Restaurant in Úbeda, Spain
Cantina La Estación
350ptsMichelin value, seasonal menu, go.

About Cantina La Estación
A Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised modern restaurant in Úbeda, Cantina La Estación serves seasonal contemporary cuisine in a distinctive train-carriage dining room at a €€ price point. Led by Montserrat De La Torre, the kitchen builds its menu around regional sourcing — Jaén olive oils, daily-changing stews, and house-made bread — making it the most credible special occasion option in the city without a high-end price tag.
Should You Book Cantina La Estación?
If you are comparing this to the hotel restaurants around Úbeda's Plaza Vázquez de Molina, stop. Cantina La Estación operates in a different category: a Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised modern restaurant running a seasonal tasting menu at a €€ price point, which is the kind of combination that is genuinely rare anywhere in Andalusia. For a special occasion meal in Úbeda that does not require a four-figure bill, this is the most credible option in the city. The Bib Gourmand signal matters here — it is Michelin's specific endorsement for quality cooking at a price that does not demand justification.
The Room and the Setting
The visual conceit at Cantina La Estación is committed and coherent: the entrance operates as a tapas bar styled after an old railway station, and the dining room behind it replicates the interior of a train carriage. For a special occasion or a date, this is more considered than it sounds. The railway-carriage format creates a naturally intimate dining environment — booth-style seating, a defined sense of enclosure, and enough visual interest to give the room a point of view without tipping into theme-restaurant territory. It reads as genuine rather than performed, which matters when you are paying for an experience rather than just a meal.
The location sits slightly outside Úbeda's historic centre, which deters walk-in traffic and keeps the room from feeling like a tourist-circuit stop. That distance is a feature rather than a drawback: the clientele skews local and the atmosphere reflects it. For visitors, it requires deliberate intent to arrive here, which means the room tends to be occupied by people who chose to be there rather than people who happened to pass.
The Menu: Sourcing as the Organising Principle
Montserrat De La Torre and Antonio José run the kitchen and front of house between them, and the menu structure reflects a sourcing-led approach rather than a trend-led one. Contemporary seasonal cuisine, artisanal breads baked in-house, a curated selection of olive oils (Úbeda sits at the centre of one of the most significant olive oil-producing areas in Spain , the Jaén province accounts for a substantial share of global extra virgin olive oil output), and a daily-changing stew are the anchors of the format.
The olive oil selection is worth paying attention to. Serving local Jaén oils as a table course rather than as an afterthought is a sourcing decision with genuine regional logic , this is not a decorative gesture. The province's oils, primarily from Picual olives, are characterised by high polyphenol content and a pronounced herbaceous intensity. At a restaurant operating at the €€ level, presenting these as a considered part of the meal rather than an entry-level filler speaks to where the kitchen's priorities sit.
The daily stew signals the same discipline. A kitchen that commits to changing its stew daily is working from what is available and good rather than from a fixed cost-controlled menu. Combined with artisanal bread made on-site, this is a kitchen that treats its raw materials as the argument for the meal, not the decoration around it. The tasting menu is the format that leading expresses this sourcing logic end-to-end, and it is the format Michelin assessed when awarding the Bib Gourmand.
Wine list is described as reasonably extensive and varied , which at a €€ venue in this region typically means strong representation of Andalusian and Spanish bottles at honest margins. For a special occasion, this is sufficient for a well-matched meal without the pressure of a list designed to push high-end bottles.
Ratings and Trust Signals
- Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) , quality cooking at moderate prices, verified by external assessment
- Google rating: 4.5 from 1,445 reviews , a volume of reviews that reduces noise; this is not a thin sample
- Price range: €€ , accessible for the quality tier
Booking and Practical Information
Know Before You Go
- Cuisine: Modern Cuisine, contemporary seasonal
- Chef: Montserrat De La Torre (with Antonio José)
- Price range: €€
- Award: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2025
- Google rating: 4.5 (1,445 reviews)
- Address: Cta. Rodadera, 1, 23400 Úbeda, Jaén, Spain
- Booking difficulty: Easy , no advance booking pressure typical of this tier, but reservations are advisable for the tasting menu on weekends
- Leading for: Special occasions, date nights, solo dining at the tapas bar, food-focused visitors to Úbeda
- Note: Located slightly outside the historic centre , plan for a short drive or taxi from the main square
How It Compares in Úbeda
Within Úbeda itself, Cibus is the most direct peer for creative modern cooking in the city. See our full Úbeda restaurants guide for a complete comparison across the city's options. For hotels near the restaurant, our Úbeda hotels guide covers the leading options in and around the historic centre. If you are building a wider Andalusia itinerary, bars, wineries, and experiences in Úbeda are all covered separately.
Pearl Picks Nearby
- Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María , for a major splurge on progressive seafood in Andalusia
- Quique Dacosta in Dénia , three-Michelin-star Mediterranean creativity on the east coast
- Ricard Camarena in València , ingredient-led modern cooking with strong regional sourcing
- Arzak in San Sebastián , the benchmark for Modern Basque at the top tier
- Azurmendi in Larrabetzu , sourcing-obsessed progressive cooking in the Basque Country
- Mugaritz in Errenteria , for adventurous diners willing to work for the experience
- El Celler de Can Roca in Girona , Spain's most complete fine dining proposition at scale
- Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona , creative cooking in a visually striking space
- DiverXO in Madrid , the most ambitious and theatrical option in the Spanish capital
- Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria , technical precision at the three-star level
- Frantzén in Stockholm , for comparison: how sourcing-led fine dining operates at the leading end
- FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai , the same sourcing philosophy exported to a different context
Compare Cantina La Estación
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cantina La Estación | Modern Cuisine | Although located slightly away from the historic centre, this authentic “cantina” full of surprises is well worth the journey! It features a simple tapas bar in the style of an old railway station, which leads to the dining room, the latter imitating the interior of an old train carriage. The couple in charge, Montserrat and Antonio José, focus on contemporary seasonal cuisine, with the intention of always enhancing what they offer with artisanal breads, a small selection of olive oils, an enticing tasting menu and at least one different stew every day. The reasonably extensive and varied wine list adds to its appeal.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Although located slightly away from the historic centre, this authentic “cantina” full of surprises is well worth the journey! It features a simple tapas bar in the style of an old railway station, which leads to the dining room, the latter imitating the interior of an old train carriage. The couple in charge, Montserrat and Antonio José, focus on contemporary seasonal cuisine, with the intention of always enhancing what they offer with artisanal breads, a small selection of olive oils, an enticing tasting menu and at least one different stew every day. The reasonably extensive and varied wine list adds to its appeal. | Easy | — |
| Aponiente | Progressive - Seafood, 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 | — |
| Cocina Hermanos Torres | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| DiverXO | Progressive - Asian, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Cantina La Estación measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Cantina La Estación?
Yes, at €€ pricing with a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand behind it, the tasting menu represents strong value for contemporary seasonal cooking in Andalusia. The format pairs with artisanal breads, a selection of olive oils, and a wine list that Michelin specifically called out as an asset. If you want à la carte flexibility, the daily stew and tapas bar at the entrance offer a lower-commitment entry point.
Is Cantina La Estación good for solo dining?
The tapas bar at the front, styled after an old railway station, is a practical option for solo diners who want to eat well without committing to a full dining room booking. The Bib Gourmand recognition confirms quality at the bar level too. Sitting at the counter also lets you see the daily stew rotation, which changes regularly.
Is Cantina La Estación worth the price?
At the €€ price point with a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand — awarded specifically for quality cooking at accessible prices — this is one of the more defensible dining spends in Úbeda. Compared to hotel restaurants around Plaza Vázquez de Molina, you get a more considered kitchen and a menu built around seasonal sourcing rather than tourist-facing convenience.
Is Cantina La Estación good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key special occasion where the food matters more than formal ceremony. The dining room is designed to resemble a vintage train carriage, which gives it a distinct atmosphere without being stiff. For a milestone dinner requiring a grander setting, manage expectations: this is a neighbourhood-spirited Bib Gourmand restaurant, not a white-tablecloth destination.
What are alternatives to Cantina La Estación in Úbeda?
Cibus is the most direct local alternative for creative modern cooking within Úbeda's historic centre. The trade-off is that Cantina La Estación holds the Michelin Bib Gourmand, giving it an independent quality marker that Cibus currently lacks. For the full Úbeda comparison, see Pearl's Úbeda restaurants guide.
What should I order at Cantina La Estación?
The tasting menu is the clearest way to see what Montserrat De La Torre and Antonio José are doing with seasonal produce. Beyond that, the daily stew changes regularly and is worth asking about on arrival. The olive oil selection — a deliberate feature, not an afterthought in Jaén, Spain's largest olive-producing province — is worth paying attention to alongside the bread course.
Recognized By
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