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Málaga, Spain

Uvedoble Taberna

CuisineTapas Bar
Executive ChefWillie Orellana
LocationMálaga, Spain
Opinionated About Dining

On Calle Císter, a short walk from the Cathedral, Uvedoble Taberna sits inside Málaga's serious tapas tier: ranked in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list in both 2024 and 2025, and holding a 4.5 Google rating across nearly 5,000 reviews. Chef Willie Orellana runs a kitchen that draws regulars at lunch and a fuller room by evening, open daily except Sundays from 12:30 pm.

Uvedoble Taberna restaurant in Málaga, Spain
About

Where Calle Císter Meets the Serious Tapas Tier

The old city centre of Málaga has an unusual dual identity. For every tourist-facing terrace angling for Cathedral views, there is a quieter address on a nearby street where the cooking takes precedence over the setting. Calle Císter, running alongside the Cathedral's northern flank, belongs to the latter category. The street is navigable and unhurried, and it is here that Uvedoble Taberna has built a following substantial enough to appear on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe ranking in consecutive years: number 261 in 2024 and number 284 in 2025. That trajectory places it in a specific tier of Andalusian casual dining where reputation travels mostly by word of mouth and repeat visits rather than destination marketing.

Málaga's tapas scene has matured considerably over the past decade. The city no longer occupies its old role as a transit point between Sevilla and the Costa del Sol; it is now a food destination in its own right, with a range that spans tasting-menu rooms like Kaleja and Aire at the contemporary Andalusian end, higher-concept addresses like Blossom, and a deeper bench of tabernas that prioritise craft over ceremony. Uvedoble Taberna sits in that last group, and within it, closer to the leading than the middle.

The Lunch and Evening Divide

The experience at Uvedoble Taberna shifts meaningfully depending on when you arrive, a pattern common to well-run tabernas in southern Spain but worth understanding before you book. Lunch in Málaga runs from roughly half past twelve until mid-afternoon, and the midday service here draws a local crowd: professionals from nearby offices, residents of the historic centre, and the occasional visitor who has done enough research to know that early afternoon in an Andalusian kitchen is often when produce is freshest and the kitchen is working at full tempo. The pacing is quicker, the room less full, and the interaction with staff more direct. This is the service that regulars tend to prefer, partly for the relative ease of getting a table and partly because the daytime light in this part of Málaga changes the mood of the room entirely.

By evening, closer to nine or ten o'clock as Spanish dinner culture dictates, Uvedoble Taberna operates in a different register. The room fills, the ambient noise rises, and the meal becomes less about efficiency and more about duration. The two services are not opposites so much as different expressions of the same kitchen, and neither is obviously preferable. Visitors on a tight itinerary tend to do better at lunch; those who want the full social texture of Málaga's evening dining tend to find more of it later. The taberna is open Monday through Saturday from 12:30 pm to midnight, which makes it one of the longer-service addresses in the area. Sundays are closed.

Chef Willie Orellana and the Taberna Format

The taberna format in Andalusia has its own grammar: shared plates, produce-led menus that shift with the market, a wine list weighted toward southern Spanish producers, and an implicit understanding that grazing across multiple small dishes is the correct approach. Chef Willie Orellana operates within that tradition rather than against it, which is part of why Uvedoble Taberna has accumulated the kind of sustained recognition that the OAD ranking represents. Opinionated About Dining's casual Europe list is built from a critic and enthusiast crowd that tends to favour technically honest cooking over novelty, and a two-year consecutive appearance signals consistency rather than a single strong year. That kind of durability in a mid-size European city's casual dining tier is a meaningful signal.

For comparison, the Basque tapas tradition has produced similar long-term OAD presences at places like Antonio Bar and Bar Bergara in San Sebastián, where the pinxtos format sets a different but comparable bar for craft-driven casual dining. Andalusia's approach is less structured in presentation but no less precise in sourcing, and Uvedoble Taberna represents that regional tradition credibly.

Where Uvedoble Sits in Málaga's Wider Range

Placing Uvedoble Taberna accurately within Málaga's dining range requires acknowledging the breadth of what the city now offers. At the upper end, Málaga has sophisticated contemporary rooms drawing on the same ambition that has defined Spanish fine dining since El Celler de Can Roca, Arzak, and DiverXO reshaped expectations nationally. Closer to Málaga's own Andalusian tradition, coastal producers supply restaurants with the same ingredients that inform southern kitchens from Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María to Quique Dacosta in Dénia. Uvedoble Taberna is not in competition with those registers; it occupies a different but legitimate position, where the goal is a well-executed casual meal rather than a formal progression through courses.

Other Málaga addresses worth triangulating against include Alaparte and Arte de Cozina, which approach Malagueño cooking from different angles. Azurmendi in the Basque Country and its relationship to regional terroir offers a structural comparison for how a serious kitchen can operate within deeply local parameters, which is a useful frame for understanding what distinguishes Uvedoble Taberna from generic Andalusian tapas. The 4.5 rating across 4,679 Google reviews is also worth reading carefully: at that volume, the score is statistically meaningful rather than the result of a small sample of enthusiastic early visitors.

Planning Your Visit

Uvedoble Taberna is at Calle Císter, 15, in Málaga's historic centre, close to the Cathedral and within easy walking distance of the Alcazaba. The kitchen runs from 12:30 pm to midnight, Monday through Saturday, with no Sunday service. For those building a broader Málaga itinerary, the EP Club guides cover the full range: restaurants, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences across the city. Arriving at lunch on a weekday gives the leading chance of a direct table, while weekend evenings will require more patience or advance planning.

What Regulars Order at Uvedoble Taberna

The OAD recognition and the volume of Google reviews both point toward a kitchen with a defined, consistent output rather than a menu that rotates dramatically by season. Andalusian tapas tradition anchors the likely repertoire: cured fish from the Mediterranean coast, fried preparations using local oil, and cured meats from the inland provinces. Without verified dish-level data, it would be inaccurate to name specific items, but the cuisine type designation as a tapas bar combined with the casual OAD category and the chef's local context all point toward a kitchen working in that southern Spanish register. Regulars at this type of Andalusian taberna typically navigate toward the daily specials, which reflect whatever the market offered that morning, rather than anchoring on a fixed signature. The 12:30 pm opening means the kitchen is ready for a full lunch from the first sitting, which is when the daily-driven dishes are at their most direct.

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