Restaurant in Barcelona, Spain
Cruix
420Pearl PointsSerious Catalan tasting menus at neighbourhood prices.

About Cruix
Cruix holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand and an Opinionated About Dining ranking while charging a fraction of what Barcelona's €€€€ tasting-menu scene commands. Chef Miquel Prado's Eixample restaurant runs two tasting menus — 11 or 13 courses — with rice dishes and a crispy socarrat as the signatures. Easy to book, casual in atmosphere, and strong on value.
Verdict: Book Cruix if you want serious Catalan cooking at a price that makes Barcelona's Michelin-starred scene look expensive
Cruix is the answer to a question most visitors to Barcelona don't know to ask: where do you get tasting-menu cooking of genuine ambition without the four-figure bill? Chef Miquel Prado's Eixample address holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) and a recommendation from Opinionated About Dining (ranked #676 in their Casual Europe list for 2025), which together confirm what the single-euro price tier already suggests — this is a serious kitchen operating well below its weight class on price. If your Barcelona dining budget is limited and you want one tasting-menu meal that will actually challenge your palate, Cruix is the booking to make.
The Room and the Mood
The exposed brick walls and informal layout set a tone that is closer to a neighbourhood bistro than a destination restaurant. Noise levels stay conversational — this is not a hushed, starched-napkin room, and the service leans warmly casual rather than formal. That atmosphere matters for how you experience the food: this is a place that wants you to relax into the meal rather than perform your way through it. If you find the theatre of high-end tasting menus slightly exhausting, Cruix is a genuine alternative. The terrace is worth requesting when the weather allows , book it specifically when you reserve, because it fills quickly.
The Menus
Two tasting menus anchor the offering. The Classic Cruix runs to eleven courses; the Grand Cruix extends to thirteen. The rice dishes are the clearest signature: paellas served with the crispy socarrat crust at the base of the pan, which is the marker of proper technique in this format. The cod churro , fried to a crispy golden texture , appears as a standout savoury course. On the dessert side, the dish listed as "sad day on the beach" is the one most mentioned in recognition from both Michelin and OAD, and worth ordering on that basis alone. The menus have evolved in scope since earlier OAD recognition in 2023 , the course count has grown, which suggests the kitchen's confidence in the format is increasing rather than plateauing.
Practical Details
Cruix sits on Carrer d'Entença, 57 in the Eixample district , the residential spine of central Barcelona, well served by metro. Dinner runs Tuesday through Friday from 7 to 10:30 pm, with Saturday adding a lunch service from 12:30 to 3:30 pm before the evening sitting. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday. Booking is rated easy , this is not a venue where you need to set calendar reminders three months out , but the terrace is the exception: secure that when you call or book online. Dress is casual; the room's own atmosphere makes that clear. The single-euro price tier means this is one of the most accessible tasting-menu experiences in a city where the upper end runs to €€€€ across most comparable kitchens. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 from 2,513 reviews, which at that volume is a meaningful signal rather than a statistical anomaly.
Why Cruix Matters in the Eixample
The Eixample is Barcelona's grid district , dense with residents, professionals, and the kind of local restaurant culture that doesn't need to market itself to tourists. Cruix fits that context: it draws a neighbourhood crowd alongside food-focused visitors, and the informality of the room reflects who actually eats there regularly. For the explorer visiting Barcelona with serious dining intentions but a rational budget, Cruix offers something the city's trophy-restaurant circuit can't match: Bib Gourmand-level cooking in a room that functions as a real local restaurant rather than a set piece. Compare it to the €€€€ end of the Barcelona scene , Disfrutar, Lasarte, Cocina Hermanos Torres, ABaC, Enigma , and the value gap is significant. Those restaurants justify their prices on different terms; Cruix justifies itself on different terms entirely.
If you're building a broader Spain itinerary around serious cooking, Cruix pairs well with longer day-trips or separate visits to El Celler de Can Roca in Girona or Quique Dacosta in Dénia. For the Basque Country, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria represent the other pole of the Spanish fine-dining spectrum. Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María is the southern anchor if your trip extends that far. For reference points outside Spain, the tasting-menu-at-accessible-price model has echoes at venues like Lazy Bear in San Francisco, though the format and price gap between those markets is substantial.
For everything else in the city, see our full Barcelona restaurants guide, our Barcelona hotels guide, our Barcelona bars guide, our Barcelona wineries guide, and our Barcelona experiences guide.
The Bottom Line
Cruix is the tasting-menu booking that makes sense when you want real culinary ambition in Barcelona without committing to a €€€€ evening. The Bib Gourmand, the OAD ranking, and the 4.6 Google rating across 2,513 reviews all point in the same direction. Book the terrace when the weather is good, go for the Grand Cruix if you want the full range of what the kitchen can do, and don't skip the socarrat rice.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Cruix?
Casual is fine. The Michelin Bib Gourmand and Opinionated About Dining recognition reflect serious cooking, but the exposed brick walls and informal room set a relaxed tone — the kind of neighbourhood spot where a jacket would look out of place. Clean, neat casual is the right call.
Does Cruix handle dietary restrictions?
The menu format — eleven or thirteen courses in the Classic and Grand Cruix respectively — is structured enough that dietary requirements need to be flagged at the time of booking, not on arrival. check the venue's official channels in advance; tasting-menu kitchens at this level generally accommodate with notice, but the specifics are between you and the team.
How far ahead should I book Cruix?
Book at least two to three weeks out for a weekend dinner slot; Saturday lunch (the only midday service) fills quickly and is worth planning for separately. Cruix is closed Monday and Sunday, so your window is Tuesday through Saturday evenings plus Saturday lunch — plan around that grid before you check availability.
What are alternatives to Cruix in Barcelona?
If budget is not a constraint, Disfrutar and Lasarte operate at the top of Barcelona's fine-dining tier — completely different price point and formality. Cinc Sentits is the closer comparison: Catalan tasting menus with more ceremony and a higher price tag. Enoteca Paco Pérez leans into the luxury-hotel register. Cruix is the move when you want genuine tasting-menu ambition at the € price range — none of the alternatives match that combination.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Cruix?
Yes, clearly. A Michelin Bib Gourmand signals food quality that overdelivers relative to price, and the OAD Casual Europe ranking reinforces that this is not a novelty. The rice dishes with socarrat and dishes like the cod churro are flagged specifically by Michelin's own inspectors as worth ordering. At the € price range, the Classic Cruix (eleven courses) is the starting point — the Grand Cruix (thirteen courses) makes sense if you have the appetite and the time.
Location
Carrer d'Entença, 57, Eixample, 08015 Barcelona, Spain
Compare Cruix
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cruix | Catalan, Contemporary | 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 |
A quick look at how Cruix measures up.
Also Consider
- Cocina Hermanos Torres, Creative, €€€€
- Disfrutar, Progressive, Creative, €€€€
- Lasarte, Progressive Spanish, Creative, €€€€
- Cinc Sentits, Modern Spanish, Creative, €€€€
- Enoteca Paco Pérez, Modern Spanish, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
How Cruix Compares to Barcelona's Tasting-Menu Scene
The most useful way to frame Cruix against its Barcelona peers is by price tier. Every serious competitor, Disfrutar, Lasarte, Cocina Hermanos Torres, Cinc Sentits, Enoteca Paco Pérez, operates at €€€€. Cruix operates at €. That gap is not a signal of lesser ambition; it is the reason the Michelin Bib Gourmand exists as a category. If you are choosing between Cruix and any of those venues purely on value-for-recognition, Cruix wins the comparison before the meal starts.
Where the €€€€ venues justify their prices differently: Disfrutar is the most technically inventive kitchen in the city and competes on the world stage; Lasarte brings the weight of Martin Berasategui's network behind a formally polished room; Cocina Hermanos Torres offers a theatrical, converted greenhouse setting that is genuinely distinct as a dining environment; Cinc Sentits delivers a refined modern Spanish tasting menu with strong product sourcing; Enoteca Paco Pérez leans into the wine-and-food pairing format as a core part of the experience. Each of those has a specific reason to spend more. Cruix's specific reason to spend less is equally clear: Bib Gourmand-level cooking in a casual room with easy booking and a neighbourhood atmosphere that the city's destination restaurants can't replicate.
For a first visit to Barcelona with a single tasting-menu slot, the decision comes down to budget and register. If money is not the constraint, Disfrutar is the booking to prioritise. If you want serious cooking without the financial commitment of Barcelona's top tier, Cruix is the practical answer, and the 4.6 Google rating from over 2,500 reviews confirms that the experience holds up at scale, not just for critics.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 7–10:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 7–10:30 pm
- Thursday
- 7–10:30 pm
- Friday
- 7–10:30 pm
- Saturday
- 12:30–3:30 pm, 7:30–10:30 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Barcelona
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