Restaurant in Vigo, Spain
Weekday lunch is the clear entry point.

Silabario holds a Michelin star (2024) and sits on the sixth floor of the Real Club Celta de Vigo beneath a 154-pane glass dome. Book the weekday Berbés lunch menu for one of the best value-to-credential ratios at any starred restaurant in Europe. Dinner opens up three tasting menus, including Solaina, built around Galicia's most distinctive seafood. Booking is hard — reserve early.
If you've already been to Silabario once, you already know the setting is unlike anything else in Vigo. The question for a return visit is whether to come back for the weekday Berbés market lunch, one of the tasting menus, or a full evening à la carte. The answer depends on your priorities, but the Berbés menu is the insider's choice: Michelin itself notes it's one of the least expensive set menus you'll find at any starred restaurant in Europe, and it's only available Tuesday through Friday at lunch. If value matters, that's your window.
Silabario sits on the sixth floor of the Real Club Celta de Vigo's headquarters on Rúa do Príncipe, 44. The room is capped by an avant-garde steel-framed dome of 154 triangular glass panes — a structure that changes character depending on the light. At lunch, natural daylight floods through those panes and the kitchen's aromas of Galician seafood and slow-cooked stocks rise through an open, airy space. At dinner, the same dome turns the room into something more intimate, the glass darkening to frame city lights rather than the estuary beyond. Both versions are worth experiencing, but they are genuinely different meals.
Lunch is the better value proposition. The Berbés market menu runs on weekdays only and, given Silabario's Michelin one-star standing (confirmed in the 2024 guide), it sits in rare company for price-to-credential ratio. You're getting chef Alberto González's contemporary Galician cooking at a price point that most starred restaurants in Spain , let alone in Basque Country or Catalonia , would not match. Compare that to the cost of a comparable lunch at Arzak in San Sebastián or Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and the Berbés menu becomes a serious proposition for anyone passing through Vigo on a weekday.
Dinner opens up the fuller range. Three tasting menus are available in the evenings: Tempo, which follows the natural cycle of seasonal produce; Raíces, which works through traditional Galician recipes with a contemporary lens; and Solaina, the most ingredient-led of the three, built around seafood, lamprey, and eel sourced from the region. If you're returning to Silabario and have already done the Berbés, Solaina is the logical progression , it uses exclusive local ingredients that González treats as the centrepiece rather than the backdrop. The à la carte also runs at dinner (and lunch), with media ración portions available, which gives you flexibility to build a meal around the kitchen's strengths without committing to a full tasting sequence.
Service hours run Tuesday to Saturday, with lunch from 1:30 PM to 3:00 PM and dinner from 9:00 PM to 11:30 PM. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday. If you're planning around a weekend visit to Vigo, Saturday lunch or dinner are your only options , factor that in early, because booking difficulty here is rated hard. Demand for Silabario tables consistently outpaces availability, and that Michelin listing has only sharpened the competition for reservations.
González's cooking is grounded in Galician tradition , the Atlantic, the estuary, the seasonal rhythms of the northwest , but the execution is contemporary. The kitchen builds dishes around ingredient quality rather than complexity for its own sake, which is the current direction of serious Galician cooking. The media ración format means you can move through more of the menu without the commitment of a full tasting sequence, which is the smarter play for a first à la carte visit. The Solaina tasting menu's emphasis on lamprey and eel signals where González's ingredient sourcing is most specific and hardest to replicate elsewhere, so those are the categories to pursue in season.
González's track record gives the kitchen credibility beyond the 2024 Michelin star: he held a star previously at Silabario in Tui (Pontevedra), meaning this Vigo iteration represents a deliberate second chapter rather than a first attempt. That matters for your decision , you're not booking a restaurant still finding its feet.
For context within Spain's contemporary restaurant scene, Silabario operates in a different register from the headline destinations. It doesn't have the profile of DiverXO in Madrid or El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, and it doesn't try to. The comparison to make is within Galicia and the broader northwest: a focused, ingredient-led one-star that argues for the quality of its region. Internationally, if you've eaten at Jungsik in Seoul or Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, you'll recognise the format , a chef working within a defined regional identity, with the technical language of contemporary fine dining. Silabario is tighter in scope and more affordable than either.
Silabario is at Rúa do Príncipe, 44, sixth floor, in central Vigo. Lunch service runs 1:30–3:00 PM Tuesday to Friday (Saturday also). Dinner runs 9:00–11:30 PM Wednesday to Saturday. Closed Sunday and Monday. Price range is €€€. Booking difficulty is high , reserve as early as possible, particularly for weekday lunch slots when the Berbés menu is available. No booking method is confirmed in current data, so check directly with the restaurant for reservation channels. For more on eating and drinking in Vigo, see our full Vigo restaurants guide, our full Vigo bars guide, our full Vigo hotels guide, our full Vigo wineries guide, and our full Vigo experiences guide.
Nearby alternatives worth knowing: Maruja Limón operates at the same price tier and is the closest comparable in contemporary ambition; Enxebre and Detapaencepa offer contemporary cooking at a lower price point if Silabario is fully booked. Alberte and La Mesa de Conus fill different niches in the city's dining options.
Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star (2024) | €€€ | Closed Sun–Mon | Lunch 1:30–3 PM, Dinner 9–11:30 PM (Tue–Sat) | Booking: hard , reserve well in advance | Google: 4.5/5 (828 reviews)
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Silabario | Contemporary | €€€ | Hard |
| Casa Marco | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Unknown |
| Enxebre | Contemporary | €€ | Unknown |
| Maruja Limón | Contemporary | €€€ | Unknown |
| Alberte | Grills | €€€ | Unknown |
| Kero | Peruvian | €€ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Group-specific arrangements are not detailed in the available venue data. Lunch service runs a tight 1:30–3:00 PM window, which limits flexibility for larger parties arriving at varied times. For groups, dinner service (9:00–11:30 PM, Wednesday to Saturday) is the more practical window. Contact Silabario directly to confirm private dining or group booking options, particularly if you want to lock in one of the three tasting menus for the full table.
Maruja Limón is the closest peer — also Michelin-starred in Vigo and worth comparing directly on price and format before booking. For something less formal at a lower price point, Enxebre is a practical alternative for traditional Galician cooking. Casa Marco and Alberte suit diners who want a neighbourhood feel over a destination-dining setup, while Kero is a reasonable option if the tasting menu format at Silabario feels like more than you need for the occasion.
If you're on a first visit, the Berbés market menu (weekday lunch only) gives you the most direct read on chef Alberto González's ingredient-led Galician cooking at an accessible price. For a deeper cut, the Solaina tasting menu is the most distinctive option, built around Galician seafood, lamprey, and eel. The à la carte also runs media ración portions, useful if you want to cover more dishes without committing to a full tasting format.
Bar seating is not documented in the available venue data for Silabario. Given its sixth-floor location inside the Real Club Celta de Vigo headquarters, the room is structured around a formal dining setup rather than a casual counter format. check the venue's official channels at Rúa do Príncipe, 44 to confirm seating options before arriving with that expectation.
Lunch is the stronger value case. The weekday Berbés market menu is cited by Michelin as one of the least expensive set menus at any starred restaurant in Europe, which makes Tuesday-to-Saturday lunch the logical first booking for most visitors. Dinner opens up the full tasting menu range — Tempo, Raíces, and Solaina — so return visitors or those specifically chasing the Solaina menu's lamprey and eel should book an evening service instead.
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