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    Restaurant in Cádiz, Spain

    Código de Barra

    825pts

    Cádiz's top tasting menu. Book ahead.

    Código de Barra, Restaurant in Cádiz

    About Código de Barra

    Código de Barra is Cádiz's only Michelin-starred tasting menu restaurant in the historic centre, earning both a star and a top-650 OAD Europe ranking in 2025. Chef Léon Griffioen's two menus — Cotinusa and Erytheia — are built around coastal ingredients specific to this region. Book three to four weeks ahead for weekends; closed Sunday to Tuesday.

    One Michelin Star, Two Tasting Menus, and No Real Rival in Cádiz at This Level

    If you are deciding between Código de Barra and a meal at one of Cádiz's many excellent tapas bars, you are asking the wrong question. This is a different category entirely: a Michelin-starred tasting menu restaurant operating in a €€€€ price tier, ranked #632 among all restaurants in Europe by Opinionated About Dining in 2025. For a city better known for fried fish and fino sherry than fine dining, that credential matters. The more useful comparison is with Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, the three-star benchmark for this corner of Andalusia. Código de Barra does not reach that level of ambition or price, but it offers something more approachable: a genuinely personal restaurant in the heart of the old city, where the food is rooted in 3,000 years of gaditano culinary history.

    What You Are Booking

    Chef Léon Griffioen, originally from the Netherlands, runs the kitchen alongside his wife Paqui Márquez, who manages front of house and the wine programme as sommelier. The format is built around two tasting menus: Cotinusa and Erytheia, both named with reference to the ancient Phoenician history of Cádiz. The menus draw directly on regional ingredients and techniques, including "navazo"-grown vegetables from coastal kitchen gardens, estuary sea bream, corvina fish prepared en adobo, tomato escabeche with red shrimp, and a dish described as "Candié" eggnog with prawns. These are not pan-Iberian tasting menu staples — they are specific to this coastline and its food memory. That specificity is the reason to book here rather than at a more generic Andalusian fine-dining address.

    The room itself reinforces the proposition. Stone, brick, and whitewashed walls define the interior, with small tables positioned close to the kitchen. The counter seating adjacent to the pass gives a direct view of service and preparation — if you are travelling for depth and context rather than comfort, request this when booking. It changes the meal from a tasting experience into something more like a conversation with the kitchen. For the food enthusiast who wants to understand the logic behind each course, proximity to the pass adds real value.

    When to Go

    The restaurant operates Wednesday through Saturday only, with lunch service from 1:30 PM to 3:00 PM and dinner from 8:30 PM to 10:00 PM. Monday, Tuesday, and Sunday are closed. Saturday lunch is the session to prioritise if your schedule allows: Cádiz in the afternoon light, followed by the old town on foot, makes for a better day than arriving after dark. Dinner on Friday or Saturday is the second choice and easier to slot around travel from Seville or Jerez. The tight window of available sessions, combined with the Michelin star and strong OAD ranking, means this is a hard book. Do not treat it as a walk-in option.

    Booking and Practicalities

    With no website or phone number in our records, reservations here require direct outreach , check current booking channels through Google or a local concierge before you travel. Given the OAD Leading Europe ranking and one Michelin star, seats fill well in advance, particularly for weekend dinner. Plan a minimum of three to four weeks ahead for Friday or Saturday. The address is C. San Francisco, 7, in the historic quarter, on a pedestrianised street that is easy to reach on foot from most central accommodation. For hotels in the area, see our full Cádiz hotels guide.

    The €€€€ price tier places this at the leading of the Cádiz dining market. Budget accordingly: a tasting menu at this level in a Spanish city of this size typically runs from €80 to €150 per person before wine. Paqui Márquez's wine service means the pairing is worth considering, given her role as sommelier and the proximity to the sherry triangle.

    How It Compares in Cádiz

    For context on the wider eating scene, see our full Cádiz restaurants guide. Código de Barra occupies the leading of the local market alongside Mare. If you want a strong modern meal at a lower price point, Almanaque Casa de Comidas and Contraseña both operate in the €€ range with contemporary menus. For Andalusian cooking without the tasting menu format, La Marmita de Ancha is a reliable option. And El Faro de Cádiz remains the go-to for tapas. None of these are direct substitutes for what Código de Barra does , they serve different purposes depending on your budget, group, and appetite for structure.

    Compared to Spain's broader tasting menu tier , Arzak, El Celler de Can Roca, DiverXO, or Azurmendi , Código de Barra sits at an accessible price point with a genuinely local perspective that the bigger-name restaurants do not attempt. It does not compete on scale or spectacle; it competes on specificity. That is a different value proposition, and for a food traveller spending time on this coast, it is the more honest one. If your trip takes you beyond Cádiz, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Frantzén in Stockholm, or FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai represent the international peer set at the upper end of what tasting menu cooking achieves globally , useful benchmarks if you are calibrating expectations.

    The Verdict

    Book Código de Barra if you are in Cádiz for at least two nights and prepared to commit to a structured tasting menu at the leading of the local price range. The combination of a Michelin star, a strong OAD Europe ranking, and a menu genuinely tied to the flavours and history of this city makes it the clearest answer to the question of where to eat seriously in Cádiz. Request counter seats near the kitchen if they are available. Book at least three weeks out for any weekend session.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should I wear to Código de Barra? Smart casual is appropriate for a €€€€ Michelin-starred restaurant in a Spanish city. No formal dress code is confirmed in our data, but the tasting menu format and price tier suggest that turning up in beach clothes would be out of place. Think along the same lines as you would for any one-star restaurant in Andalusia.
    • Is Código de Barra good for a special occasion? Yes, with some caveats. The intimate room, the dedicated husband-and-wife team, and the two named tasting menus make it a strong choice for a significant dinner. The counter seats near the kitchen add an interactive dimension that works well for couples who want engagement rather than just a meal. For a larger group celebration, the small room and limited seating may be a constraint , see the group question below.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Código de Barra? At the €€€€ price point, yes, if tasting menus are your format. The Cotinusa and Erytheia menus are built around ingredients specific to this coastline , navazo vegetables, estuary sea bream, corvina en adobo , rather than generic Iberian fine-dining staples. Chef Griffioen's Dutch background filtering Cádiz's 3,000-year food history through a contemporary lens is a specific proposition, not a generic one. OAD's #632 Europe ranking for 2025 backs the quality claim.
    • Does Código de Barra handle dietary restrictions? This is not confirmed in our data. Given the tasting menu-only format, dietary requirements need to be communicated at the time of booking. Contact the restaurant directly before you travel to confirm what can be accommodated , do not arrive and expect the menu to adapt on the night.
    • What should I order at Código de Barra? The format removes the choice: you are booking one of two tasting menus, Cotinusa or Erytheia. Dishes cited in verified award notes include the Candié eggnog with prawns, tomato escabeche with red shrimp, and corvina en adobo. Ask Paqui Márquez about the wine pairing , her sommelier role is central to the experience and the sherry-producing region surrounding Cádiz gives the pairing particular local relevance.
    • Is Código de Barra worth the price? For what it is, yes. This is the only Michelin-starred restaurant in central Cádiz operating at this level of local specificity. At €€€€, you are paying for a tasting menu format, a credentialled wine service, and cooking that has earned both a Michelin star and a top-650 OAD Europe ranking. If you want a strong modern meal at a lower price, Contraseña or Almanaque Casa de Comidas are the sensible alternatives at €€.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Código de Barra? Lunch. Saturday lunch in particular allows you to walk the old city before or after the meal in daylight, which adds context to a restaurant explicitly rooted in the history of this place. The service windows are identical in format , 1:30 PM for lunch, 8:30 PM for dinner , so the meal itself will not differ, but the experience of arriving in Cádiz's historic quarter at midday versus late evening is meaningfully different.
    • Can Código de Barra accommodate groups? The small room with tables close to the kitchen suggests limited capacity. Seat count is not confirmed in our data, but the intimate format described in award documentation points to a restaurant better suited to parties of two to four than to larger group bookings. If you are planning a group dinner of six or more, contact them directly before booking to confirm what is possible.

    Compare Código de Barra

    Price vs. Value: Código de Barra
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Código de Barra€€€€Hard
    Almanaque Casa de Comidas€€Unknown
    El Faro de CádizUnknown
    Contraseña€€Unknown
    La Marmita de Ancha€€Unknown
    La Taberna der GuerritaUnknown

    A quick look at how Código de Barra measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Código de Barra?

    The space uses stone, brick, and whitewashed walls with small tables by the kitchen — the tone is composed and intimate, not formal ballroom. A neat, considered outfit fits the room; there is no evidence of a strict dress code, but the Michelin-starred, tasting-menu format means turning up in beachwear would read as mismatched. Think dinner-smart rather than black-tie.

    Is Código de Barra good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it is probably the strongest case in Cádiz for a celebration meal. One Michelin star, two exclusive tasting menus built around the city's 3,000-year culinary history, and a sommelier-led front of house from Paqui Márquez add up to a format designed for occasions that need more than a good tapas crawl. Just confirm your booking well in advance given the limited four-day operating window.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Código de Barra?

    At the €€€€ price range, Código de Barra is the most expensive dining option in Cádiz at this format — but it is also the only one holding a Michelin star and ranked in the OAD Top Restaurants in Europe (2025). The two menus, Cotinusa and Erytheia, are built specifically around local ingredients and the region's history, so you are not paying for generic fine dining. If structured tasting menus are your format, the credentials justify the spend.

    Does Código de Barra handle dietary restrictions?

    There is no documented policy in the available venue data, but the kitchen builds its menus around the specific flavours of Cádiz — dishes like tomato escabeche with red shrimp and navazo-grown coastal vegetables suggest a heavily seafood and produce-led approach. check the venue's official channels before booking if you have serious allergies or exclusions; the tasting-menu format makes last-minute adjustments harder to guarantee.

    What should I order at Código de Barra?

    You do not order à la carte here. The restaurant runs two tasting menus only: Cotinusa and Erytheia, both structured around the culinary history of Cádiz. Documented examples from the menus include Candié eggnog with prawns, tomato escabeche with red shrimp, estuary sea bream, and corvina fish en adobo. Choose between the two menus at booking or on arrival — the wine pairing led by sommelier Paqui Márquez is the logical add-on.

    Is Código de Barra worth the price?

    For Cádiz, yes. At €€€€ it sits at the top of the local market, but it is the only Michelin-starred option in the city and carries dual OAD rankings for 2025 (Top Casual #784, Top Restaurants #632 in Europe). If you are comparing against Cádiz tapas bars, the format and price are entirely different propositions. Compare it instead against other one-star tasting-menu restaurants in Andalusia, where it holds its ground on local specificity.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Código de Barra?

    Both services run the same tasting-menu format, so the food experience is equivalent. Lunch (1:30 PM–3:00 PM) runs shorter, which suits a two-day itinerary where you want afternoon time in the city. Dinner (8:30 PM–10:00 PM) fits the natural rhythm of Spanish dining in Cádiz. The choice is logistical rather than qualitative.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    closed
    Wednesday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Thursday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Friday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Saturday
    1:30 PM-3 PM 8:30 PM-10 PM
    Sunday
    closed

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