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    Restaurant in Córdoba, Spain

    Choco

    830pts

    Book ahead: Córdoba's best creative tasting menu.

    Choco, Restaurant in Córdoba

    About Choco

    Choco is Córdoba's strongest case for a tasting-menu dinner: Michelin-starred, OAD top-200 in Europe, and built around Kisko García's personal connection to Andalucían ingredients. Book three to four weeks ahead — availability is limited to five services a week, and it fills. At €€€€, it earns its price tier in a city where that level of creative cooking is rare.

    Should You Book Choco?

    Getting a table at Choco is genuinely difficult, and it is worth the effort. The restaurant operates only five services a week — lunch and dinner Wednesday through Saturday, plus Sunday lunch — which means availability tightens fast. Add a Michelin star earned in 2024, a ranking of #176 in Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Europe that same year (rising to #193 in 2025), and a dining room that seats a limited number of guests per service, and you are dealing with one of Andalucía's harder reservations to secure. Plan at least three to four weeks ahead, more if you are visiting on a Friday or Saturday evening. If those slots are gone, the Sunday lunch service is your most practical fallback.

    What Choco Is

    Choco is a creative tasting-menu restaurant in Córdoba's Sureste district, built around chef Kisko García's personal connection to the neighbourhood where he grew up. The room reads as elegantly minimalist , clean lines, restrained décor , but the experience is structured to feel personal rather than clinical. Two tasting menus are on offer: Barrio Antiguo and Kisko García, both drawing on ingredients from the Valle de Los Pedroches and the area around Villanueva de Córdoba. Locally sourced, seasonal produce (organic where available) is the operating principle, not a marketing claim. Wine pairing is available as an add-on.

    The sequence matters here. The experience is designed to begin at the entrance, move through an aperitif in the kitchen, and finish at your table in the dining room. That progression , from threshold to kitchen to table , is not just logistical choreography. The aperitif stage in the kitchen gives you a direct view of the operation before you sit down, and for anyone travelling specifically to eat well, that kind of access adds context to what follows. It is one of the more considered ways a tasting-menu restaurant can frame its own food, letting the cooking environment inform the eating experience rather than keeping the two entirely separate.

    The Counter Angle

    The kitchen aperitif moment at Choco functions as this restaurant's version of counter seating. You are not eating a full meal in the kitchen, but the stage where you are brought in to drink and observe is the point at which the formality of a high-end tasting room briefly drops. For food-focused travellers, this is where you pick up the details that make a meal memorable rather than merely impressive: the rhythm of the kitchen, the scale of the operation, the specificity of the ingredients García is working with. If you are the kind of diner who wants to understand what you are eating and why, that aperitif stage gives you a frame of reference that the dining room alone cannot.

    At the €€€€ price tier, Choco is a meaningful spend by Córdoba standards , comparable to Noor, the city's other fine-dining benchmark. What you are paying for is not just the food but the full arc of the evening: the entrance, the kitchen, the dining room, and a tasting menu that reflects a specific Andalucían geography rather than a generic creative-cooking template. That specificity is the argument for the price.

    Timing and Practical Details

    The leading time to visit depends on what you want from the experience. Dinner on a weekday (Wednesday or Thursday) gives you the fullest service with the least pressure , the room is less likely to be running at capacity, and the kitchen tends to operate at a steadier pace. Friday and Saturday evenings are the hardest to book and the most energetic. Sunday lunch is the one service where a same-week reservation occasionally opens up, making it a reasonable option if your travel schedule is not fixed far in advance. The restaurant is closed Monday and Tuesday, which is worth building around if Choco is the primary reason for your visit to Córdoba.

    Córdoba's climate makes spring (April to June) and autumn (September to November) the most comfortable periods for travel in general. Summer heat in the city is significant, but Choco's interior room means the season does not affect the meal itself , only the experience of getting there and exploring the city around it. If you are combining this reservation with visits to the Mezquita-Catedral or the historic centre, spring and autumn give you more outside the restaurant to work with. For regional context, Choco sits within a broader network of serious Spanish creative cooking , a category that includes El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, and Azurmendi in Larrabetzu , but Choco's positioning is deliberately local rather than nationally ambitious. It is not trying to compete with DiverXO in Madrid on spectacle or with Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María on conceptual scale. The comparison that matters is whether it earns its place as the finest creative-cooking option in Córdoba itself , and on that measure, the OAD rankings and Michelin recognition confirm that it does.

    For other creative cooking at a similar level in Spain, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona and Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen give you a useful calibration of where Choco sits internationally , respected, regionally grounded, and operating at a level well above its city's average, without yet reaching the top tier of European creative cooking. Within Córdoba's restaurant scene, also worth noting are ReComiendo, Vertigo, and Arbequina for different price points and styles.

    Practical Details at a Glance

    DetailChocoNoor (peer)El Envero (alt)
    Price tier€€€€€€€€€€
    CuisineCreative tasting menusCreative / Moorish-inspiredModern cuisine
    Booking difficultyHard (3–4 weeks min)HardModerate
    Lunch serviceYes (Wed–Sun)Check availabilityYes
    ClosedMonday, TuesdayVariesVaries
    AwardsMichelin 1 Star, OAD #193Michelin 1 StarNone listed

    For a broader view of what Córdoba offers, see our full Córdoba restaurants guide, our full Córdoba hotels guide, our full Córdoba bars guide, our full Córdoba wineries guide, and our full Córdoba experiences guide.

    FAQ

    Is lunch or dinner better at Choco?

    • Lunch is the more accessible option , Sunday lunch in particular occasionally has last-minute availability that evening services do not.
    • Dinner on a weekday evening is the format to choose if you want the fullest, unhurried version of the experience.
    • Both services run the same tasting-menu format, so the food itself does not differ by time of day , the choice is really about pace and booking practicality.

    What should I wear to Choco?

    • Smart casual is the reliable call. Choco is a Michelin-starred, €€€€ restaurant with a minimalist room, so overly casual dress would read as out of place.
    • There is no confirmed formal dress code in the available data, but at this price tier in Spain, a step above resort wear is appropriate.
    • Think: collared shirts or neat tops for men, equivalent smart-casual for women. Jackets are not required but would not be out of place at dinner.

    What should a first-timer know about Choco?

    • Book as far ahead as possible , this is not a walk-in venue under normal circumstances.
    • The experience has three distinct stages: entrance, kitchen aperitif, and dining room. The kitchen visit is not optional , it is part of the designed sequence.
    • Both tasting menus (Barrio Antiguo and Kisko García) are rooted in Andalucían ingredients. If you have specific dietary restrictions, contact the restaurant well in advance.
    • Choco is in the Sureste district, away from the tourist centre , factor in transit time if you are staying near the Mezquita.

    What should I order at Choco?

    • There is no à la carte menu. You are choosing between two tasting menus: Barrio Antiguo and Kisko García.
    • The wine pairing option is worth considering if you want the kitchen's perspective on what to drink alongside the menu , at this level, pairings are usually assembled with the same care as the food.
    • If you have a preference between the two menus, the Kisko García menu likely reflects the chef's current direction most closely, though specific differences are not published in available data.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Choco?

    • Yes, if creative tasting menus are the format you want. A Michelin star and a top-200 OAD ranking in Europe confirm the cooking is operating at a serious level.
    • At €€€€, this is a significant spend by Córdoba standards , comparable to Noor, but less expensive than equivalent-tier restaurants in Madrid or Barcelona.
    • If you are price-sensitive, Arbequina or ReComiendo offer modern cooking at lower price points in the same city.
    • The value case for Choco specifically is that it delivers a regionally distinct, award-recognised tasting-menu experience in a city where that option is rare , which makes it harder to replicate elsewhere at any price.

    Compare Choco

    Comparing Choco to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    ChocoCreative€€€€A delightful restaurant featuring an elegantly minimalist dining space, but one which has not lost its inherent, time-honoured authenticity.Here, chef Kisko García decided to create a connection with the barrio in which grew up, hence his creative cuisine (showcased on two tasting menus - Barrio Antiguo and Kisko García) that brings into the limelight the delightful flavours and aromas of the Valle de Los Pedroches and Villanueva de Córdoba – the Andalucía that had such a positive influence on his childhood. Locally sourced seasonal ingredients (organic wherever possible), fine flavours, teamwork and a positive attitude are all part of a delightful experience, which starts at the entrance, continues with an aperitif in the kitchen, and ends at your table in the dining room. A wine pairing option is also available.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #193 (2025); A delightful restaurant featuring an elegantly minimalist dining space, but one which has not lost its inherent, time-honoured authenticity.Here, chef Kisko García decided to create a connection with the barrio in which grew up, hence his creative cuisine (showcased on two tasting menus - Barrio Antiguo and Kisko García) that brings into the limelight the delightful flavours and aromas of the Valle de Los Pedroches and Villanueva de Córdoba – the Andalucía that had such a positive influence on his childhood. Locally sourced seasonal ingredients (organic wherever possible), fine flavours, teamwork and a positive attitude are all part of a delightful experience, which starts at the entrance, continues with an aperitif in the kitchen, and ends at your table in the dining room. A wine pairing option is also available.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #176 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Recommended (2023)Hard
    NoorModern Spanish - Moorish, Modern Dutch, Creative€€€€Michelin 3 StarUnknown
    Casa Pepe de la JuderíaRegional Cuisine€€Unknown
    El EnveroModern Cuisine€€Unknown
    Garum 2.1 Bistronómic Tapas BarAndalusian€€Unknown
    La Cuchara de San LorenzoTraditional Cuisine€€Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Choco and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Choco?

    Lunch is the safer booking for first-timers: Sunday lunch is the only service where demand is slightly lower, which can matter for last-minute availability. Dinner on a weekday tends to feel more settled, with fewer time pressures on the table. Both services run the same tasting menus, so the decision is more about your schedule than the food. If you want the kitchen aperitif moment with the most relaxed pace, a Wednesday or Thursday dinner is the call.

    What should I wear to Choco?

    Choco operates at €€€€ pricing with a Michelin star and a minimalist dining room, so dress accordingly — neat, put-together clothing is appropriate. There is no documented dress code in the venue data, but the format (tasting menus, kitchen aperitif, formal service) signals that casual resort wear or trainers would feel out of place. Think business casual or above.

    What should a first-timer know about Choco?

    The experience is built around two tasting menus — Barrio Antiguo and Kisko García — both rooted in the produce and flavours of Villanueva de Córdoba and the Valle de Los Pedroches. The meal begins with an aperitif in the kitchen, which functions as an informal introduction to the food before you move to the dining room. Choco is open only five services per week (closed Monday and Tuesday), so plan your Córdoba trip dates around the restaurant, not the other way around. Wine pairing is available.

    What should I order at Choco?

    Choco is a tasting-menu-only format, so there is no à la carte ordering. Choose between the Barrio Antiguo menu, which focuses on García's childhood neighbourhood and Andalucian regional ingredients, and the Kisko García menu, which takes a broader creative approach. Adding the wine pairing is worth considering given the Michelin-starred context and the kitchen's focus on locally sourced seasonal produce.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Choco?

    For creative tasting menus in Andalucía, Choco at €€€€ delivers a Michelin star and an OAD Top 200 Europe ranking (No. 193 in 2025), which puts it in a narrow tier of restaurants in the region. The format — kitchen aperitif followed by a full tasting menu rooted in Córdoba's northern comarca — is personal and specific rather than generic fine dining. If you are visiting Córdoba and want one serious meal, this is the reservation to prioritise. If the format feels too long or structured, El Envero or Garum 2.1 offer shorter, more flexible meals in the same city.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    closed
    Wednesday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Thursday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Friday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Saturday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Sunday
    1:30 PM-3 PM

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