Restaurant in A Coruña, Spain
Market-driven sharing plates, no ceremony required.

A Espiga holds two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.8 Google rating, making it one of the stronger calls at the €€ price point in A Coruña. The kitchen works without a freezer, so the market-driven menu of sharing plates shifts daily. Book at least a week out for weekends; walk-ins are a risk in this intimate room near Plaza de María Pita.
If you're choosing between A Espiga and the more formal, tasting-menu-only route at Árbore da Veira, the decision comes down to what kind of evening you want. Árbore da Veira is the city's most technically ambitious table, priced accordingly at €€€. A Espiga, at €€, is where you go when you want cooking that takes itself seriously without requiring a ceremonial commitment. Two Michelin Plates in consecutive years (2024 and 2025) confirm the kitchen is operating at a documented level of quality. A Google rating of 4.8 across more than 500 reviews suggests the consistency extends beyond award season. Book here if you want market-driven Galician cooking in an atmospheric room, with sharing plates and flexibility built into the format.
A Espiga sits on Rúa Santiago, steps from the Plaza de María Pita, which puts it in one of the most historically dense parts of A Coruña. The interior is intimate, with stone walls that hold the warmth of a room that was clearly designed for conversation rather than performance. The open kitchen means you're aware of the cooking without it dominating the energy — this is not a chef's-theatre setup. The ambient level is social rather than loud: a good room for groups catching up over shared plates, and late enough into the evening to function as the kind of place where dinner extends naturally into another round rather than arriving at a hard stop. For travellers arriving in A Coruña without a fixed schedule, that flexibility is worth knowing. Galician dining culture pushes dinner late, and A Espiga fits that rhythm. If you're coming from a bar crawl along the harbour with stops at A Coruña's bar scene, this is a kitchen worth arriving at with an appetite rather than a clock.
The kitchen works without a freezer, which means the menu shifts with what's available at market each day. That's not a marketing claim: it's a structural commitment that limits what can be served and forces the kitchen to make decisions based on what's genuinely fresh. The format leans toward sharing dishes alongside a handful of recurring specialities, including smoked croquettes, a seasonal tortilla called "Nuestra Gilda" that changes throughout the year, and rice dishes designed for two. This is Galician produce cooked with care and some creative ambition, not a tourist-facing approximation of regional food. For food-focused travellers who've been through the Basque circuit at places like Arzak or Azurmendi and want to see what Galicia's northwest is doing at a mid-price level, A Espiga is a credible answer. It is not trying to compete with El Celler de Can Roca or Quique Dacosta — nor should it. It is trying to serve honest, seasonally anchored food at a price that makes it a realistic weeknight option, and by that measure it succeeds.
The name itself is a deliberate nod: "A Espiga" means ear of corn in Galician, a play on the chef's surname Trigo, which is Spanish for wheat. That kind of self-aware identity signals a kitchen that knows what it wants to be , grounded, local, specific. Compare that framing to the farm-to-table format at Au Gré du Vent in Belgium or Wein- und Tafelhaus in Germany , all three are working from a similar philosophy of market availability driving the menu, with regional specificity as the anchor. A Espiga's version is distinctly Galician.
At the €€ price point with an easy booking difficulty rating, A Espiga is not the kind of table that requires a two-month lead time. That said, the intimate room and strong local following mean you should not assume a walk-in will work on a Friday or Saturday evening. Book at least a week out for weekends; midweek reservations are generally more flexible. The location near Plaza de María Pita makes it a natural anchor for an evening that starts with drinks along the Marinería or a walk through the old town. If you're planning a broader A Coruña trip, cross-reference with our full A Coruña restaurants guide, hotels guide, and experiences guide to build the full picture. Other strong €€ options in the city worth knowing before you commit: A Mundiña for Galician tradition, 55 Pasos for modern Spanish, and Artabria or Asador Coruña if traditional cuisine is your priority.
A Espiga earns its Michelin recognition without demanding the full ceremony that usually accompanies it. For food-focused travellers at the €€ price range who want a room with character, a kitchen with documented discipline, and a format built for sharing and lingering, this is one of the stronger calls in A Coruña. It is not the right choice if you want a structured tasting menu experience , that's Árbore da Veira's territory. But if you want serious Galician cooking in a setting that feels lived-in rather than staged, book A Espiga and order the rice.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Espiga | Farm to table | Located in the heart of A Coruña, very close to the Plaza de María Pita and Los Cantones which showcase the city’s historical heritage, this restaurant (which translates as “ear of corn” in Galician, a play on the name of chef Koke Trigo (“trigo” is the Spanish word for “wheat”) provides the backdrop for cuisine that highlights his full personality. In the intimate interior, featuring stone walls and a kitchen that opens out on to the dining room, the focus is on market-inspired cooking that is continually reinvented in line with fresh ingredients available daily, a fact reinforced by the lack of a freezer here. The menu includes an impressive array of dishes for sharing alongside specialities such as creamy smoked croquettes, “Nuestra Gilda” (a tortilla that changes with the seasons), delicious rice dishes (for two people) etc.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| NaDo | Gallician, Creative | Unknown | — | |
| Árbore da Veira | Creative | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Miga | Traditional Cuisine | Unknown | — | |
| El de Alberto | Modern Cuisine | Unknown | — | |
| Taberna 5 Mares | Contemporary | Unknown | — |
How A Espiga stacks up against the competition.
At €€, A Espiga is straightforwardly good value for a Michelin Plate restaurant. You're getting a daily-changing, market-driven menu in a room with real character near Plaza de María Pita, without the price premium that Michelin recognition usually demands. For the same budget, you'd be looking at more generic bistro fare elsewhere in the city.
The smoked croquettes and the seasonal tortilla called 'Nuestra Gilda' are specifically highlighted as signature dishes. The rice dishes are designed for two people and worth ordering if you're there with a partner. Beyond those anchors, the menu shifts daily based on market availability, so ask the kitchen what's freshest that day.
A Espiga is a stone-walled, open-kitchen room at €€ pricing — the atmosphere is relaxed and unfussy. Smart casual is appropriate, but the venue's format doesn't call for anything formal. Think what you'd wear to a good neighbourhood restaurant, not a tasting-menu occasion.
Árbore da Veira is the step up if you want a full tasting-menu format with more ceremony. Miga and El de Alberto offer comparable casual, produce-led cooking at a similar price tier. NaDo is the comparison to make if fish and Galician seafood are your priority over the broader sharing-plate format A Espiga runs.
The venue database does not confirm bar seating at A Espiga. The dining room features an open kitchen that looks into the room, but specific counter or bar arrangements aren't documented. check the venue's official channels before planning around that format.
A Espiga is not structured around a fixed tasting menu — the format is sharing plates and à la carte dishes, including sharing rice for two. If you want a curated multi-course progression, Árbore da Veira in A Coruña is the more appropriate choice. A Espiga's strength is flexibility and daily market variation, not a locked sequence.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.