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Step off the sun-bleached, soul-crushing retail treadmill of Portal de l’Àngel and duck into Carrer Comtal. You’re looking for a door that looks like it hasn’t changed since the peseta was king. This is Anduriña. In a neighborhood increasingly surrendered to international chains and frozen paella hawkers, this place feels like a stubborn, wood-paneled middle finger to the homogenization of the city. It’s a tapas bar in the Gothic Quarter that manages to keep its soul intact while the rest of the district sells its out for souvenir magnets.
The name means 'swallow' in Galician, and that northern DNA is the backbone of the operation. You aren’t here for molecular foam or tweezers-applied microgreens. You’re here for the kind of food that requires a stack of napkins and a cold glass of Estrella. The interior is a classic study in Spanish hospitality: dark wood, tiles that have seen a million footsteps, and a bar that’s been polished smooth by the elbows of people who know exactly what they want. It’s loud, it’s often crowded, and the service is delivered with the kind of brisk efficiency that some tourists mistake for rudeness but locals recognize as 'getting the job done.'
Let’s talk about the berenjenas con miel—fried eggplant drizzled with honey or molasses. It’s a dish found all over Spain, but here, they get the physics right. The batter is a shatter-crisp shell, the interior is creamy and molten, and the sweetness of the honey cuts through the salt and oil like a sharp knife. It’s addictive, dangerous, and mandatory. Then there’s the pulpo a la gallega. This is the litmus test for any place with Galician pretensions. It arrives on the traditional wooden plate, dusted with pimentón, sitting on a bed of sliced potatoes. If the octopus doesn't have that perfect, tender-but-firm resistance, the whole thing fails. Here, it usually passes with flying colors.
You’ll see the tourists ordering the sangria, and for once, you shouldn’t sneer. Unlike the neon-red sugar water served on La Rambla, the version here is respectable—stiff, fruit-heavy, and capable of making the afternoon heat feel like a suggestion rather than a sentence. Pair it with some pimientos de Padrón, those small green peppers where every tenth one hits like a lightning bolt of spice, and a plate of jamón that hasn't been sweating under a heat lamp for three days.
Is it the best tapas Barcelona has ever produced? Maybe not in the absolute sense, but context is everything. When you are five minutes away from the Cathedral and surrounded by 'tourist menus' featuring photos of food that looks like it was modeled in Play-Doh, Anduriña is a godsend. It’s an honest room. It smells of frying oil, spilled wine, and history. It’s the kind of place where you can lose two hours and only realize it when you try to stand up and the sangria reminds you who’s boss.
Don't come here if you want a quiet, romantic candlelit dinner where you can hear your partner's inner thoughts. Come here when you’re hungry, slightly irritable from the crowds, and in need of a reminder that the real Barcelona—the one that eats, drinks, and argues with gusto—is still alive and kicking behind the storefronts of the global brands. It’s not a secret, but it’s a sanctuary. And in this part of town, that’s more than enough.
Price Range
€10–20
Authentic Galician-style octopus served on traditional wooden plates
Famous 'Berenjenas con miel' that is widely considered among the best in the city
A rare, traditional wood-paneled sanctuary in the heart of the tourist-heavy Gothic Quarter
Carrer Comtal, 30
Ciutat Vella, Barcelona
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Yes, especially if you are in the high-traffic shopping district near Portal de l'Àngel and want authentic tapas rather than a tourist trap. It offers a traditional atmosphere and solid Galician-influenced dishes.
The signature dish is the berenjenas con miel (fried eggplant with honey). Other highly recommended items include the pulpo a la gallega (octopus), pimientos de Padrón, and their house sangria.
It is a popular spot that gets very busy during peak lunch and dinner hours. While they accept walk-ins, booking ahead via their phone number (+34 933 01 99 99) is recommended for groups.
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