Restaurant in Madrid, Spain
Strong value, real cooking, book it.

TonTon is a personality-driven contemporary in Chamberí with a 4.6 Google rating and a €€ price point that makes multiple visits viable. French-trained chef Alice Reydet runs both a sharing-plate à la carte and an Omakase-style Carte Blanche tasting menu from a room defined by open brick walls and wooden beams. Easy to book and well-suited to date nights or low-key celebrations.
TonTon holds a 4.6 Google rating across 312 reviews — a strong signal for a mid-priced contemporary restaurant on Calle de Jordán in Madrid's Chamberí district. At the €€ price point, it competes in a category where many restaurants settle for competent but forgettable cooking. TonTon does not. The combination of French-trained chef Alice Reydet's seasonal, minimal-intervention approach and a room that commits hard to industrial character makes this one of the more considered options in the neighbourhood for a date, a celebration dinner, or any occasion where you want the setting to do some of the work.
The atmosphere at TonTon is defined before you sit down. Large wooden beams cross the ceiling, open brick walls absorb the room's energy, and the industrial aesthetic reads as intentional rather than trend-chasing. The energy is warm but not loud — this is not a late-night bar masquerading as a restaurant. It is the kind of room where conversation is possible throughout the meal, which makes it a reliable choice for a first date or a business dinner where you actually need to hear each other. The upstairs bar, which carries its own cocktail list, shifts the mood if you want to extend the evening without leaving the building.
TonTon's format rewards return visits because it operates two distinct tracks: an à la carte menu built around sharing plates, and an Omakase-style tasting menu called Carte Blanche. These are genuinely different experiences, not just the same kitchen in different portion sizes.
On a first visit, the à la carte is the right call. It gives you the most direct read on what the kitchen does well. The sharing format means a table of two can cover four or five dishes without over-ordering. Reydet's cooking draws on French technique and Mediterranean flavour, with dishes like sea urchin with brioche and salted butter, sea bass with citrus and piparra peppers, and sweetbreads with shallots, pomegranate and red wine. These are not safe crowd-pleasers , they are specific, confident dishes that signal a kitchen with a point of view. At €€ pricing, the value is strong relative to what comparable sharing-plate contemporaries charge in Madrid.
On a second visit, book Carte Blanche. The Omakase-style tasting menu hands control to the kitchen and is the better format for understanding the full range of Reydet's cooking. If the à la carte tells you what TonTon is, Carte Blanche tells you how good it can be. This is also the more appropriate format for a special occasion or celebration where the arc of the meal matters as much as individual dishes.
A third visit , and TonTon is the kind of place that generates third visits , is leading used to explore the upstairs bar after dinner. The cocktail list is described as substantial, and finishing the evening there rather than moving to a separate venue keeps the night coherent. For a date or an anniversary dinner, this three-beat structure (aperitivo at the bar, à la carte below, nightcap above) is worth considering.
Reydet's training in leading French restaurants shapes the technical foundation, but the cooking is not French in any rigid sense. The use of piparra peppers, pomegranate, and sea urchin alongside brioche and salted butter reflects a kitchen that reads as genuinely Mediterranean in its sourcing instincts while remaining French in its discipline. The menu also incorporates Brazilian influences , the Bobó Tonton dish, served with grilled pink prawns, basmati rice, grilled banana and farofa, signals a kitchen willing to reach outside European reference points. This range makes TonTon harder to categorise than most €€ contemporaries in Madrid, which is either a recommendation or a caveat depending on what you want from the evening.
Booking at TonTon is rated easy. For a mid-priced Chamberí contemporary with a 4.6 rating and a growing profile, this is an advantage worth using. There is no hard lead time required, but if you are planning around a specific date for a celebration or a visit to Madrid, booking ahead is sensible rather than essential. The address is Calle de Jordán, 7, Chamberí, 28010 Madrid , a residential street that keeps the surrounding energy calm relative to the more trafficked dining corridors in Malasaña or Chueca. If you are building a Madrid itinerary around food, our full Madrid restaurants guide will help you sequence the city's options across price tiers and neighbourhoods. For the full picture of where to stay, drink, and explore, see our Madrid hotels guide, Madrid bars guide, and Madrid experiences guide.
Madrid's contemporary dining scene has considerable depth at the €€€€ level , DiverXO, Coque, and Smoked Room are all operating at a different price and ambition tier. TonTon is not trying to compete with them. What it offers instead is serious, personality-driven cooking at a price point that makes repeat visits viable. Among Madrid's neighbourhood contemporaries, Adaly, BANCAL, and Desborre are worth knowing as alternatives in the same tier. Elsewhere in the city, En la Parra and Ferretería offer comparable value-to-quality ratios if Chamberí is not your base. For Spain's broader high-end contemporary circuit, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and El Celler de Can Roca in Girona represent a different league of investment and ambition. If the contemporary format interests you internationally, César in New York City and Jungsik in Seoul offer useful points of comparison for what the category can look like at a higher price tier. Within Spain, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona are worth considering if you are building a wider Spanish food trip.
Book TonTon for a date or small celebration if you want a room with real character, technically grounded cooking, and a price point that does not require the occasion to justify itself. Start with the à la carte, return for Carte Blanche. Easy to book, strong rating, and a Chamberí location that keeps the evening calm. For Madrid at the €€ tier, it is one of the more rewarding options currently available.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| TonTon | €€ | Easy | — |
| DiverXO | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Coque | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Deessa | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Paco Roncero | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Smoked Room | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Madrid for this tier.
Go with a small group and use the à la carte sharing format on a first visit before committing to the Carte Blanche tasting menu. At €€ pricing on Calle de Jordán in Chamberí, the room delivers more atmosphere than the price point suggests — industrial beams, open brick, and food rooted in French technique with Mediterranean seasoning. Booking is rated easy, so there's no pressure to plan weeks in advance, but a reservation is still sensible.
TonTon describes itself as a playful space, and the industrial-meets-neighbourhood room in Chamberí sets a relaxed tone. Neat casual fits the context — think what you'd wear to a good bistro, not a formal tasting room. There's no documented dress code, so nothing needs to be overthought at this price point.
The menu incorporates seasonal ingredients and covers meaningful range — sea urchin, sea bass, sweetbreads, and pasta all appear across the formats — but specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented for this venue. Contact TonTon directly before booking if restrictions are a deciding factor, particularly if you're considering the Omakase-style Carte Blanche tasting menu, which offers less flexibility by format.
Yes, particularly for a date or small celebration where you want a room with character without the spend of Madrid's €€€€ tier. The Carte Blanche tasting menu gives the occasion a structured arc, and the 4.6 Google rating across 312 reviews suggests consistent execution. If you need a private room or a grander setting, it won't match somewhere like Coque — but at €€, the value-to-atmosphere ratio is strong.
For a step up in ambition and spend, Smoked Room and Deessa both operate at a higher price tier with stronger formal credentials. DiverXO and Coque are at the top of Madrid's contemporary scene but require significantly more budget and advance planning. Within the €€ neighbourhood contemporary bracket, TonTon's French-Mediterranean focus and Omakase option give it a distinct position — it's harder to find a direct like-for-like in Chamberí at this price.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.