Restaurant in Huesca, Spain
Thirty years in, still delivering.

A Michelin Plate-recognised restaurant with over 30 years in Huesca, Las Torres pairs traditional Aragonese cooking with a contemporary touch at a mid-range €€ price point. The 4.6 Google rating across nearly 900 reviews signals reliable execution. Book weekend lunch and consider the tasting menu if you have visited before.
If you have been to Las Torres once and left satisfied, go back. This is the kind of restaurant that rewards return visits: a Michelin Plate-recognised address in Huesca with over 30 years of operation behind it, a mid-range price point (€€), and a format that pairs à la carte traditional cooking with a tasting menu option. Compared to the higher-priced Lillas Pastia or Tatau, Las Torres is the more accessible entry point into serious Huesca dining without the commitment of a €€€ bill. Book it for a relaxed weekend lunch rather than a quick weekday stop.
Las Torres takes its name from the district it occupies, an area of Huesca colloquially known for its three towers. The room leans on wood throughout — walls, surfaces, structural detail — giving it the kind of settled warmth that comes from three decades of the same kitchen feeding the same city. This is not a venue that has reinvented itself recently; the recent evolution here is subtler. The kitchen has held its Michelin Plate recognition across both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistency rather than stagnation: the guide is telling you that quality-per-euro at this price tier is being maintained year on year. That matters when you are deciding whether a second visit is worth it.
The editorial angle assigned to this page is brunch and weekend service, and Las Torres fits that lens well. Spanish lunch culture means the midday service is the main event, and a restaurant with à la carte traditional cuisine at a €€ price point is exactly what a long Saturday lunch calls for. You are not rushing. The tasting menu gives you a structure if you want it; the à la carte lets you eat at your own pace if you do not. For a second visit, the tasting menu is the logical next step if you spent your first meal working through the à la carte.
The kitchen operates in what the venue describes as traditional cuisine with a contemporary touch, and that framing is worth taking at face value rather than dismissing as vague. At this price tier and longevity , over 30 years in business , the contemporary elements are likely refinements of technique and presentation rather than dramatic departures from the regional pantry. Aragon's larder is the foundation: think mountain produce, cured meats, and locally sourced ingredients given careful treatment. The profusion of wood in the room reinforces that the experience is grounded rather than theatrical. If you are arriving from El Celler de Can Roca in Girona or Arzak in San Sebastián expecting that register of fine dining, recalibrate. Las Torres operates at a different altitude, and that is precisely its value.
Google rating of 4.6 across 899 reviews is a useful signal. Nearly 900 data points at 4.6 is not a lucky streak , it reflects a kitchen that executes reliably for a wide range of diners. That breadth of satisfaction, combined with Michelin's Plate recognition, positions Las Torres as a lower-risk booking than many restaurants that carry more ambient prestige. For a second visit, the question is not whether it will be good but whether you want à la carte freedom or the tasting menu's structure. The tasting menu is the better call if you are celebrating something or want the kitchen to show you what it can do across multiple courses.
Weekend lunch here is the format to target. Spanish service rhythms mean midday Saturday or Sunday is when the kitchen is at its most attentive and the room is at its most convivial. If you are visiting Huesca as part of a wider trip through Aragon , perhaps combining a stop at Quique Dacosta in Dénia or Azurmendi in Larrabetzu with a slower Pyrenean detour , Las Torres is the kind of anchor meal that justifies the town stop. It is not a destination restaurant in the way that DiverXO in Madrid or Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María might be, but it earns its place on a serious itinerary through northern Spain.
For context on how Las Torres sits within the broader Spanish contemporary dining scene, see our guides to Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria. Internationally, if you are curious how the contemporary format compares across markets, Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City offer useful reference points for how the same broad category plays out elsewhere.
Budget: €€ , mid-range pricing that makes a tasting menu here a realistic option without the financial commitment of the €€€ venues in the city. Reservations: Easy to book; no evidence of the extended lead times required at Lillas Pastia or Tatau. Call ahead for weekend lunch to be safe. Dress: Smart-casual fits the room; the wood-heavy interior is warm rather than formal, and the price point does not demand a jacket. Address: C. de María Auxiliadora, 3, 22003 Huesca, Spain. Leading timing: Weekend midday service for the full experience. Group size: Works for pairs and small groups; the à la carte format accommodates mixed preferences without difficulty.
See the full comparison below.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Las Torres | Contemporary | €€ | Easy |
| Lillas Pastia | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown |
| Tatau | Creative | €€€ | Unknown |
| El Origen | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Unknown |
How Las Torres stacks up against the competition.
Yes, and the tasting menu format makes it an easy call for a celebratory dinner. At €€ pricing, it delivers a structured, Michelin Plate-recognised meal without the financial pressure of a higher-tier venue. The wood-heavy room has been running for over 30 years, which means the kitchen knows how to execute consistently — useful when the occasion matters and a bad night isn't an option.
The menu is built around traditional cuisine with a contemporary touch and a strong emphasis on top-quality ingredients, but specific dietary accommodation policies aren't publicly documented for this venue. check the venue's official channels via the address at C. de María Auxiliadora, 3 to confirm before booking, particularly if you're planning around the tasting menu format.
At €€ pricing, it's one of the more accessible tasting menu options in Huesca and worth choosing over à la carte if you want to see what the kitchen does at full stretch. Las Torres has held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which confirms consistent quality at this price point. If you're comparing with Lillas Pastia, expect a different tier — Las Torres is the better value proposition, Lillas Pastia the higher-ceiling experience.
The à la carte features traditional cuisine with a contemporary touch, using top-quality seasonal ingredients — but specific dish names aren't documented here. The safest approach is the tasting menu, which gives the kitchen room to show its range. For à la carte, ask the staff what's performing well on the day; a 30-year-old restaurant with this format will have front-of-house that can steer you accurately.
The venue has been operating for over 30 years in a wood-lined room that sits in the mid-range price bracket — the atmosphere is considered without being formal. Neat, comfortable clothing is appropriate; there's no indication of a strict dress code, but arriving in casual sportswear would feel out of step with the setting.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.