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CuisineContemporary
Executive ChefMario Tofe
LocationMadrid, Spain
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

A Michelin Plate restaurant in Madrid's Arganzuela district, Èter runs five distinct tasting menus across the year, each shaped by different ingredient traditions — from mountain produce in autumn to seafood in winter. Latin American influences, particularly from Mexico and Colombia, thread through a contemporary framework that places it well outside the city's more orthodox fine-dining circuit. Ranked #614 in the 2025 Opinionated About Dining Europe list.

Èter restaurant in Madrid, Spain
About

Where Arganzuela Meets the Contemporary Table

Madrid's fine-dining geography has long tilted north and west: Salamanca for the expense-account crowd, Chamberí for the cerebral independents. Arganzuela sits south of the Manzanares, closer to the working rhythms of Legazpi than to the gallery circuit of Alonso Martínez, and that position matters. The neighbourhood has developed its own quiet tier of serious restaurants, operating at a remove from the visibility that central postcodes confer but not from the ambition. Èter, on Calle del Granito, belongs to that tier. The room is intimate and deliberately spare, with paintings by rotating artists providing the only real visual intervention. The music changes with the menu, a detail that sounds gimmicky until you sit through a full service and notice how effectively it modulates the pacing of a meal.

The broader Madrid contemporary scene clusters around a handful of well-capitalised tasting-menu addresses: Desborre, BANCAL, Adaly. At the leading of the city's price tier, DiverXO operates at €€€€ with three Michelin stars, and Coque and Smoked Room hold two stars each at the same price point. Èter sits at €€€, which positions it as a more accessible entry into structured, concept-led tasting menus — not a budget compromise, but a different competitive conversation. The 2025 Michelin Plate recognition and an Opinionated About Dining Europe ranking of #614 (2025) confirm it as a tracked address rather than a neighbourhood curiosity.

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Five Menus, Five Ingredient Logics

The editorial choice at Èter is structural: the restaurant runs five distinct tasting menus across the year rather than one menu with seasonal updates. Each has a name, a focus, and its own ingredient logic. Talo appears twice in spring, Karpo arrives in summer with a vegetable-centred approach, Ouros lands in October with mountain produce as its organising principle, and Thalate takes over in winter with a seafood focus. The names carry enough specificity to signal intent without over-explaining. Ouros, for instance, gestures toward gold and autumn abundance simultaneously; Thalate connects to the sea without the blunt literalism of naming a menu 'mar'.

This structure is rarer in Madrid than it might appear. Most tasting-menu restaurants in the city operate on a single annual menu that rotates incrementally, adjusting dishes as produce changes. Running five fully differentiated menus requires more from both the kitchen and the guest: the kitchen must maintain distinct ingredient vocabularies across the year, and the guest who returns four times will encounter four meaningfully different experiences rather than variations on a single theme. For the committed diner, that is the point. For the occasional visitor, choosing when to go becomes an editorial decision in itself — autumn's Ouros menu for mountain produce, winter's Thalate if the Pacific coast is your reference point.

The sourcing logic embedded in this structure draws directly on Spanish regional produce traditions. Mountain menus in October imply game, fungi, and cured ingredients from the sierras; seafood menus in winter track the North Atlantic and Cantabrian catches that peak in colder months. This is not novel as a concept , plenty of Spanish restaurants have built identity around seasonal sourcing , but the formalisation of it into five named, discrete menus gives Èter a more transparent relationship with its ingredient calendar than most. You know, booking in October, that you are booking for mountain produce. The menu's identity is not a surprise to be revealed; it is part of the information available at the point of reservation.

Latin American Threads in a Spanish Framework

Contemporary Spanish fine dining has absorbed many international influences over the past two decades, but Latin American references remain underrepresented in the upper tiers of Madrid's restaurant scene. The dominant external influence at most starred addresses runs through French classical technique or Japanese minimalism. The Tofé brothers, Mario and Sergio, bring a different set of references, specifically from Mexico and Colombia, shaped through working relationships with chefs from those regions. The result is not fusion in the reductive sense, but a contemporary Spanish framework with recurring ingredient and technique signatures from Mesoamerican and Andean traditions.

This matters for ingredient sourcing specifically. Mexican and Colombian culinary traditions have deep relationships with fermentation, with dried and fresh chilli varieties, with corn preparations, and with herb profiles that differ substantially from European norms. When those references appear inside a structured tasting menu built on Spanish seasonal produce, the combinations become genuinely compositional rather than decorative. Whether that translation holds across all five annual menus, or concentrates more heavily in certain seasons, is something the menu archive would clarify , but as a framing intention it gives Èter a distinct ingredient perspective that its peer set at the €€€ level in Madrid does not widely replicate.

For comparison, En la Parra and Ferretería both operate in the contemporary Madrid space with their own sourcing logics, but neither foregrounds Latin American influence as a structural element. Further afield, the Basque-rooted addresses , Arzak in San Sebastián and Martín Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria , operate at higher price tiers and with very different ingredient traditions. Internationally, the contemporary format has its own distinct expressions at Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City, where cross-cultural ingredient thinking operates through entirely different reference libraries.

The Room and the Service Model

The division of labour at Èter runs clearly: Sergio Tofé as chef, Mario Tofé as maître d' and sommelier. This separation of kitchen and floor across two people who share the project's full weight is common in smaller independent restaurants but functions differently when both roles are covered by founders rather than hired heads of department. The floor perspective and the kitchen perspective are both invested in the same outcome, which tends to produce a consistency of intention from opening to service close. The room's minimalism , intimate scale, spare décor, rotating artworks , reflects a similar economy of means: nothing decorative that does not also serve a purpose.

The Google review aggregate of 4.8 across 617 reviews is a meaningful signal at a restaurant of this size and format. A high average across a substantial volume of reviews, rather than a small number of enthusiastic early adopters, suggests consistent execution across different menus and different seasons. That consistency is harder to achieve with five annual menu rotations than with a single evolving format.

Where Èter Sits in the Broader Picture

Spain's most decorated contemporary tables , El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona , operate at a different scale of recognition and ambition. Èter is not in that conversation yet. What it represents instead is a specific Madrid phenomenon: the small, owner-operated contemporary restaurant that has earned independent critical tracking (Michelin Plate, OAD Europe Top 1000) without the institutional backing or media profile that the city's larger starred addresses command.

That position has its own value for the reader deciding where to allocate their restaurant spending in Madrid. The €€€€ addresses at the leading of the city's tier offer more resource, more production, more accumulated recognition. Èter offers a more direct relationship between the people who conceived the project and the experience of sitting inside it, at a price point that makes a second visit within the same year (to catch a different menu) financially reasonable. For the full picture of where to eat and stay in Madrid, 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.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: C. del Granito, 20, Arganzuela, 28045 Madrid
  • Price range: €€€
  • Awards: Michelin Plate (2024, 2025); Opinionated About Dining Europe #614 (2025)
  • Menu structure: Five named tasting menus per year , Talo (spring, twice), Karpo (summer, vegetable-focused), Ouros (October, mountain produce), Thalate (winter, seafood)
  • Music: Changes with each menu and the stages of the meal
  • Nearest landmark: A few minutes' walk from Plaza de Legazpi
  • Google rating: 4.8 (617 reviews)
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