Restaurant in València, Spain
Serious Valencian rice. Book ahead.

A Michelin Plate-recognised Valencian restaurant in L'Eixample that takes traditional rice cookery seriously at a €€ price point. Pre-order one of the rice dishes when you book and start with the cod fritters. Easy to get into, harder to find at this quality level for the money.
If you want to understand what Valencian rice cookery actually tastes like when it is taken seriously, Yarza is worth booking. This is a Michelin Plate-recognised restaurant in L'Eixample that holds a 4.7 rating across 876 Google reviews, delivers traditional market cuisine at a €€ price point, and does so without chasing the creative tasting-menu format that defines the higher-end room down the road. Book it for a long, unhurried dinner rather than a quick bite: the rice dishes require pre-ordering, which sets the pace and the intention of the meal from the moment you sit down.
There is a particular kind of Valencian restaurant that does not announce itself. Yarza sits on Carrer de Ciscar in L'Eixample, a residential neighbourhood that draws a local crowd rather than tour groups, and its contemporary dining room signals precision rather than theatre. The space is clean, modern, and deliberately unpretentious — which is exactly the right visual cue for what follows on the plate. The ethos here is stated plainly: cook in the same painstaking way as in the past, but with a modern touch. That is not a marketing line — it is a working philosophy that shapes every section of the menu.
The à la carte is structured around market availability, with wild-caught fish of the day rotating according to what the market offers. For a food-focused traveller, this is relevant because it means the menu rewards a conversation with your server rather than a pre-visit study of a fixed list. The fish section shifts; the rice dishes do not, and they are the reason to come. Arròs del Senyoret, Arroz en Perol Marinero, Paella de Costilla Ibérica with vegetables, and Arroz en perol de montaña are all available, but each must be pre-ordered. This is standard practice for serious rice cookery in Valencia , a rice dish made to order for a full table takes time, and restaurants that skip this step are usually cutting corners somewhere. Yarza does not skip it.
The cod fritters (Buñuelos de Bacalao) are the recommended starting point for first-timers. They appear in Michelin's own notes on the restaurant, which is as close to a sourced endorsement as you will get without a table of your own. At the €€ price tier, the kitchen is delivering Michelin-recognised quality at a fraction of what you would spend at Ricard Camarena (Modern Spanish, Creative) or El Poblet (Modern Spanish, Creative) , two addresses that occupy the leading of Valencia's fine-dining tier but require a different budget and a different booking mindset entirely.
Yarza is not a late-night venue in the conventional sense, but in a city where dinner service often runs past 11 PM by cultural default, a restaurant that takes rice cookery this seriously and carries no booking difficulty qualifies as one of the more civilised options for a long evening table. You are not rushing to beat last orders. You are settling in for a meal that has a beginning (the fritters), a centre (the rice, pre-ordered), and a natural conclusion at whatever pace you set. That format suits the food-focused traveller who wants depth over volume , someone who has already seen the flashier side of Spanish dining at addresses like Quique Dacosta in Dénia, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, or Arzak in San Sebastián, and is now looking for something more rooted.
For context within Valencia's broader dining map: if you want market-focused Spanish cooking with a farm-to-table lean at a step up in price, Llisa Negra (€€€) is the comparison to make. If you want to eat well at a similar price point but in a faster, tapas format, Vuelve Carolina (€€) handles that role. Yarza occupies the space between them: sit-down, structured, unhurried, and specifically committed to Valencian tradition in a way that neither of those addresses is.
The Michelin Plate , awarded in both 2024 and 2025 , is the relevant trust signal here. It does not indicate stars, but it does indicate that Michelin's inspectors found the cooking technically sound and consistent enough to name twice. At this price tier, that kind of sustained recognition across consecutive years matters. It is not a ceiling for the restaurant; it is a floor of confidence for the diner. You can also explore comparable traditional cuisine destinations further afield, including Cave à Vin & à Manger - Maison Saint-Crescent in Narbonne and Coto de Quevedo Evolución in Torre de Juan Abad, though neither will give you the Valencian rice experience that Yarza does on home ground.
If you are building a broader Valencia itinerary, Yarza pairs well with nearby options such as Goya Gallery, Gran Azul, and La Barra de Kaymus for variety across a multi-day stay. The full Valencia restaurants guide covers the category in depth, and the hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the planning picture. If you are comparing across Spain's broader high-end restaurant circuit, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria represent the country's top tier , Yarza is not competing at that level, but it is doing something those kitchens do not: keeping Valencian tradition intact at an accessible price.
Booking difficulty at Yarza is classified as easy, so you do not need to plan weeks in advance. That said, call or book as soon as you know your date, because you will need to pre-order the rice dishes at the time of reservation , that step requires a confirmed table, not a walk-in decision. A few days' notice should be sufficient for most evenings.
There is no confirmed bar seating in the available venue data, so do not assume that option exists. Yarza reads as a full sit-down restaurant rather than a counter or bar format. If bar dining is your preferred mode in Valencia, Vuelve Carolina is the stronger choice for that experience.
Pre-order a rice dish when you book , that is the single most important logistical move. The Buñuelos de Bacalao (cod fritters) are specifically called out in Michelin's notes and make a sensible starting point. Expect a structured, unhurried meal at a €€ price point with Michelin Plate-level cooking. This is a traditional Valencian restaurant, not a creative tasting-menu format.
No phone number or website is available in the current data, so contacting the restaurant directly to discuss restrictions requires finding current contact details through Google or a booking platform. Given that the menu is market-driven and heavily fish-focused, pescatarians and seafood eaters are well served by default. The rice dishes include both land and sea options, which gives some range. Confirm specific dietary needs before you go.
Smart casual is the practical answer for a Michelin Plate restaurant at the €€ tier in Valencia's L'Eixample neighbourhood. You will not need a jacket, and you will not feel comfortable in beachwear. Think the same register you would bring to a good neighbourhood restaurant in any European city: tidy, relaxed, not overdressed.
Yes, with one caveat: the rice dishes are designed for sharing and need to be pre-ordered as a table. For solo dining, focus on the à la carte , the market fish section and the cod fritters work well without a group. At the €€ price point, a solo meal here is one of the more affordable ways to eat at Michelin-recognised level in Valencia. If you want a counter experience purpose-built for solo diners, that format is less established at Yarza than at some of the city's bar-focused addresses.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yarza | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | A contemporary-style restaurant that describes its traditionally inspired Valencian cuisine in a single premise: “We cook in the same painstaking way as in the past, but with a modern touch”. On the à la carte, with its focus on traditional, market-inspired cuisine, and featuring an array of suggestions with a focus on wild-caught fish of the day, you’ll also find delicious rice dishes (Arròs del Senyoret, Arroz en Perol Marinero, Paella de Costilla Ibérica with vegetables, Arroz en perol de montaña) which need to be pre-ordered. Make sure you also sample the exquisite cod fritters (Buñuelos de Bacalao).; 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 | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Yarza and alternatives.
Book at least a week in advance, and further ahead for weekends. The rice dishes, including the Arròs del Senyoret and Paella de Costilla Ibérica, must be pre-ordered, so confirm your order at the time of reservation. Walk-ins may find space at quieter lunch services, but arriving without a booking and expecting rice is a gamble.
The venue database does not confirm bar seating at Yarza. Given that the rice dishes require pre-ordering at the time of booking, a spontaneous bar visit would limit what you can actually eat, so a table reservation is the more practical route regardless of seating format.
The rice dishes are the reason to come, but they must be pre-ordered — do not show up expecting to order paella on the spot. Yarza holds a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025), which signals kitchen consistency without the price tag of starred dining. At €€, this is an accessible entry point into serious Valencian cookery. The cod fritters (Buñuelos de Bacalao) are specifically called out as a dish to try.
The menu centres on traditional Valencian rice dishes, wild-caught fish, and market produce, so pescatarians and omnivores are well served. The kitchen's focus on traditional methods means the menu is not structured around dietary customisation, so check the venue's official channels before booking if you have specific requirements — especially given the pre-order nature of the rice dishes.
Yarza describes itself as contemporary in style but grounded in traditional Valencian cooking, and sits in a residential L'Eixample neighbourhood rather than a high-profile destination address. At a €€ price point with a Michelin Plate, clean and neat is the practical benchmark — this is not a venue that demands formal dress, but it is not casual beachwear territory either.
Solo dining is manageable here, particularly if you stick to the à la carte fish and starters. The pre-order rice dishes are sized for sharing, so a solo visit means you will likely skip the format Yarza is best known for. If the rice is your priority, bring at least one other person.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.