue before visiting is recommended.

For a fuller picture of eating, drinking, and staying in La Rioja's capital, see our full Logroño restaurants guide, our full Logroño hotels guide, our full Logroño bars guide, our full Logroño wineries guide, and our full Logroño experiences guide.

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