Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Madrid, Spain

    Kuoco

    540Pearl Points

    Bold Latin-Asian flavours, no fuss required.

    Kuoco, Restaurant in Madrid

    About Kuoco

    Kuoco holds two consecutive Michelin Plates and a 4.7 Google rating for good reason: its Venezuelan-led kitchen moves confidently across Mexican and Asian flavours, with real spice depth and a focused à la carte anchored by standout dishes like Peking duck and chilli crab. At €€€ with easy booking, it is one of Madrid's more accessible routes into serious fusion cooking.

    Should You Book Kuoco?

    If you are weighing Kuoco against Madrid's more conventional fusion restaurants, the comparison that matters is this: while spots like ABYA or Asiakō each stake out a clear single-cuisine identity, Kuoco moves across Latin American, Mexican, and Asian cooking in a single sitting without the meal feeling scattered. That range is either the point or the problem, depending on what you want from dinner. For first-timers arriving without strong preconceptions about what fusion should be, Kuoco's approach lands well. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.7 Google rating across 1,835 reviews suggest the kitchen is consistent enough to trust.

    The Room

    Kuoco sits at Calle del Barquillo 30 in the Centro district, a neighbourhood that mixes late-night bars with quieter residential streets. The restaurant's character is described by Michelin as relaxed and elegantly informal, which in practice means you are not walking into a white-tablecloth room with ceremony and hushed tones. The setting is designed to make the food the focal point rather than the occasion. For a first visit, that is useful context: dress accordingly (smart casual is the right call), and arrive expecting a room that encourages conversation rather than performance. The atmosphere is informal enough that a solo diner or a pair on a casual date will feel at ease, but the food's ambition lifts it above neighbourhood-restaurant territory.

    What to Eat

    The à la carte is concise but deliberate. The kitchen, run by young Venezuelan chefs Rafa and Andrés, draws most visibly on Mexican and broader Asian references, with spice levels that vary meaningfully across the menu rather than sitting at a uniform warmth. If you are ordering à la carte for the first time, Michelin's guidance is direct and worth following: the croquettes, the Peking duck, and the chilli crab are the dishes that anchor the experience. The croquettes function as a statement of technical discipline before the more adventurous flavours arrive. The Peking duck and chilli crab mark the two strongest directional pulls of the kitchen.

    For a more structured experience, the tasting menu called Attraverso is available alongside the à la carte. The name means 'through' in Italian, which signals the intent: a journey across the kitchen's full range of references rather than a focused exploration of one cuisine. Whether Attraverso justifies the additional spend over a well-chosen à la carte selection depends on how much value you place on curation versus freedom. First-timers who want to understand the kitchen's full vocabulary should consider it; those who already know which dishes they want are better served ordering directly.

    Drinks at Kuoco

    The venue data does not provide a detailed breakdown of the bar programme, so specific cocktail names or wine list depth cannot be confirmed here. What the venue's positioning does suggest is that drinks have been considered as part of the overall experience rather than as an afterthought. A €€€ price point in Madrid's Centro typically means a wine list with reasonable depth and likely some spirit-forward cocktails designed to carry the spice register of the food. If a strong cocktail programme is your primary reason for choosing a venue on a given night, Doppelgänger Bar in Madrid will be a more reliable destination. Kuoco's drinks are leading understood as support for the food rather than the main event.

    First-Timer Practical Guide

    Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means same-week or even next-day bookings are typically achievable. Do not assume you can walk in without a reservation, but you are unlikely to need weeks of lead time. Budget: Kuoco is priced at €€€, which in Madrid Centro puts it in the range of a considered dinner out rather than a special-occasion splurge. Expect a meaningful spend per head once drinks are included, but nothing that requires advance financial planning. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate and consistent with the relaxed-informal tone of the room. Location: Calle del Barquillo 30 is well-connected by metro (Chueca and Banco de España are both close) and walkable from most central Madrid hotels. If you are building a broader Madrid trip, our full Madrid restaurants guide, Madrid hotels guide, Madrid bars guide, Madrid wineries guide, and Madrid experiences guide cover the full picture.

    Where Kuoco Sits in Madrid's Broader Scene

    For context on how Kuoco's fusion cooking compares to other approaches in Spain: if a more rigorous tasting-menu experience is what you are after, Bacira offers a comparable fusion sensibility with a slightly different balance of Asian and Mediterranean references. Beyond Madrid, Spain's most decorated kitchens at Quique Dacosta in Dénia, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria operate in a different tier of investment and occasion. Kuoco is not competing with those rooms. It is competing for the Madrid dinner where you want something genuinely interesting without the ceremony or the three-hour commitment. Internationally, if you are drawn to the fusion-without-borders approach, Jae in Düsseldorf and Soseki in Winter Park offer useful comparisons for what this format can look like in other cities. Closer to home, I+T in Madrid is worth considering if you want a more produce-focused approach within a similar price bracket.

    The Verdict

    Book Kuoco if you want a Michelin-recognised kitchen delivering Latin American and Asian flavours with real spice depth, in a room that does not ask you to dress up or settle in for a four-course ritual. The à la carte is the more flexible entry point; order the croquettes, the Peking duck, and the chilli crab and you will leave with a clear sense of what the kitchen is doing. If you want a fuller picture of the menu's range, Attraverso is worth considering. Booking is easy, the price point is reasonable for the quality on offer, and the 4.7 rating across nearly 2,000 reviews provides solid confidence that the kitchen performs consistently rather than just on good nights.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Kuoco accommodate groups?

    Small groups of four to six should be fine given the relaxed, informal room at Calle del Barquillo 30. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels before assuming availability — the à la carte format suits groups better than a long tasting menu would, and the concise menu means the table can order across multiple cuisines without conflict.

    Can I eat at the bar at Kuoco?

    The venue data does not confirm a dedicated bar counter for dining. Given the casual, informal character of the room, it is worth asking when you book — but do not plan around it without checking first.

    Is Kuoco good for solo dining?

    Yes, more so than most €€€ Madrid restaurants. The relaxed format and concise à la carte mean you are not locked into a two-hour tasting menu commitment, and the room's informal tone does not make solo guests conspicuous. The Attraverso tasting menu is also an option if you want the full kitchen showcase on your own terms.

    Is Kuoco worth the price?

    At €€€ with a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, Kuoco sits in a reasonable range for what it delivers: bold Latin American and Asian cooking with genuine spice depth from a kitchen that has earned independent recognition. For the price, you are getting more personality and flavour intensity than most comparably priced fusion spots in Madrid Centro.

    Is Kuoco good for a special occasion?

    It works if your occasion calls for a lively, informal setting rather than white-tablecloth formality. The Attraverso tasting menu gives the meal some structure and occasion feel, and the Michelin Plate recognition means the cooking quality is not in question. If you need a more ceremonial room, DSTAgE or Smoked Room would be a stronger fit.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Kuoco?

    The Attraverso tasting menu is the better choice if you want to see the full range of Rafa and Andrés's kitchen — the spice work and cross-cultural references land more coherently across a sequence of courses than through a single à la carte visit. At €€€, it sits at a price point where the Michelin Plate credential gives reasonable confidence in execution. If you prefer to graze and share, the à la carte is equally deliberate.

    Location

    C. del Barquillo, 30, Centro, 28004 Madrid, Spain

    Compare Kuoco

    Full Comparison: Kuoco
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    KuocoFusionEasy
    DiverXOProgressive - Asian, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    DSTAgEModern Spanish, CreativeMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    Smoked RoomProgressive Asador, ContemporaryMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    Paco RonceroCreativeMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    CoqueSpanish, CreativeMichelin 2 StarUnknown

    Comparing your options in Madrid for this tier.

    Also Consider

    • DiverXO, Progressive - Asian, Creative, €€€€
    • DSTAgE, Modern Spanish, Creative, €€€€
    • Smoked Room, Progressive Asador, Contemporary, €€€€
    • Paco Roncero, Creative, €€€€
    • Coque, Spanish, Creative, €€€€

    Kuoco sits at €€€ while its most obvious Madrid comparisons, DiverXO, DSTAgE, Smoked Room, Paco Roncero, and Coque, all operate at €€€€. That price difference is the starting point for any decision. If your budget allows for €€€€ and the experience you are after is a full tasting-menu event with Michelin star-level ambition, DiverXO (three stars) or DSTAgE deliver a categorically different level of investment and occasion. Kuoco is not trying to compete on that ground.

    Where Kuoco earns its place is for the diner who wants genuine kitchen ambition and Michelin recognition without the four-hour commitment or the highest price tier in the city. Smoked Room and Coque both demand significantly more per head and are harder to book. Paco Roncero similarly requires more advance planning and a larger spend. Kuoco's Easy booking rating and €€€ price point make it the most accessible entry in this comparison set, and its consecutive Michelin Plates confirm the kitchen is not coasting on accessibility alone.

    If you are deciding between Kuoco and one of the €€€€ options, the practical question is this: do you want a serious dinner out, or do you want an event? For a serious dinner with real flavour ambition and room to have a conversation, book Kuoco. For an occasion that needs to feel like a destination meal with full tasting-menu ceremony, move up to DSTAgE or DiverXO and plan further ahead. Kuoco wins on value, on booking ease, and on informality. It loses on sheer scale of ambition and the kind of tableside theatre the starred rooms provide.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Kuoco on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.