Restaurant in Madrid, Spain
Serious kitchen, low price, book now.

A Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen in Madrid's La Latina district, Trèsde delivers technically considered contemporary cooking at the €€ price tier. Chef Gonzalo Cuesta Martínez leads a concise, market-driven menu built on navazo garden vegetables, complemented by an unusual three-glass pairing of sherry, sake, and minimal-intervention wine. Book it now, while it remains easy to access.
At the €€ price point, Trèsde delivers a level of technical ambition that sits well above what you typically find in this bracket in Madrid. Chef Gonzalo Cuesta Martínez and his two co-founders — each managing a distinct pillar of the operation — have built something that Michelin has twice acknowledged with a Plate designation (2024 and 2025), and that the Opinionated About Dining guide has flagged for casual haute-cuisine in Europe. For a food-focused traveller looking for genuine kitchen craft without the €€€€ commitment of Madrid's top tier, this is a strong case for booking now, while access is still easy.
The editorial angle that matters here is what Trèsde actually does differently from its price-tier peers. The menu is built around vegetables sourced from traditional navazo gardens , a specific agricultural system tied to coastal marshland areas in Spain, where crops are grown in the humid sand between dunes and the sea. This is not a general commitment to seasonality; it is a defined sourcing practice that shapes the character of the dishes structurally, not just descriptively. In a Madrid contemporary dining scene where vegetable-forward cooking can read as a trend signal rather than a craft position, the specificity of the navazo sourcing is worth noting as a differentiator.
The format is deliberately structured around the classic starter/main/dessert arc, but the kitchen has reworked it rather than abandoned it. The menu list is concise , Michelin describes it as meticulously prepared , which in practice means you are choosing from a tight, considered set of dishes rather than a sprawling card. For a food enthusiast, that brevity is a signal: the kitchen is cooking what it is confident in, not what fills pages. The visual presentation at this price range at Michelin Plate level tends to be cleaner and more composed than casual bistro peers, leaning into the French bistro-style setting without abandoning technical ambition.
Three-glass pairing at Trèsde is one of the more distinctive drink programmes at this price tier in the city. It pairs sherry, sake, and minimal-intervention wines in a single sequence , a combination that reflects genuine thinking about flavour pairing rather than a default Spanish wine list. Sherry and sake appearing alongside natural wine in a Madrid neighbourhood restaurant at €€ pricing is the kind of programme that a drinks-focused diner will find more interesting than what the price point would usually suggest. If you are coming to Trèsde for the food, the pairing is worth adding.
Trèsde sits on Calle de la Cava Alta in La Latina, one of Madrid's most historically dense central districts. The French bistro-style interior signals informality without casualness , the kind of room where the cooking is taken seriously but the atmosphere does not demand ceremony. For a solo traveller or a pair of food enthusiasts, the setting works well. La Latina is walkable from the city centre and is surrounded by other options, which matters if you are building a longer evening. See our full Madrid bars guide for what to do before or after.
Book Trèsde if you are a food or wine enthusiast who wants kitchen craft at a price that does not require a special-occasion justification. The Michelin Plate recognition and the OAD listing give you a verifiable quality signal at the €€ tier, which is a rare combination in Madrid's contemporary dining category. The market-driven menu means what is on the card now will differ from what was available a month ago , a seasonal visit will give you a different experience to a return visit, which makes this a place worth revisiting rather than ticking off.
It is less suited to large groups looking for a social occasion format, or to diners who want the theatrical multi-course experience: for that, Madrid's €€€€ tier , DiverXO, Smoked Room, or Coque , will be more appropriate. But for a two-person dinner where the cooking itself is the point, Trèsde is a better use of budget than most alternatives at this price tier.
Booking difficulty: Easy , book in advance to be safe, but this is not a venue requiring weeks of lead time at present. Address: C. de la Cava Alta, 17, Centro, 28005 Madrid. Price tier: €€. Chef: Gonzalo Cuesta Martínez. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025; Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe 2025. Google rating: 4.7 from 606 reviews. Drink pairing: Three-glass sequence (sherry, sake, minimal-intervention wine) available. Getting there: La Latina metro station is the closest stop. For where to stay nearby, see our full Madrid hotels guide.
For a food-focused traveller building a Spain itinerary, Trèsde represents the kind of neighbourhood-level serious cooking that complements rather than competes with destination restaurants. If you are visiting Spain for a broader dining trip, compare it against other Pearl-tracked contemporary kitchens: Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María for marine sourcing at the opposite end of the ambition scale, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona for the benchmark of Spanish creative fine dining, or Azurmendi in Larrabetzu for sustainability-driven cooking at the three-star level. Closer to Madrid's own neighbourhood dining scene, Pearl also tracks Adaly, BANCAL, Desborre, En la Parra, and Ferretería , all worth considering depending on what format and price point you are looking for. See our full Madrid restaurants guide for the complete picture. If you are curious how the vegetable-forward contemporary format compares internationally, Pearl tracks Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City for reference points in the same broad contemporary category. For the complete Spain picture beyond Madrid, Arzak in San Sebastián, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona round out the tier above. Trèsde is not competing with those rooms , but it is doing something technically considered at a price point where that is harder to find. See also our full Madrid wineries guide and our full Madrid experiences guide for building a fuller visit.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trèsde | €€ | Easy | — |
| DiverXO | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Coque | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Deessa | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Paco Roncero | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Smoked Room | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
How Trèsde stacks up against the competition.
Yes, at the €€ price point it is. The concise menu is built around produce from traditional navazo coastal gardens and comes with an optional three-glass pairing featuring sherry, sake, and minimal-intervention wines — a combination you rarely find at this price in Madrid. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen is executing at a level above what the price suggests. If you are visiting Madrid and want serious cooking without a special-occasion budget, this is a strong call.
The menu is concise and market-driven, so the best approach is to work through the full starter/main/dessert structure rather than picking selectively. The vegetable-forward dishes sourced from navazo gardens are the kitchen's editorial identity, so prioritise those over any meat-led options. Add the three-glass pairing of sherry, sake, and minimal-intervention wines — it is one of the more distinctive drink programmes at this tier in the city and worth the addition.
Trèsde is a French bistro-style room in La Latina, which typically means compact covers rather than large-format seating. The venue is run by three friends managing kitchen, floor, and operations, which points to a tight, personally managed operation. Groups of two to four are likely the format this room is built for. For larger groups, check the venue's official channels via their address at C. de la Cava Alta, 17 to confirm capacity before assuming availability.
For a step up in scale and recognition, Smoked Room holds Michelin stars and operates at a higher price point. Coque and Deessa represent Madrid's more formal fine-dining tier with corresponding prices. Paco Roncero sits in a similar prestige bracket to those. DiverXO is the city's three-star outlier — expensive, theatrical, and a different category entirely. Trèsde is the call if you want Michelin-recognised cooking at €€ in a neighbourhood setting rather than a formal dining room.
Trèsde is informal by design — it is described as a French bistro-style room, so do not arrive expecting white-tablecloth service. The kitchen is run by chef Gonzalo Cuesta Martínez, and the overall operation is a three-person collaborative led by lifelong friends. The menu is short and market-driven, so availability of specific dishes will vary. It holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent kitchen quality without the pressure of a starred reservation.
At €€, yes — it consistently overdelivers for the bracket. The Michelin Plate across two consecutive years, a produce-led menu drawing on navazo vegetables, and an original three-glass pairing programme all sit above what the price tier typically produces in Madrid. The question is not really whether it is worth it, but whether this style of cooking — vegetable-forward, concise, informal — fits what you are after. If it does, the value case is straightforward.
It works for a low-key special occasion where the priority is food quality over ceremony. The informal French bistro format means this is not the venue for a formal celebration dinner with theatre and long tasting menus. The OAD Casual listing for 2025 reinforces that positioning. For a milestone dinner where setting and formality matter as much as food, Deessa or Smoked Room would be more appropriate. For a food-focused occasion where the kitchen is the point, Trèsde at €€ is a strong choice.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.