Restaurant in València, Spain
Serious Valencian rice at a fair price.

A Michelin Plate-recognised traditional Valencian restaurant open since 1950, Goya Gallery is the right call for a long rice-focused lunch in L'Eixample at €€. The croquettes and cuttlefish are worth ordering alongside whatever seasonal rice dish the kitchen is running. Book ahead — the local following fills the room.
Book Goya Gallery if you want a proper traditional Valencian lunch grounded in rice cookery, at a price that leaves room for a second bottle of wine. The Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) signals competent, consistent kitchen work without the ceremony or spend of a tasting-menu room. At €€, this is one of the more honest value propositions in L'Eixample, and the loyal local following is a reliable quality signal in a city where tourists rarely find it. Booking ahead is necessary — walk-ins are a gamble given the regulars who fill the room most service times.
The room carries genuine historical weight. The Mostra de València-Cinema international film festival was first established here, which means the space has been part of the city's cultural fabric since long before the current dining scene took shape. That backstory is worth knowing less for atmosphere-hunting purposes and more because it explains the clientele: this is a neighbourhood institution that opened as a bar in 1950 and has held its character across decades, which is exactly the kind of track record that tends to keep kitchens honest.
Physically, the dining room reflects its heritage — this is not a stripped-back, minimalist interior or a designed-for-Instagram space. For a special occasion dinner where the conversation matters more than the backdrop, or for a long celebratory lunch with a small group, the scale and layout work in your favour: you are unlikely to be crammed against strangers or competing with a loud DJ set. The spatial experience here is one of a proper Valencian comedor , contained, functional, and built for the kind of meal that takes its time.
The kitchen runs a traditional Mediterranean à la carte, and the rice dishes are the reason to come. Rice cookery in Valencia is a discipline with strict local standards, and a restaurant that has been refining its approach since 1950 and still earns Michelin recognition is one to take seriously in this category. Order rice as your main course and use the starters to set the pace.
On the starter front, the Michelin data specifically flags the croquettes and the cuttlefish with mayonnaise as dishes not to skip. Both are rooted in the traditional Valencian kitchen rather than any modernist reworking, which is the correct register for a meal here. These are not reinvented classics , they are the real thing, executed consistently.
The seasonal angle matters here more than it might at a modern tasting-menu restaurant. Traditional rice cooking in Valencia tracks the calendar closely: the vegetables and proteins that appear alongside rice change with what the region produces, and the leading version of any given dish depends on timing. Spring brings artichoke and broad bean preparations; autumn and winter lean toward richer, meatier combinations. If you are visiting with a specific rice dish in mind, it is worth contacting the restaurant in advance to check what the kitchen is running that season rather than assuming a fixed menu year-round. The à la carte format means the kitchen has flexibility to follow the market, and that flexibility is an asset if you use it.
For a special occasion lunch, the logical approach is to let rice anchor the meal, choose two or three starters to share across the table, and allocate enough time to do it properly. This is not a format for a quick 45-minute turnaround , Valencian rice service is designed to be unhurried, and the room supports that rhythm.
Goya Gallery holds a Google rating of 4.5 across 3,324 reviews , a volume that carries genuine weight. A 4.5 average on that many reviews is harder to maintain than a 4.8 on 200, and it reflects consistent delivery over time rather than a burst of early enthusiasm. The Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen is producing food that meets a recognised benchmark for quality, even without climbing to Bib Gourmand or star level.
Goya Gallery operates on a loyal local following, which means availability tightens faster than the €€ price point might suggest. Book at least a week ahead for weekday lunches and further in advance for weekend service or if you are planning around a specific date. The booking difficulty is rated easy relative to the wider Valencia dining scene, but that does not mean walk-in availability is reliable , it means you will not need to plan three months out the way you might for Ricard Camarena or El Poblet.
The address is Carrer de Borriana, 3 in L'Eixample, the grid-plan neighbourhood that sits between the old city and the newer residential districts. L'Eixample is walkable from the centre and well-served by public transport. For broader context on eating and drinking in the city, see our full València restaurants guide, our full València bars guide, and our full València hotels guide.
For those building a longer trip around Spanish restaurant dining, the regional context is useful: Quique Dacosta in Dénia is less than an hour south and represents the other end of the ambition spectrum in Valencian cooking. Further afield, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria are the benchmark Spanish fine dining references if Goya Gallery is part of a broader Spanish restaurant itinerary. Other traditional cuisine venues worth cross-referencing for context: Cave à Vin & à Manger in Narbonne and Coto de Quevedo Evolución in Torre de Juan Abad offer useful regional comparisons in the traditional cuisine category.
More Valencia dining options: Gran Azul, La Barra de Kaymus, and Yarza are all worth considering depending on your format and budget. See also our full València wineries guide and our full València experiences guide for trip planning.
Quick reference: Traditional Valencian à la carte, €€, L'Eixample, Michelin Plate 2024–2025, Google 4.5 (3,324 reviews), book ahead recommended.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goya Gallery | Traditional Cuisine | Occupying a legendary setting in the city (the Mostra de València-Cinema film festival was first established here), this business began life as a bar in 1950. It offers a traditional Mediterranean à la carte featuring an impressive choice of starters (don’t pass up the croquettes or the cuttlefish with mayonnaise) and a superb selection of rice dishes – the house speciality. We strongly recommend booking ahead as the Goya Gallery has a loyal local following.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Ricard Camarena | Modern Spanish, Creative | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Riff | Mediterranean, Creative | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Vuelve Carolina | Tapas Bar, Modern Cuisine | Unknown | — | |
| Llisa Negra | Spanish, Farm to table | Unknown | — | |
| Toshi | Chinese, Mediterranean Cuisine | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Book at least a week in advance. Goya Gallery has a loyal local following, and that regular trade fills the room faster than the €€ price point implies. For weekend lunch — the prime slot for rice dishes in Valencia — push that to ten days minimum.
Yes, if your occasion calls for a proper sit-down Valencian lunch rather than a tasting-menu format. The room carries genuine historical weight as the original home of the Mostra de València-Cinema film festival, and two consecutive Michelin Plates give the kitchen credibility. For a celebration requiring more ceremony, Ricard Camarena or Llisa Negra would be a stronger fit.
The rice dishes are the primary reason to come — rice cookery is the house speciality and the item the kitchen has built its reputation around. The venue data specifically calls out the croquettes and cuttlefish with mayonnaise as starters worth ordering. Lead with those two, then anchor the meal on a rice.
For a step up in ambition and price, Llisa Negra or Vuelve Carolina offer a more contemporary take on Valencian produce. Riff sits at a similar casual register but with a more modern kitchen. Toshi is a different category entirely. If traditional rice cookery at an honest price is the brief, Goya Gallery is the more focused choice than any of them.
The venue database does not specify dietary accommodation policies. The kitchen runs a traditional Mediterranean à la carte, which typically includes fish, shellfish, and meat as central ingredients. check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a factor — no phone or website is listed in current records, so approach via booking platform.
At €€, yes. Two Michelin Plates in consecutive years and a 4.5 Google rating across more than 3,300 reviews point to consistent kitchen performance. For a traditional Valencian rice lunch in L'Eixample at this price level, the value case is solid. If you want a more polished room or a longer tasting format, the price goes up considerably elsewhere.
Goya Gallery runs an à la carte format, not a tasting menu. The structure here is starter, rice dish, and dessert chosen from the menu — which suits the traditional Valencian lunch format. If a tasting menu is the format you want, Ricard Camarena or Vuelve Carolina are the right addresses.
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