Restaurant in Barcelona, Spain
Serious neighbourhood cooking at a fair price.

BaLó is a Michelin Plate-recognised contemporary restaurant in Barcelona's Les Corts district, run by chef couple Lena María Grané and Ricky Smith. At the €€ price point with three menu formats including a midweek lunch option, it offers a credible alternative to the city's pricier tasting-menu circuit. Book one to two weeks out — tables are available without a scramble.
At the €€ price point, BaLó is one of the more considered ways to spend an evening in Les Corts. The Mediodía lunch menu keeps costs lower still, making this a credible option if you want contemporary cooking without committing to a four-figure bill. The fuller Baló and Degustación menus ask more of your time and wallet, but both remain a fraction of what you would spend at Barcelona's €€€€ tier. The central question is whether the cooking justifies a deliberate trip to a residential neighbourhood rather than picking something closer to the old town. For food-focused diners, the answer leans yes.
BaLó sits in the Les Corts district, a quieter residential corner of Barcelona that does not pull in the same tourist foot traffic as Eixample or El Born. That works in your favour on two counts: the room has a noticeably calmer energy than similarly priced spots closer to the centre, and the lighting is described as pleasant rather than the punishing brightness or performative dimness that plagues a lot of contemporary spaces. The interior includes a glass-fronted private dining room that reads as genuinely attractive rather than an afterthought partition. The overall atmosphere is relaxed, comfortable, and oriented around the food rather than the social spectacle of being seen — a useful distinction if you are coming here to eat rather than to network.
The kitchen is led by chef couple Lena María Grané and Ricky Smith, who met while working in London. The restaurant's name makes that origin legible: Ba from Barcelona, Ló from London. The cooking reflects both cities without being a gimmick about it. The base is contemporary Spanish technique with international references woven in, which in practice means you are not eating a tapas-adjacent greatest-hits menu. Michelin awarded BaLó a Plate in both 2024 and 2025, the guide's signal that the food is good enough to seek out. That is a meaningful credential at this price bracket — Michelin Plate recognition at €€ pricing is a ratio that is harder to find than the awards tier above it. Google reviewers give it 4.6 across 364 reviews, which at that sample size carries more weight than a handful of five-star ratings.
The squid noodles with chicken skin crumble, shiso, and chicken tea is one confirmed dish that draws on both Asian technique and Spanish product , the kind of combination that either lands precisely or feels forced. Michelin's assessors noted it positively, which is enough to flag it as worth ordering if it appears on the menu during your visit. Beyond that single dish, the cooking philosophy points toward careful textures and layered broths rather than maximalist plating, though specific menu details change and should be confirmed at booking.
Booking difficulty here is rated Easy, which means you are not fighting a 6 AM release-date scramble. A reasonable window of one to two weeks out should secure you a table for most dates, though weekend evenings in a well-reviewed neighbourhood restaurant can tighten up faster than that suggests. If your priority is the Mediodía lunch menu , the more accessible midweek option , you have slightly more flexibility, but it is still worth booking rather than assuming a walk-in will land. The private dining room adds a layer of planning if you are considering it for a group; contact the restaurant directly to confirm availability and group size requirements, as that is not something to leave to chance on arrival.
For visitors staying elsewhere in Barcelona, Les Corts is accessible but requires intent. This is not a restaurant you stumble into. Building a meal at BaLó into an evening in the neighbourhood, or combining it with other reasons to be on that side of the city, makes the logistics easier to justify. If you are already exploring the city's food scene and want to move beyond the well-trodden Eixample circuit, BaLó is a reasonable next stop. For broader context on where it fits, see our full Barcelona restaurants guide, alongside our full Barcelona hotels guide, our full Barcelona bars guide, our full Barcelona wineries guide, and our full Barcelona experiences guide.
There is no confirmed takeaway or delivery offering listed for BaLó. The cooking here , built around multi-course menus, textured broths, and components like chicken skin crumble , is not well-suited to off-premise consumption even if it were offered. The squid noodles with chicken tea is the kind of dish that depends on temperature and timing in a way that a delivery container would undermine. If you want to experience BaLó, the recommendation is to eat in the room. The atmosphere is part of the value proposition at this price point, and the format of the menus is designed to be consumed across a full sitting. Off-premise is not the right lens for this restaurant.
Within Barcelona, BaLó belongs to a broader wave of chef-led neighbourhood restaurants offering serious contemporary cooking outside the headline venues. Closer peers in spirit include Avenir, Contraban, Deliri, and Amar Barcelona. For seafood-focused alternatives, Fishølogy is worth considering if fish-forward cooking is the priority.
At the Michelin-starred and multi-starred level in Spain, the frame of reference shifts considerably. El Celler de Can Roca in Girona and Quique Dacosta in Dénia are a different category of commitment, in both price and planning. Further afield, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria represent the upper ceiling of Spanish fine dining , useful context for where BaLó sits in the national hierarchy. For contemporary cooking in other markets, Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City offer points of comparison for the international influences visible at BaLó. On the coast, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María is a benchmark for what Spanish product-led creativity looks like at three-star level.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BaLó | Contemporary | BaLó is run by chef couple Lena María Grané and Ricky Smith who met while working in London, hence the unusual name of the restaurant which combines the first syllable of Barcelona and London respectively. The contemporary-influenced cooking here, which also showcases some international influences, is centred around several menus: one, a more reasonably priced “Mediodía” (midweek lunch only), and two more extensive menus entitled Baló and Degustación. This contemporary-style restaurant boasts a stylish and comfortable decor, pleasant lighting, as well as an attractive glass-fronted private dining room. We loved the squid noodles with chicken skin crumble, shiso and chicken tea!; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Cocina Hermanos Torres | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Disfrutar | Progressive, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Lasarte | Progressive Spanish, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Cinc Sentits | Modern Spanish, Creative | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Enoteca Paco Pérez | Modern Spanish, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Barcelona for this tier.
Yes, and the Mediodía midweek lunch menu makes it a practical solo option at the €€ price point — lower spend, no need to commit to a longer tasting format. Booking difficulty is rated easy, so there is no pressure to plan weeks ahead. For solo diners who want a more counter-focused experience, some of Barcelona's larger destination restaurants offer bar seating, but BaLó's neighbourhood scale and relaxed format work in favour of dining alone without feeling conspicuous.
BaLó is primarily known for Contemporary in Barcelona.
BaLó is located in Barcelona, at Carrer de Déu i Mata, 141, Les Corts, 08029 Barcelona, Spain.
You can reach BaLó via the venue's official channels.
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