Restaurant in València, Spain
Patraix Locals Table

Eladio is a neighbourhood restaurant in Valencia's Patraix district, set away from the tourist circuit and suited to explorers willing to work with limited published information. Booking is easy and the residential setting signals accessible pricing. Best approached as a low-pressure lunch on a first visit, with a return trip if the kitchen earns it. Compare against more documented Valencia options before committing a key evening here.
Eladio sits in Patraix, one of Valencia's working residential districts rather than the tourist centre, which tells you something useful before you even look at the menu: this is a neighbourhood restaurant built for repeat locals, not a destination play. With no published awards, no star rating in the current database, and sparse online presence, it belongs to a category of Valencia dining that rewards the explorer willing to move beyond the old town. Whether it earns that exploration depends on what you are after, and this portrait will help you decide.
The address on Carrer de Xiva places Eladio firmly in everyday Valencia rather than the polished waterfront or the Ruzafa dining corridor where most visitors concentrate. That positioning is either a reason to skip it or the point entirely, depending on your approach to a city. For a food and travel enthusiast who has already worked through Valencia's better-documented dining rooms, a place operating this quietly in a residential barrio is worth investigating. Valencia has a long tradition of neighbourhood restaurants that do the honest, unfussy work of feeding a community well, and Patraix has its share of them. Eladio appears to be one.
Because specific menu data, pricing, and hours are not available in the current record, direct comparisons on value-per-dish are not possible here. What the address and profile do suggest is a local-format restaurant: accessible price tier, walk-in or short-notice booking, and a kitchen cooking to a regular clientele rather than a review cycle. If you are comparing this against somewhere like Anyora or Bouet, both of which have more documented profiles, Eladio is the lower-certainty, higher-serendipity option.
If Eladio fits the exploratory mould, think about it across two or three visits rather than a single high-stakes dinner. A first visit should be low-pressure: lunch rather than dinner, no fixed expectations, and an eye on what the kitchen is running as daily specials. Valencia's neighbourhood restaurants often cook differently for the midday menú than for evening à la carte service, and that lunch format is where the value and the kitchen's actual personality tend to show. A second visit, if the first earns it, is where you can push further: ask what the house is known for, note what the tables around you are ordering, and build from there. This two-visit frame is how locals use places like this, and it is the right way to assess a restaurant where the published record is thin.
For context on what serious Valencia dining looks like at the other end of the spectrum, Quique Dacosta in Dénia is the regional benchmark, and the broader Spanish fine dining conversation includes names like Arzak in San Sebastián and Azurmendi in Larrabetzu. Eladio is not competing in that space. It is competing for your attention as a neighbourhood room in a city full of them, which is a different and often more honest contest.
Patraix is not difficult to reach from central Valencia, though it sits outside the typical tourist loop. The neighbourhood is residential and understated. Expect a local clientele, a room that reflects the area rather than a design brief, and an operation that is not calibrated for visitors arriving with a checklist. That is the trade-off: less curation, more authenticity, but also less predictability for someone without a local contact to vouch for it in advance.
For a broader view of where Eladio fits within Valencia's dining options, our full Valencia restaurants guide gives you the category in full. If you are planning a longer stay, the Valencia hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are worth reading alongside it. Other neighbourhood options worth considering in Valencia include Colmado LaLola and Barraca Toni Montoliu, both of which have more documented records to help you calibrate the decision.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.