Skip to Main Content
Traditional Mountain Spanish Cuisine
← Collection
Soldeu, Andorra

Sol i Neu

CuisineContemporary
Price€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium
Michelin

Sol i Neu sits at the base of the Grandvalira pistes in Soldeu, pairing mountain-facing views with contemporary Pyrenean cooking developed under the oversight of Francis Paniego. The à la carte runs alongside a seasonal tasting menu, with half-plate options giving the meal a flexible, grazeable structure. Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 places it among the more technically considered dining options in the Andorran ski corridor.

Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

Plan your visit on PearlPlan Your Visit
Address
Camí de la Mola, 10, AD100 Soldeu, Andorra
Phone
+376 851 325
Sol i Neu restaurant in Soldeu, Andorra
About

Where the Slopes End and the Table Begins

At altitude, the relationship between a restaurant and its setting is rarely incidental. In ski resorts across the Pyrenees, dining tends to fall into two camps: the fast-service mountain refuge built for caloric replenishment, and the more considered table that treats the landscape as a backdrop rather than just a justification. Sol i Neu is a restaurant in Soldeu, Andorra, at Camí de la Mola, 10, AD100 Soldeu, serving traditional mountain Spanish cuisine at the foot of the Grandvalira pistes.

Guests arriving from the slopes or from the village below settle into a room that draws its visual language from the mountain environment, with materials and an atmosphere that reference the Pyrenean context without reducing it to cliché. The à la carte offers half-plate options alongside full portions, which changes the rhythm of a meal considerably. Rather than a fixed procession of courses, diners can build something more exploratory, moving between preparations and textures at a pace that reflects appetite rather than format. This structural flexibility is more common in urban contemporary dining than in resort settings, and its presence here signals a kitchen thinking beyond the captive-audience dynamic that mountain restaurants can default to.

The Kitchen's Logic: Tradition as a Starting Point

Contemporary Pyrenean cooking, as practiced across the wider region, tends to use traditional technique and local ingredient identity as raw material rather than finished product. The direction at Sol i Neu follows that logic: the cooking frames itself around regional foundations and then applies current technique and texture work to produce something that reads as both familiar and considered. Chef Jordi Grau leads the kitchen, with the program developed under the oversight of Francis Paniego, a figure with deep roots in the serious dining culture of the Rioja region and significant recognition across the Spanish culinary world. That supervisory lineage gives the kitchen a frame of reference that reaches beyond Andorra's small dining scene.

The menu's structure, with a seasonal tasting menu running alongside the à la carte, is the standard dual-format approach at this price tier in southern European contemporary dining. What the half-plate option adds is granularity: the ability to sample across a wider range of preparations in a single sitting without committing to a set sequence. In a resort context, where guests may be eating at different stages of fatigue or hunger depending on their day, this is a practical and intelligent piece of menu architecture.

Michelin awarded Sol i Neu its Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, a signal of consistent kitchen quality rather than a moment of notice. The Plate designation, which indicates cooking that meets Michelin's threshold for quality without yet reaching star level, places Sol i Neu in a tier above the general resort dining offer in the area and aligns it with the more technically serious end of Andorran restaurant culture. For comparison, Ibaya operates at the €€€€ tier in Soldeu with a creative modern cuisine format, while Koy Hermitage offers Japanese cooking at the same price point, giving Soldeu an unusually varied upper tier for a village of its scale.

How the Meal Moves

The dining ritual at Sol i Neu rewards a deliberate approach. The cheeks cooked three ways, which appears in Michelin's own notes on the restaurant, illustrates the kitchen's method: a single cut of meat interpreted through grilling, breading, and a pil-pil preparation, each technique producing a different texture and register from the same base ingredient. This kind of within-dish variation is a signature move in contemporary Spanish cooking, where demonstrating range through repetition and transformation has become a mark of kitchen confidence. It also makes for a meal that is more interesting to eat slowly than quickly, which suits the setting.

The pil-pil reference is worth noting for context. Pil-pil is a Basque emulsion sauce built from the gelatin of salt cod and olive oil, requiring patience and technique to execute correctly. Its appearance in a Pyrenean mountain restaurant signals a kitchen drawing on the Basque-Navarran culinary corridor that runs through the highlands to the west, a tradition with its own technical rigour distinct from both Catalan and Castilian approaches. That connection is reinforced by the Paniego oversight, given his base in the Rioja Alta area where Basque and Riojan influences intersect.

Soldeu's Table Culture in Context

Andorra's dining culture is shaped by its unusual status: a small principality with a ski economy, a tax structure that keeps alcohol and food pricing different from neighbouring Spain and France, and a tourist base that skews toward winter sports visitors who may or may not prioritize the table. Within that context, the cluster of more serious restaurants in and around Soldeu is worth noting. Elsewhere in Andorra, Beç in Escaldes-Engordany applies a similar contemporary approach to traditional Andorran cooking, while Celler d'en Toni in Andorra la Vella operates at the €€ tier with contemporary technique, and Les Pardines 1819 in Encamp extends the region's table culture further. The wider contemporary dining conversation that Sol i Neu participates in connects to practitioners across very different geographies: Alo in Toronto, Jungsik in Seoul, Orfali Bros in Dubai, and Smoked Room in Dubai all work within the contemporary format, demonstrating how broadly the idiom has spread. Closer to home in terms of category, César in New York, Solbam in Seoul, Eatanic Garden in Seoul, and Brutø in Denver represent the range of interpretations the contemporary classification now holds across markets.

Planning Your Visit

Sol i Neu sits at Camí de la Mola, 10, AD100 Soldeu, positioned directly at the base of the ski area, which makes it accessible both from the pistes and from the village. The price tier is €€€, placing it above mid-range resort dining but below the €€€€ tier occupied by Ibaya and Koy Hermitage. Google reviews show a score of 3.9 across 456 reviews. The à la carte format with half-plate options gives flexibility for those who want a shorter meal, while the seasonal tasting menu suits a longer, more structured evening.

Frequently asked questions

Cuisine Context

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Rustic
  • Scenic
Best For
  • Group Dining
  • Casual Hangout
Experience
  • Terrace
  • Open Kitchen
Views
  • Mountain
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Cozy wood-paneled interior in Andorran style with warm lighting, complemented by a sunny terrace overlooking snowy slopes.