Restaurant in Vigo, Spain
Michelin-recognised tapas bar worth booking twice.

Detapaencepa holds a 2025 Michelin Plate and a 4.6 Google rating at the €€ price tier, making it one of Vigo's stronger options for contemporary Galician cooking without the tasting-menu price tag. The dual tapas bar and restaurant setup gives flexibility, and dishes like the pigs' trotters with Carabinero tartare and wild boar stew show a kitchen working at a technical level above its price point.
If you have already eaten at Detapaencepa once, book it again. The €€ price tier, a 4.6 Google rating across more than 2,000 reviews, and a 2025 Michelin Plate together make a clear case: this is one of the more technically accomplished kitchens operating at this price point in Vigo, and its dual-format setup — tapas bar up front, restaurant behind — gives you genuine flexibility depending on what kind of evening you want.
Detapaencepa operates two businesses under one roof: a busy tapas bar and a full restaurant, and the same updated traditional menu runs across both spaces. That decision matters for how you plan your visit. Sitting at the bar is not a compromise here , you have access to the full range of tapas, raciones, and more elaborate dishes, including the pigs' trotters with Carabinero prawn tartare and the wild boar stew with wild mushrooms and Gnocchi Sarda pasta. Those two dishes represent exactly what this kitchen is doing technically: taking Galician ingredients and traditions and pulling them into a more composed, contemporary register without losing the weight and honesty that makes the regional cooking worth eating in the first place.
The Carabinero pairing with pigs' trotters is a good example of the kitchen's approach. Carabineros are among the most prized prawns on the Atlantic coast , deeply flavoured, with a richness that demands an equally strong counterpart. Matching them with trotters, slow-cooked collagen-rich cuts with their own intensity, is a considered technical choice, not a garnish decision. If this combination worked on your first visit, it is the reason to return.
The wild boar stew with wild mushrooms and Gnocchi Sarda is a second anchor dish worth ordering. Boar benefits from long cooking, and pairing it with Sardinian-style pasta , dense, chewy, built to hold a sauce , reflects a kitchen that thinks in texture as well as flavour. This is not fusion for its own sake; it is a practical, well-judged match between a strong protein and a pasta format that earns its place on the plate.
Three menu formats run alongside the à la carte. Weekday lunches (Monday to Friday) include an executive menu , typically the most price-efficient way to eat in any kitchen operating at this standard. There is also a menú de la casa and daily suggestions that rotate. If you are returning specifically to explore the kitchen's range, the menú de la casa is the better choice over a second à la carte visit: it gives the kitchen more structure to show what it does across courses, rather than limiting you to two or three individual choices.
At the €€ price band, Detapaencepa sits in a tier where value is not a given , plenty of mid-range Vigo restaurants charge similar prices for significantly less technical cooking. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 is a meaningful data point here: it marks the kitchen as one producing cooking of a standard Michelin's inspectors consider worth flagging, without the tasting-menu format or pricing that comes with a starred operation. For a returning visitor, that credential matters more than it might on a first visit, because it confirms the kitchen's consistency rather than just its ambition.
Booking at Detapaencepa is rated easy, which aligns with Vigo's generally accessible restaurant scene at this price tier. The dual-format setup also works in your favour: if the restaurant tables are full, the tapas bar gives you access to the same menu without the wait. No phone number or booking platform is listed in available data, so the most reliable approach is to visit the venue directly or enquire at the address at R. do Ecuador, 18, Santiago de Vigo, 36203 Vigo, Pontevedra. Given the 4.6 rating and Michelin recognition, weekday lunch , especially using the executive menu , is likely the lowest-friction entry point if you want a table in the restaurant rather than the bar.
For more options across the city, see our full Vigo restaurants guide. If you are planning a broader trip, our full Vigo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city's offer.
Galicia is not the most discussed region in Spain's contemporary restaurant conversation , that space tends to be occupied by the Basque Country and Catalonia, with operations like Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, and Quique Dacosta in Dénia drawing the critical attention. Detapaencepa is not in that conversation in terms of scale or ambition. What it is doing is applying that contemporary approach , updated technique applied to traditional ingredients , at a price and accessibility level that makes it useful for a broader range of visits. That is the more honest comparison: not against Spain's three-star operations, but against other €€ contemporary kitchens in Galicia, where its Michelin Plate puts it ahead of most of the field.
For reference on how this kind of contemporary approach translates internationally, Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City both operate in the contemporary category, though at different price points and with different cultural reference points than what Detapaencepa is working with in Galicia.
If Detapaencepa is your base in Vigo, you should also know Silabario, Enxebre, La Mesa de Conus, Maruja Limón, and Alberte , each serving a different purpose depending on budget, occasion, and format preference.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Detapaencepa | €€ | — |
| Silabario | €€€ | — |
| Casa Marco | €€ | — |
| Morrofino | €€ | — |
| Alberte | €€€ | — |
| Kero | €€ | — |
Comparing your options in Vigo for this tier.
Relaxed but neat is the right call. Detapaencepa runs a dual format — tapas bar on one side, restaurant on the other — and at the €€ price tier with a Michelin Plate, the tone sits closer to polished casual than formal. Jeans and a clean shirt work; a suit would feel out of place.
Yes, with the right expectations. The Michelin Plate recognition (2025) and dishes like pigs' trotters with Carabinero prawn tartare give it enough occasion weight, and the €€ price tier means you are not paying a premium for the setting alone. Book the restaurant side rather than the tapas bar if you want a sit-down celebration feel.
The tapas bar format makes it one of the more solo-friendly options in Vigo at this level. You can order tapas or raciones without committing to a full à la carte meal, and a busy bar counter rarely makes a solo diner feel conspicuous. The weekday executive lunch menu is also a low-friction solo option.
Groups are manageable here given the dual-space setup — the tapas bar side handles informal larger parties well, and the shared menu across both spaces means everyone orders from the same options. For groups of six or more, calling ahead to confirm table availability is advisable, as no booking policy details are publicly documented.
Maruja Limón is the reference point for more ambitious contemporary Galician cooking in Vigo and sits at a higher price tier. Silabario and Alberte are worth considering if you want a different register of the same Galician produce focus. For something more casual and lower-cost, Morrofino and Kero cover different corners of the Vigo dining scene.
At €€ with a 2025 Michelin Plate, yes. The kitchen is running dishes like wild boar stew with wild mushrooms and Gnocchi Sarda pasta alongside a full tapas and raciones menu, and three menu formats — à la carte, menú de la casa, and a weekday executive lunch — give you options at different spend levels. For Michelin-recognised cooking in Galicia at this price point, the value holds.
Detapaencepa does not offer a traditional tasting menu. The closest equivalent is the menú de la casa, which the Michelin record describes as impressive, plus daily suggestions that extend the à la carte. If a set multicourse format is what you are after, Maruja Limón in Vigo is a better fit.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.