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Food & Drink

The best places to try tapas in Spain

Tempt your tastebuds this World Tapas Day with some of the best spots to sample tapas across Spain and its islands…

Katie McGonagle
20 June 2024
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Spain is famous for its food – from paella and gazpacho to Spanish tortilla and chocolate-dipped churros – but there’s one dish that offers a taste of the country’s culture as well.

Tapas might be small in size but they’re big on flavour, packing Spain’s rich culinary heritage and abundant local produce into tiny, bite-sized morsels that can be completely different depending on which region you’re in.

The foodie tradition comes from the Spanish word ‘tapar’, meaning ‘to cover’, from the days when innkeepers served up glasses of sherry topped with a small piece of bread and meat or cheese, supposedly to stop flies and dust from getting into their patrons’ drinks.

An alternative version says medieval King Alfonso X became partial to the small plates while recovering from illness and decreed that they should be served across the kingdom to moderate the effects of alcohol.

Whatever you might believe about their origins, tapas are now firmly established as part of the country’s culinary repertoire – so you can join locals in hopping from one tapas bar to another enjoying an early-evening bite or two with each glass of vino. But which Spanish cities have the best tapas, which dishes should you look out for in each region, and do they come free when you order a drink?

Five places to try authentic Tapas in Spain

1. Bilbao

Ribera Market, Bilbao (Katie McGonogle)

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You won’t find tapas bars in Bilbao – instead, you’ll find them serving pintxos (pronounced ‘pinchos’), which comes from the word for ‘spike’, aka the toothpick that holds these ingredients together before they are placed on top of a piece of bread. Most famous is the ‘gilda’, made up of a spicy green pepper, anchovy and an olive, said to have been invented at the Casa Vallés bar in San Sebastian – another Basque city that’s known for its tapas – and named after the character played by Rita Hayworth in the 1946 film. Admire the Art Deco architecture and stained glass of the waterfront Ribera Market, before tucking into a tour of its food stalls and booths, where you’ll see piles of glistening gildas alongside croquetas de bacalao (cod croquettes) and deep-fried idiazabal (sheep’s) cheese unique to the region – best enjoyed with a glass of the local white wine, txakoli.

2. Granada

Taberna Del Puerta Carmen restaurant, Granada (Shutterstock)

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Set at the foot of the Sierra Nevada mountains in a region known for its abundant produce, yet only an hour from the Mediterranean coast, this Andalusian city brings the best of both land and sea to its renowned foodie scene. Not only do most places still uphold the tradition of a free tapa with each drink – sadly not a given across many other Spanish cities these days – but you can also pick up on the region’s Arab influences in its cuisine. It was the last region to be ruled over the Moors until the late 15th century, resulting in dishes rich with spices such as cumin, coriander and nutmeg. You’ll find plenty of fried sardines and anchovies, fresh Andalusian gazpacho, grilled sausage and local specialities like ham and beans, San Antón stew and – not for the faint-hearted – the Sacromonte tortilla (omelette) which includes calf and pig’s brains and testicles, so only order if you dare. Follow local residents on the many tapas routes around the city, with plenty of options around Plaza Nueva and Plaza Campillo or along the bar-filled streets of Calle Navas or Calle San Mateo.

3. Valladolid

University and cathedral in Valladolid, Spain (Shutterstock)

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Less than an hour from Madrid by high-speed train sits the 17th-century Spanish capital of Valladolid, a hotbed of historic palaces, sweeping plazas and galleries, including the National Museum of Sculpture and the home of Don Quixote writer Cervantes. Each November, it’s also home to an annual tapas competition bringing together chefs from around the world to compete for both national and international titles, and prompting every bar with a tempting tapas menu to up its game. The region is known for its hearty meat dishes, so you’ll find top-quality Iberico ham and morucha beef from Salamanca in charcuteries like Jamonería Sarmiento, which converts into a tapas bar after dark; in the bars around Plaza San Martín and Plaza Martí y Monsó; or from the local producers in Mercado del Val, a late 19th-century iron-built market near the grand church of San Benito el Real. Or come for the festival, when creative culinary talents stretch the definition of tapas as far as it can go with fusion ingredients from all over the world.

4. Las Palmas

Vegueta old town, Las Palmas, Gran Canaria (Shutterstock)

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The Gran Canarian capital’s old town of Vegueta is a twisting maze of cobbled streets overlooked by brightly coloured buildings and wrought-iron balconies, centred around the grand Catedral de Santa Ana and home of Christopher Columbus, Casa de Colón. On a Thursday evening, people spill out from the bars along Calle Mendizábal and the old town’s array of pedestrian plazas on a pincho crawl, where a drink and a single serving should set you back less than €3. Alternatively, dine under the arches of the city market Mercado del Puerto, a Modernist structure designed by French engineer Gustave Eiffel, where you can pick up tempting bites from different stalls – each with its own speciality, from sheep’s cheeses to local cured meats – then perch at its tall tables to wolf them down. Expect mainland Spain classics alongside the Canary Islands’ signature papas arrugadas (wrinkled potatoes) with red and green mojo sauces.

5. Logroño

Calle Laurel, Logroño, Spain (Shutterstock)

La Rioja region might be best known for its eponymous wines, but its tapas game is top-notch too, not least in capital Logroño. In the heart of its medieval old town, Calle Laurel and its surrounding streets bring together dozens of bars and restaurants dishing out delicious pinchos each night, so you could spend an entire evening hopping from one spot to the next and still have to come back several times to try them all. Each place has its signature dish featuring local specialities like white asparagus, sun-ripened peppers, garlic-infused mushrooms and regional favourite patatas a la riojana which mixes in paprika-spiced chorizo. You’ll find the spicy sausage in every form, but the simplest and best is chistorra, or grilled chorizo with paprika and garlic.

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