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Trumfes holds consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) for seasonal Catalan cooking in Llívia, a Spanish exclave surrounded by French territory in the Pyrenees. The kitchen anchors its menu in mountain-sourced ingredients, from black morel mushrooms and green asparagus in spring to game and summer truffle when the season allows. À la carte and tasting menu formats sit at a mid-range price point that is rare at this recognition level.
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- Address
- Carrer del Raval, 27, 17527 Llívia, Girona, Spain
- Phone
- +34 972 14 60 31
- Website
- restaurantrumfes.com

Where the Mountain Sets the Menu
Llívia occupies an unusual position in European geography: a Spanish municipality completely encircled by French territory in the Cerdanya valley, sitting at altitude in the eastern Pyrenees. The town's political history is well documented, a 1659 treaty excluded it from the broader transfer of Catalan territory to France, but its culinary identity is shaped less by maps than by the land immediately surrounding it. At this elevation, seasons arrive with force and leave abruptly, and kitchens that pay attention to that rhythm produce food that reads differently from what you find on the plains below.
Carrer del Raval, 27 puts you on a quiet residential street in a town of fewer than 1,500 people. The approach to Trumfes is unhurried in the way that mountain towns tend to be: stone buildings, narrow lanes, and an absence of the retail noise that accompanies most dining destinations. That physical setting matters because it conditions what the kitchen can reasonably claim to source locally, and what it is honest to put on the plate.
Two Michelin Plates and What They Signal
Michelin has awarded Trumfes a Plate in both 2024 and 2025, a designation indicating cooking of sufficient quality to merit attention without reaching star level. In Spain's broader fine dining context, that comparable set is instructive. The country's upper tier, represented by houses such as El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Disfrutar in Barcelona, Arzak in San Sebastián, DiverXO in Madrid, and Quique Dacosta in Dénia, operates at the €€€€ price point with tasting menus designed around maximalist technique and extended service. Trumfes sits at €€, which is a meaningful gap. The Michelin Plate recognition at that price level, in a town this remote, suggests a kitchen executing with consistency rather than one stretching for spectacle.
For comparison, other Plate-holding restaurants in rural Catalonia often compete on tourist traffic from proximity to ski resorts or larger regional centres. Llívia's relative obscurity means Trumfes draws an audience that has made a deliberate choice to be there, which tends to concentrate the room with people who are eating attentively rather than incidentally.
Sourcing at Altitude: Why It Changes the Plate
The kitchen at Trumfes organises its menu around seasonal and local ingredients, and at this altitude in the Pyrenees that phrase carries specific weight. The Cerdanya valley is known for game, foraged mushrooms, and mountain dairy; the surrounding terrain delivers ingredients with a compressed seasonality that forces discipline. Black morel mushrooms paired with green asparagus and brioche is the kind of dish that only works within a short window in spring, when both ingredients are at their most direct. The same logic applies to game in autumn and to the summer truffle preparations that appear when conditions allow.
Mountain-inspired rice dishes appear as occasional menu anchors, which is less common in Pyrenean cooking than in coastal Catalonia but reflects the valley's historic cross-border food culture. The Cerdanya has long traded ingredients across what is now the French border, and rice preparations with mountain ingredients represent a quiet nod to that hybrid tradition.
This sourcing approach positions Trumfes in a different register from the laboratory-focused creativity of Spain's headline restaurants. The kitchen's reference point is closer to the Catalan tradition of cooking what the season provides and adjusting technique to serve the ingredient rather than the other way around. That is not a lesser ambition; it is a different one, and it produces food that reads as place-specific in a way that more technically driven menus sometimes do not.
Format and the Decision Between À la Carte and the Tasting Menu
Trumfes offers both à la carte and tasting menu formats, which at the €€ price range gives the kitchen broad commercial reach without forcing every table into a single experience. The tasting menu here is the more direct expression of seasonal sourcing logic: dishes appear in sequence tied to what is available, and the kitchen controls the narrative of the meal. The à la carte format suits the visitor who wants two or three courses organised around specific ingredients in season, including the veal steak tartare with truffled fried egg and summer truffle, which appears in the kitchen's own description of its repertoire.
Both formats benefit from the mountain rice dishes when they are on offer, as these represent the most regionally specific expression on the menu. Ordering around those anchors, where available, gives the leading read of what the kitchen does that a restaurant at lower altitude could not replicate with the same authenticity.
Planning a Visit to Llívia
Llívia requires a deliberate approach. The town sits in the Pyrenees roughly equidistant from Puigcerdà on the Spanish side and Bourg-Madame on the French side, with access via road through French territory from either direction. Driving is the practical option; public transport connections to the exclave are limited. The surrounding area draws visitors to the ski resorts of the Cerdanya valley through winter and to hiking and cycling in warmer months, which means Trumfes benefits from seasonal visitor flows without being solely dependent on them.
At the €€ price point with Michelin recognition, booking ahead is advisable, particularly on weekends and during peak mountain seasons. The kitchen's seasonal menu structure means the experience in March, when morels and asparagus arrive, is materially different from what you find in October during game season. Timing a visit around a specific ingredient window, if you have flexibility, gives the meal more focus.
For broader context on what the area offers beyond this address, our full Llívia restaurants guide, Llívia hotels guide, Llívia bars guide, Llívia wineries guide, and Llívia experiences guide cover the full range of options in the exclave and surrounding Cerdanya valley.
For those building a broader Spanish fine dining itinerary, the regional context extends from Catalonia into the Basque Country and beyond. Houses worth considering alongside a Cerdanya stay include Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, Mugaritz in Errenteria, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Ricard Camarena in València, and Atrio in Cáceres. For modern cuisine outside Spain entirely, Frantzén in Stockholm, FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María represent different points on the contemporary fine dining spectrum.
In Context: Similar Options
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TrumfesThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Modern Catalan Fine Dining | $$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| Mas Romeu | Classic Catalan Fine Dining | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Lloret de Mar |
| Deliri | Modern Spanish Fusion | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample |
| Oníric | Modern Spanish Fine Dining | $$$ | Bib Gourmand | la Vila de Gracia |
| Gaudium | Modern Catalan Fine Dining | $$$ | Michelin Plate | La Vila Closa |
| L’Hostal de Ca l’Enric | Traditional Catalan | $$ | Bib Gourmand | La Vall de Bianya |
Continue exploring
More in Llívia
Restaurants in Llívia
Browse all →At a Glance
- Cozy
- Intimate
- Rustic
- Elegant
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Family
- Open Kitchen
- Private Dining
- Extensive Wine List
- Local Sourcing
Cozy and intimate with warm lighting, multiple dining spaces including a wine cellar private room, and views of the open kitchen.









