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    Restaurant in Puente Genil, Spain

    Alma Ezequiel Montilla

    350Pearl Points

    Michelin value in a mansion. Book the tasting menu.

    Alma Ezequiel Montilla, Restaurant in Puente Genil

    About Alma Ezequiel Montilla

    Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2024 and 2025, rated 4.9 from 600+ reviews, Alma Ezequiel Montilla serves two tasting menus built around Spain, Morocco, Europe in a restored century-old Andalucían mansion. At €€ with deep local sourcing and straightforward booking, it is the strongest value case for serious tasting-menu dining in the province of Córdoba.

    A Michelin Bib Gourmand twice over, at €€ prices, in a century-old mansion in provincial Andalucía: book the tasting menu

    That number is harder to earn in a small Córdoba city than in a major capital, where tourist volume can inflate scores. Here it reflects something more durable: a restaurant that locals return to and visitors make detours for. Backed by Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025, this is one of the clearest value cases in southern Spain's dining scene.

    The venue is housed in a century-old mansion on Calle Cuesta Borrego in Puente Genil, a town in the province of Córdoba better known for its Holy Week processions than its fine dining. That context matters when you walk in: the building's arched corridors, ornate tilework, Arabian-inspired lattice windows are not decorative padding — they are structural to the experience. The central patio, covered by a glass roof and centred on a fountain modelled on one in Granada's Generalife gardens, is where the architecture and the kitchen's geographic ambitions converge. If you are visiting Puente Genil and choosing between this and Casa Pedro for a serious meal, the setting alone tips it toward Alma for occasion dining.

    Two menus, three geographies, one structural idea

    Chef Ezequiel Montilla organises the kitchen around an explicit premise: three gastronomic routes through Spain, Morocco, Europe, expressed across two tasting menus named Riad and Medina. The dining rooms carry names from the same map — London, Marrakech, Casablanca, Córdoba, the progression through the meal is meant to mirror movement through these places. This is not a gimmick applied to a generic menu. The sourcing is grounded in specific Andalucían producers: vegetables from Puente Genil itself, wine from the Montilla and Moriles D.O. meat from the Valle de Los Pedroches, fish from the Andalucían coast. The international references in the menu names sit on a foundation of deeply local ingredients, which is the point: the chef's time cooking abroad informs what arrives on the plate, but what arrives on the plate comes from the region immediately outside the door.

    For the food-and-travel enthusiast visiting Andalucía, this structure is the main draw. The Bib Gourmand designation confirms the kitchen is delivering quality at a price that doesn't require the budget justified by a starred room. The €€ price tier puts both tasting menus well below comparable tasting experiences in Seville, Málaga, or Madrid. If you're planning a route through southern Spain and want one meal that combines regional provenance with international culinary thinking, Alma makes a strong argument for a stop in Puente Genil specifically.

    Book 24 hours out, minimum

    Both the Riad and Medina tasting menus require a booking made at least 24 hours in advance, this is a kitchen production requirement, not a formality. Given the Bib Gourmand recognition and the 4.9 rating, securing a table at least several days ahead is the safer approach, particularly at weekends and during Semana Santa, when Puente Genil draws visitors for its celebrated processions. The booking difficulty is rated Easy overall, which means this is not a restaurant where you need to set calendar reminders months out, but the 24-hour minimum for tasting menus is non-negotiable. Phone and website details are not currently listed in our database, so check the venue address directly or search locally for current contact information.

    The restaurant also includes a private room suitable for business meetings, which makes it a practical option for groups that want a memorable working lunch or dinner in the region. The combination of the architectural setting, the local sourcing credentials, the Michelin recognition gives it the kind of third-party legitimacy that makes it easier to propose to a professional group.

    Sustainability framing worth noting

    Alma has a stated commitment to recycling and operates with a focus on regional sourcing that goes beyond menu copy. The specific producers named in the venue record, local vegetables, Montilla-Moriles wine, Valle de Los Pedroches meat, Andalucían coastal fish, indicate a supply chain built around the immediate region. For diners who weight provenance and food ethics in their decisions, this is a genuine credential rather than a marketing position. Our full guides to Puente Genil restaurants, Puente Genil wineries, and Puente Genil experiences offer broader context for planning time in the area.

    How It Compares

    Comparing Alma Ezequiel Montilla to Spain's headline tasting-menu restaurants is useful for calibrating expectations, not for suggesting they compete directly. Quique Dacosta in Dénia, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María all operate at €€€€ price points with multi-star Michelin recognition and booking windows that stretch weeks or months ahead. Alma operates at €€, holds a Bib Gourmand rather than a full star, books with far less difficulty. The question is not which is better overall, it's which fits your trip and budget.

    If you're building a dedicated Spain fine-dining itinerary and cost is secondary, the starred restaurants above will deliver greater technical ambition and harder-to-replicate experiences. But if you're in Andalucía specifically, you want a serious tasting menu with genuine local provenance and Michelin endorsement at a fraction of those prices, Alma is the more accessible and arguably more regionally authentic choice. Aponiente is the strongest Andalucían alternative for a more technically ambitious seafood-focused experience, but at significantly higher cost and with a more demanding booking process.

    Within Puente Genil itself, Casa Pedro is the main alternative for traditional Andalucían cooking. Choose Casa Pedro for direct regional cuisine without the tasting menu structure. Choose Alma if the multi-course format, the international-meets-local kitchen philosophy, the architectural setting are part of what you're there for. For broader trip planning across southern Spain, see our Puente Genil hotels guide, bars guide, and the full restaurants guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Alma Ezequiel Montilla?

    Book one of the two tasting menus — Riad or Medina — at least 24 hours in advance, as walk-in à la carte is not the format here. The restaurant holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025, which means the kitchen is producing food at a level that Michelin considers exceptional value for money. You're dining in a century-old mansion with a central glass-roofed patio and a fountain modelled on the Generalife gardens in Granada, so arrive a few minutes early to take in the space.

    Is Alma Ezequiel Montilla worth the price?

    At €€ pricing with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025, the value case is clear. Bib Gourmand is specifically awarded to restaurants where quality exceeds what the price would suggest, in a small Córdoba city that distinction is harder-won than in a major capital. For the combination of setting, sourcing credentials, tasting-menu format, this is one of the stronger value propositions in provincial Andalucía.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Alma Ezequiel Montilla?

    Yes, it's the only format worth booking. The Riad and Medina menus are built around three explicit gastronomic routes — Spain, Morocco, Europe — and both require 24 hours' notice, which signals kitchen-level preparation rather than a menu assembled from standing stock. Chef Ezequiel Montilla's international experience shapes the structure directly, with dining rooms named after cities including London, Marrakech, Casablanca. If you want à la carte flexibility, this isn't the right venue.

    What should I wear to Alma Ezequiel Montilla?

    The venue data doesn't specify a dress code, but the setting — a century-old mansion with architectural detailing, a replica Generalife fountain, named dining rooms — points toward neat, occasion-appropriate clothing rather than casual dress. A tasting menu in a Michelin-recognised restaurant in this kind of space warrants effort.

    What are alternatives to Alma Ezequiel Montilla in Puente Genil?

    No comparable tasting-menu restaurant in Puente Genil is documented in available venue data, which makes Alma the clear anchor for a serious dinner in the town. For Michelin-level alternatives in the broader Córdoba province, you'd need to travel; within Puente Genil itself, Alma has no documented peer at this level.

    Is Alma Ezequiel Montilla good for solo dining?

    The tasting-menu format works for solo diners — there are no minimum party requirements noted — and the architectural setting of the central patio gives solo guests something to engage with beyond the table. The private room is positioned for business meetings and groups, so solo diners will likely be seated in the main dining areas, which is the better experience anyway.

    Is Alma Ezequiel Montilla good for a special occasion?

    The combination of a century-old mansion, a glass-roofed central patio with a Generalife-replica fountain, named dining rooms, Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition makes this a straightforward yes for a special occasion in the Córdoba region. The tasting-menu format gives the meal a clear arc, the €€ price point means you're not paying Michelin-star prices for the occasion. Book at least 24 hours out and confirm which menu you want at the time of reservation.

    Location

    C. Cta. Borrego, 3, 14500 Puente Genil, Córdoba, Spain

    Puente Genil, Spain

    Compare Alma Ezequiel Montilla

    How Easy to Book: Alma Ezequiel Montilla vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Alma Ezequiel MontillaInternational€€Easy
    Quique DacostaCreative€€€€Unknown
    El Celler de Can RocaProgressive Spanish, Creative€€€€Unknown
    ArzakModern Basque, Creative€€€€Unknown
    AzurmendiProgressive, Creative€€€€Unknown
    AponienteProgressive - Seafood, Creative€€€€Unknown

    Comparing your options in Puente Genil for this tier.

    Also Consider

    Comparing Alma Ezequiel Montilla to Spain's headline tasting-menu restaurants is useful for calibrating expectations, not for suggesting they compete directly. Quique Dacosta in Dénia, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María all operate at €€€€ price points with multi-star Michelin recognition and booking windows that stretch weeks or months ahead. Alma operates at €€, holds a Bib Gourmand rather than a full star, books with considerably less difficulty. The question is not which is better overall, it's which fits your trip and budget.

    If you're building a dedicated Spain fine-dining itinerary and cost is secondary, the starred restaurants above will deliver greater technical ambition. But if you're in Andalucía and want a serious tasting menu with genuine local provenance and Michelin endorsement at a fraction of those prices, Alma is the more accessible and arguably more regionally grounded choice. Aponiente is the strongest Andalucían alternative for a technically ambitious seafood-focused experience, but at significantly higher cost and with a more demanding reservation process. DiverXO in Madrid and Mugaritz in Errenteria sit in the same tier of Spain's most-discussed tasting rooms but require far greater commitment in both budget and forward planning.

    Within Puente Genil, Casa Pedro is the main alternative for traditional Andalucían cooking without the tasting menu format. Choose Casa Pedro for regional classics and a more informal evening. Choose Alma when the multi-course progression, the architectural setting, the Bib Gourmand credibility are what you are there for. For diners who want a broader sense of what the region offers, our full Puente Genil restaurants guide covers the wider field.

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