Top 10 Restaurants in Barcelona for Great Value Set Lunches

Barcelona Lunch

Richard Eilers, The Guardian, June 15, 2015

Everyone loves tapas but sometimes you can’t face another plate of patatas bravas. Forget standing in a crowded bar trying to avoid being stabbed in the eye by a tourist wielding a cocktail stick loaded with chorizo: it’s time for a proper meal, with chairs, and tables. But restaurants in a place such as Barcelona can empty your wallet quickly; the answer is a menú del día, the ubiquitous set lunch. The best offer good value and quality and they’ll see you through to the evening and back on the tapas trail.

All menús here include three courses, a drink and bread unless stated

La Polpa, Eixample

A wander up Passeig de Gràcia is pretty much a must-do, whether you’re gawping at Gaudí buildings or heading for the shops. But the Eixample is proper moneyed Barcelona. The shops, the people, and the restaurants are expensive. That’s why La Polpa, a couple of blocks off the Passeig, is such a find. It’s got linen napkins, smartly dressed staff and a patina of posh, but the menú is still only €10.30. That really is astonishingly good value for this part of town. The food is modern and expertly turned out. A standout was an exceptionally tasty loin of tuna in teriyaki sauce. Even the house wine, a muscat, was a cut above the usual menú offerings.
€10.30 for the menú. Carrer d’Enric Granados 69, +34 933 238 308, grupandilana.com. Open daily 1pm-3.45pm and 8.30pm-11.30pm

 

El Jardi, Raval

 

Seafood dish at El Jardi restaurant in the courtyard of the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, in Raval, Barcelona

 

The Raval, just off the Ramblas, is, despite everyone’s best efforts to talk it up, still rough and ready in parts. Carrer de l’Hospital, all phone shops and dive bars, is fascinating and when you want a break you can duck into the courtyard of the 15th-century Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau. It’s a lovely quiet space and there’s a little open-air restaurant, El Jardi, which puts out great food from its tiny kitchen. It’s not fancy stuff but delicious. I had a thick leek and potato soup packed with flavour and a hearty lentil and sausage casserole. Handily, this place ticks another spot off the Gaudí trail: the old hospital is where the architect died after being knocked down by a tram in 1926.
€9.90 for the menú. Carrer de l’Hospital 56, +34 933 291 550, eljardibarcelona.es. Open daily 10am-midnight

Teresa Carles, Raval

 

Teresa Carles, Raval, Barcelona

 

Walk north from l’Hospital and Raval gets more salubrious and positively trendy. There will probably be plenty of time here to watch the world go by because this vegetarian restaurant is very popular and at the busiest times diners have to wait for a table. The staff are rushed off their feet but still stay friendly and the decor – bare brick walls and tartan upholstery – doesn’t try too hard. For €13 you get to choose from a starter of soup or salad, mains (divided into cereals, rice, vegetable or pasta) and a fruit salad to finish. Drinks, bread and fancier deserts are extra. It’s all wholesome stuff but far from worthy.
Carrer de Jovellanos 2, +34 933 171 829, teresacarles.com. Open daily 9am-11.30pm

Petra, Born

 

Petra, Born, Barcelona, Spain

 

The Born district is a great place for hunting down a menú. Its narrow alleys are packed with interesting, independent shops and new places to eat and drink open at a bewilderingly pace. Beautiful Santa Maria del Mar church is the heart of the barrio and Petra restaurant is tucked away on a lane on its flank. Behind its stained-glass windows lie tiled walls (don’t worry, it’s not as cliched as it sounds: the chandeliers are made of spoons and knives) and a dozen or so tables. I had pumpkin gnocchi, spicy chicken in a moscatel sauce and crema catalana with baked apple. All good. Cheery chef and co-owner Joan Pluvinet somehow finds time to work the tables.
€12.25 for the menú. Carrer dels Sombrerers 13, +34 933 199 999, restaurantpetra.com. Open MonSat 1pm-4pm and 8.30pm-11pm, closed Sundays

NAP, Born

 

NAP, Born, Barcelona, Spain

 

Ah, pizza, the go-to food for all weary tourists. But Barcelona (and Pisa, Rome, Naples and more) has committed its fair share of crimes against this simple dish. That probably explains why NAP (the owners are from Naples) is such a success: it takes pizza back to its delicious basics. The list of pizzas is refreshingly short, just a dozen; €7.50 gets you bruschetta to start, a margherita and a soft drink. Fancier pizzas are a few euros more. Tiramisu, panna cotta and cheesecake add another €3 or so. No piped music and fishing nets here, just a simple, clean design. There is also a new, very popular branch in Barceloneta, near the beach.
Pizzas from €4.90. Avinguda Francesc Cambó 30, +34 686 192 690, Facebook page. Open daily 1.30pm-4.30pm and 8pm-midnight. Carrer de Baluard, 69, Barceloneta, +34 930 073 639. Open Mon-Fri 1pm-4.30pm and 7.30pm-11.30pm, Sat 1pm-midnight, Sun 1pm-11pm

Luki, Poble Sec

 

Luki, Poble Sec, Barcelona

 

Poble Sec, a few minutes from Raval and in the shadow of Montjuïc hill, is a bit off most tourists’ itineraries but its quiet streets, pretty squares and friendly locals make it worth the detour. It’s being billed as the “new Born” but thankfully has some way to go yet. The standout spot for tapas is tiny Quimet i Quimet (Carrer del Poeta Cabanyes, 25, +34 934 423 142) but a friend took me to Luki, in the corner of Plaça del Sortidor. The decor is exuberant, but in a good way. The aubergine ravioli were fantastic, followed by slices of rolled chicken in a brandy sauce. For once, I skipped desert, except for a spoon or two of my friend’s chocolate tart.
€10.90 for the menú. Plaça del Sortidor 3, +34 933 293 545, luki.com.es. Open Tue midday-4pm, Wed-Thurs midday-4pm and 8pm-midnight, Fri-Sat midday-midnight, closed Mondays

Can Culleretes, Barri Gòtic

 

Interior of Can Culleretes, a 1786 dated restaurant, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spai

Photograph: Stefano Politi Markovina/JAI/Corbis

OK, you’re trapped in the old town, tapas to the left, touts to the right. There’s no escape – time to go old school at the “House of Spoons”. It claims to be the oldest restaurant in Barcelona and the menú doesn’t feel like it has changed in a couple of hundred years. It’s always packed with Spanish families, gossiping abuelas and tourists. And they all look like they are having a very good time. Individual dishes are such good value (goose with apples is lovely, filling and only €9.50) that they almost make the €17.50 menú look expensive, but three courses give plenty of time to enjoy the atmosphere. The fish soup is not too heavy, which was a good job because I followed it with pig’s trotter cooked in cava and the inevitable crema catalana.
€17.50 for the menú. Carrer d’en Quintana 5, +34 933 173 022, culleretes.com. Open Tues-Sat 1.30pm-4pm and 9pm-11pm, Sun 1.30pm-4pm, closed Mondays

La Mar Salada, Barceloneta

 

La Mar Salada, Barcelona, Spain

 

Tourists stream to the beach along Passeig de Joan de Borbó, the main drag of the old fishermen’s quarter of Barceloneta. The unfortunate ones get hooked in by one of the many desperately poor restaurants here. The only good one I knew was Suquet de l’Almirall, but it’s expensive. Thankfully, a friend introduced me to La Mar Salada a few doors along. Take a table in the sunlit white interior or sit outside and people-watch. I had cream of artichoke soup, topped with a poached egg, my friend spinach and mushroom cannelloni in almond sauce. Then we had langoustines sautéed with vegetables and served in a lime sauce and confit of duck with oranges and turnips. Desserts – carrot cake with Greek yoghurt, and white chocolate cake with a strawberry centre, were absolutely wonderful. The same family own nearby Can Ros, which is more traditional and a few euros cheaper.
€17 for the menú. Passeig Joan de Borbó 59, +34 932 212 127, lamarsalada.cat. Open Mon-Fri 12.30pm-4.30pm and 8pm-11.30pm, Sat-Sun 12.30pm-11.30pm, closed Tuesdays

La Singular, Gràcia

 

La Singular, Gracia, Barcelona

There are many bars and restaurants to choose from in Gràcia’s charming streets but you’ll struggle to do better than here. Gràcia was a village until the city gobbled it up in the 19th century but the barrio retains a sense of community. La Singular fits in perfectly: it only has 10 tables and is a cosy locals’ favourite. It’s been going for years but still feels fresh and innovative. The food is classic Catalan with a bit of a twist. The €10 menú lists, for example, a salad of baby lettuce hearts in anchovy sauce, veal with endives, red peppers and brie, and mousse of mató (a Catalan soft white cheese) with a fruit coulis.
€10 for the menú. Carrer de Francisco Giner 50, +34 932 375 098, lasingularbarcelona.com. Open Mon-Thurs 1pm-4pm and 8.30pm-11.30pm, Fri 1pm-4pm and 8.30pm-12.30am, Sat only open 8.30pm-12.30am

El Clandestino, Sarrià

 

El Clandestino, Barcelona

 

Sarrià is another village subsumed by the city, but it pretends that never happened. Little old ladies wander around with little dogs in their handbags and people greet each other on the street. It’s one of the city’s most desirable districts and there are lots of great, but expensive, places to eat. I wanted to recommend Vivanda on Carrer Major de Sarrià but it doesn’t have a menú to make it affordable, and Tram-Tram, also on Carrer Major de Sarrià, has just put its menú up to €28. Never mind, El Clandestino in the heart of the barrio is very good and very sensibly priced. Unusually, there are half a dozen choices for each course. Nothing too fancy, but very well done – I’ll be trying to cook their beans with clams at home. Butt cheek of cow was delicious – and sounds better in Spanish. And if you’re still hungry and ready to get back to tapas, Barcelona’s best patatas bravas are served just round the corner at Bar Tomás (Carrer Major de Sarrià, 49).
€11.80 for the menú. Carrer de Jaume Piquet 1, +34 932 041 036, elclandestinorestaurant.es. Open daily 1pm-4pm and 9pm-11pm, closed Monday and Sunday evenings


This article was amended on 15 June. An incorrect photo of Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau has been removed.

This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

 

This article was written by Richard Eilers from The Guardian and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network.