Restaurant in Vecinos, Spain
Family-run, Michelin-noted, worth the detour.

Casa Pacheco in Vecinos holds Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025, operates from a family address since 1916, and prices at €€ — making it one of the most accessible Michelin-recognised tables in Castile and León. Chef Cristina Martín runs a seasonal, produce-driven kitchen rooted in Campo Charro tradition. Book ahead for weekends; walk-in midweek lunch is the lowest-pressure window.
Seasonal produce drives everything at Casa Pacheco, which means the window for any given dish is finite. If you are planning a trip to the Campo Charro region of Salamanca, do not treat this as a backup option. A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, a Google rating of 4.6 from 482 reviews, and a family operation running since 1916 put this squarely at the leading of the short list for traditional Castilian cooking in the area. The price point sits at €€, which makes it one of the more accessible Michelin-recognised tables in Spain right now.
This is a family-run restaurant in Vecinos, a small municipality in the province of Salamanca, operating from the same address on Calle José Antonio since 1916. Chef Cristina Martín leads the kitchen with a programme built around Campo Charro produce, seasonality, and the kind of cooking that does not require much editorial framing: ingredients from the land around the restaurant, prepared with technique and without embellishment. The Michelin Plate designation, awarded in consecutive years, signals a kitchen that meets a consistent standard of cooking quality — not a flash-in-the-pan recognition. For context, the Michelin Plate is awarded to restaurants where inspectors find good cooking, sitting below Bib Gourmand and starred categories but representing a meaningful external validation of kitchen quality.
The cuisine type is listed as Traditional, which in this context means rooted in the cooking traditions of the Charro countryside in Castile and León. This is not the place for avant-garde technique or deconstructed dishes. It is the place for those traditions executed with care, using produce that reflects the agricultural character of the region. Iberian products, field vegetables, and the flavours that come from slow, attentive cooking are what you should expect. The aroma that defines a kitchen like this is foundational: rendered fat, bread, and slow-cooked meat — the kind of smell that has been in the walls of a century-old family house for generations.
At €€ pricing, yes , this is worth a detour if you are already in or near Salamanca. The combination of Michelin recognition, a strong Google score across nearly 500 reviews, and the longevity of the operation gives you enough signal to justify making this a destination rather than an afterthought. If you are comparing spend, a table at Casa Pacheco costs a fraction of what you would pay at the starred Spanish restaurants in larger cities, and the cooking here is drawing external recognition in its own right. For food and travel enthusiasts seeking depth in less-visited regions of Spain, the case for Vecinos is exactly this kind of find: serious cooking, low profile, accessible price.
On the question of whether the food travels well for takeout or delivery: traditional Castilian cooking at this level is not optimised for off-premise consumption. Slow-cooked preparations, rendered textures, and dishes built around the experience of a family table do not survive a journey the way a taco or a banh mi might. If you are visiting the region, eat in. The format of this restaurant, a family house with a century of cooking history, is part of what you are paying for. Do not try to replicate it in a hotel room.
Booking at Casa Pacheco is rated Easy. Given the Michelin recognition and the small-town location, you are unlikely to face the weeks-long waits common at city-based Michelin restaurants , but calling ahead is still the right move, particularly on weekends and during peak autumn and spring seasons when the Campo Charro produce calendar is at its richest. Timing your visit for midday lunch on a weekend, when traditional Spanish restaurant culture is at its most alive, will give you the fullest version of what this kitchen offers. Summer midweek visits are likely the lowest-demand windows.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Style | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Casa Pacheco (Vecinos) | €€ | Easy | Traditional Castilian | Michelin Plate ×2 |
| Quique Dacosta (Dénia) | €€€€ | Hard | Creative | 3 Michelin Stars |
| El Celler de Can Roca (Girona) | €€€€ | Very Hard | Progressive Spanish | 3 Michelin Stars |
| Arzak (San Sebastián) | €€€€ | Hard | Modern Basque | 3 Michelin Stars |
| Azurmendi (Larrabetzu) | €€€€ | Hard | Progressive | 3 Michelin Stars |
If you are building a longer itinerary around traditional Spanish cooking, Coto de Quevedo Evolución in Torre de Juan Abad operates in a similar register of regional tradition with its own Michelin recognition. For a cross-border comparison at a similar price tier, Cave à Vin & à Manger - Maison Saint-Crescent in Narbonne offers traditional cuisine with a strong wine focus just across the Pyrenees.
For explorers interested in the wider Spanish high-end dining circuit, Atrio in Cáceres sits in the same Castile and Extremadura cultural zone and operates at a higher price tier with starred recognition. Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, Ricard Camarena in València, and Mugaritz in Errenteria represent the creative end of the Spanish canon, all at significantly higher price points and booking difficulty.
If you are making a trip to this part of Salamanca province, see our full Vecinos restaurants guide for further options, along with our Vecinos hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide to round out the visit.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Casa Pacheco | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | This house, located in the heart of Campo Charro, has been in the hands of the same family... since 1916! Here, each dish is a tribute to the land and the efforts of those who cultivate or work it, always with great dedication and an unequivocal dose of passion. The chef at the helm, Cristina Martín, builds her proposal around the best produce, seasonality and the authenticity of the flavours that come from nature, so that we can enjoy gastronomy in its purest state!; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Quique Dacosta | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| El Celler de Can Roca | Progressive Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Arzak | Modern Basque, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Azurmendi | Progressive, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Aponiente | Progressive - Seafood, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
How Casa Pacheco stacks up against the competition.
At €€ pricing, Casa Pacheco sits well within detour-worthy territory for the value it delivers — Michelin Plate recognition two years running (2024 and 2025) at this price point is a strong signal. The kitchen, led by Cristina Martín, builds around seasonal produce from Campo Charro, so what you eat reflects what the land is producing at that moment. If you want tightly controlled fine dining with a fixed progression, this may not be the format — but if seasonal, producer-driven Salamancan cooking is the draw, the value case is clear.
Specific dishes are not documented in available data, but the kitchen's stated approach centres on seasonal Campo Charro produce, so the strongest choices will be whatever reflects current harvest or local livestock. Ask the team what is in season — Cristina Martín's cooking is explicitly built around that cycle. Avoid anchoring to a specific dish you read about online; seasonal rotation means the menu shifts.
Booking at Casa Pacheco is rated Easy — this is a small-town restaurant in Vecinos, not a city venue running weeks-long waitlists. A few days' notice is likely sufficient for most visits, though Michelin recognition (Plate, 2024–2025) does attract regional visitors, so weekends and peak season warrant earlier contact. Phone and online booking details are not listed in current records, so plan to call ahead or check locally.
Bar seating is not documented for Casa Pacheco. Given the venue's profile — a family-run restaurant operating since 1916 in a small Salamanca municipality — the setup is more likely a conventional dining room than a counter or bar format. If informal seating matters to you, confirm directly when booking.
Vecinos is a small municipality with limited dining options, so the practical comparison is at the provincial level. Coto de Quevedo Evolución in Torre de Juan Abad operates in a similar regional, produce-led register. For a broader Salamanca city restaurant list, Pearl's Vecinos and Salamanca guides cover the options worth considering alongside Casa Pacheco.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.