Restaurant in Saragossa, Spain
Crudo
290Pearl PointsRaw-focused counter dining at budget prices.

About Crudo
A Michelin Plate-recognised gourmet taberna on Calle del Dr. Cerrada, Crudo runs a small à la carte of raw and marinated dishes pulling from Japan, Latin America, and the Mediterranean. At the € price tier with a 4.7 Google rating from nearly 460 reviews, it is Saragossa's strongest value case for serious, ingredient-focused cooking. Book a week or two in advance; the counter format suits pairs and small groups best.
Crudo Is Not a Restaurant in the Way You Expect
If you arrive at Crudo on Calle del Dr. Cerrada expecting a conventional dining room, a long menu, or a formal service ritual, reset those expectations before you sit down. Crudo describes itself as a gourmet taberna, and that framing is deliberate. The format is a small, intimate counter built around raw and marinated ingredients, with an à la carte that pulls from Japan, the Mediterranean, and Latin America in the same sitting. That level of cross-cultural range in a single, compact menu is unusual for Saragossa, and the 2025 Michelin Plate recognition confirms it is being taken seriously beyond the local food conversation. The Google rating of 4.7 across 459 reviews adds a further data point: this is not a place that polarises — it converts.
The room itself signals what you are in for. Counter seating, close quarters, and a kitchen that is part of the experience rather than hidden behind a wall. Visually, this is a sparse, focused space. There is no theatrical décor to distract from what arrives on the plate. If you are walking in hoping for a sprawling tasting menu in a grand sala, look at Cancook instead. If you want the opposite — a sharp, ingredient-led experience in a setting that keeps the focus entirely on the food , Crudo is the right call.
What the Format Actually Delivers
The menu is built around crudos, tiraditos, and preparations that treat raw or lightly cured protein as the main event. The sea bass tiradito is a Latin American reference point, drawing on Peruvian technique. The Japanese influence runs through the approach to texture and restraint. The Mediterranean thread shows up in the sourcing logic. None of these lanes dominates; the cooking moves between them with enough confidence that it reads as a point of view rather than an identity crisis.
At the €price tier, this is one of the more accessible serious meals you will find in Saragossa. The city's higher-end creative options, including Gente Rara and La Prensa, sit at €€€ and above. Crudo sits well below that band while holding a Michelin recognition that neither of those venues currently carries. For a food-focused traveller who wants to eat well without committing to a full tasting-menu spend, this is the most efficient trade in the city right now.
Booking is advisable according to the venue's own guidance, but availability is not a stress point the way it would be at a multi-starred address. This is not a restaurant where you need to plan six weeks out. Checking a week or two in advance is generally sufficient, which makes it a practical option to fold into a trip itinerary without treating it as the sole logistical priority. If you are exploring the city's wider food scene, our full Saragossa restaurants guide maps the full range of options.
Groups and the Counter Experience
The counter format at Crudo shapes the group question directly. This is a space designed for pairs and small groups who want to engage with the food and the cooking in front of them, not a venue with the capacity infrastructure to absorb large party bookings comfortably. If you are planning a group dinner that needs a private room, a long table, and the ability to run set menus for ten or more covers, Crudo is not the right architecture. The room is intimate by design, and that intimacy is the product. For groups of two to four who want a shared meal with genuine culinary range at a price that does not require justification, the counter format delivers exactly what it promises.
For travellers who value that counter dynamic and want to benchmark it against comparable fusion approaches elsewhere in Europe, Jae in Düsseldorf and Soseki in Winter Park operate in a related space. Within Spain, the country's leading creative kitchens, from Quique Dacosta in Dénia to El Celler de Can Roca in Girona and Arzak in San Sebastián, operate at a different scale and price point entirely. Crudo is not competing in that tier, and does not need to. It is making a specific argument about what an accessible, ingredient-focused counter can do in a mid-sized Spanish city, and the Michelin Plate says that argument is working.
Who Should Book and Who Should Look Elsewhere
Book Crudo if you are a food-focused traveller who wants to eat something genuinely considered at the €price level, is comfortable with a counter format, and values range of culinary reference over the comfort of a single, coherent regional cuisine. The Michelin recognition at this price tier is the clearest signal the city offers that this is serious cooking worth your time.
Look elsewhere if you need private dining infrastructure, a long menu format, or the kind of service envelope that comes with a multi-course tasting experience. Cancook at €€€€ is the address for that. If the budget sits between the two, es.TABLE at €€ is worth considering as a middle-ground option.
Dress code is not a documented concern at this price point and format. Smart casual is a safe default, but nothing about a gourmet taberna with counter seating demands formality. For everything else the city has to offer, see our guides to Saragossa hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Crudo?
The sea bass tiradito is explicitly flagged in Crudo's own description as a signature dish and represents the Latin American thread running through the menu. Beyond that, order according to what's on the small à la carte that day — the format rotates around raw and marinated preparations drawing from Japanese and Mediterranean influences, so let the counter guide you rather than arriving with a fixed list.
Is Crudo good for a special occasion?
It depends on what you mean by special. Crudo holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and serves considered, ingredient-led food at the € price point, which makes it a strong choice for a food-focused celebration on a budget. But the informal counter format and casual taberna atmosphere mean it is not the place for a landmark anniversary dinner requiring ceremony or a private room — for that, es.TABLE or Cancook in Zaragoza would be more appropriate.
Is Crudo worth the price?
At the € price range, yes, with very little hesitation. A Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen serving raw and marinated preparations with Japanese, Mediterranean, and Latin American influences at this price level is a strong proposition for food-focused travellers. You are not paying for a long tasting menu or formal service, but the cooking is deliberate and the format is honest about what it is.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Crudo?
Crudo operates an à la carte format, not a fixed tasting menu, so this is not the question to bring here. The small à la carte is built around raw and marinated dishes, which functions as a naturally sequential meal if you order progressively. If a structured tasting progression is what you want, es.TABLE in Zaragoza is the more relevant option.
What should I wear to Crudo?
Crudo describes itself as a casual, informal eatery — relaxed clothing is appropriate and a jacket or formal dress would be out of place. Think the kind of thing you would wear to a relaxed lunch rather than a formal dinner.
What should a first-timer know about Crudo?
Booking is advisable — the venue recommends it, and counter seats fill faster than a conventional dining room. Arrive expecting a short, focused à la carte built around raw and lightly cured ingredients rather than a broad menu. Crudo identifies as a gourmet taberna, which is their way of signalling that the format is unconventional: no long menu, no formal pacing, but the cooking is the point.
What are alternatives to Crudo in Saragossa?
Cancook and es.TABLE are the obvious steps up if you want a more structured or formal experience in Zaragoza. Gente Rara and Bistrónomo are worth considering if you want something similarly casual but with a different culinary angle. La Prensa skews more traditional, which is the right call if raw and marinated formats are not your preference.
Location
C. del Dr. Cerrada, 40, 50005 Zaragoza, Spain
Saragossa, Spain
Compare Crudo
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Crudo | € | — |
| Cancook | €€€€ | — |
| Gente Rara | €€€ | — |
| La Prensa | €€€ | — |
| es.TABLE | €€ | — |
| Bistrónomo | € | — |
Comparing your options in Saragossa for this tier.
Also Consider
- Cancook — Creative, €€€€
- Gente Rara — Creative, €€€
- La Prensa — Contemporary, €€€
- es.TABLE — Contemporary, €€
- Bistrónomo — Contemporary, €
How It Compares
Crudo sits at the most accessible end of Saragossa's serious dining tier, and that position is its clearest advantage. At €, it holds a 2025 Michelin Plate that neither Gente Rara (€€€) nor La Prensa (€€€) currently carries, which makes the value argument direct: you are getting credentialled creative cooking at a price point well below the city's mid-range. Cancook at €€€€ is the only address in the comparison set operating at a clearly higher level of ambition and service formality. If budget is not a constraint and you want the full formal creative experience, Cancook is the call. If it is, Crudo wins without a contest.
es.TABLE at €€ is the closest peer in terms of format and accessibility, offering contemporary cooking at a step above Crudo's price with a different culinary approach. It is the alternative to consider if you want something slightly more conventional in execution but still at a moderate price. Bistrónomo at € matches Crudo on price but operates in the contemporary register rather than the fusion counter format, making it a reasonable fallback if Crudo is full rather than a direct substitute.
For diner profile matching: food-focused travellers who want range, cultural cross-reference, and a counter experience should book Crudo. Groups that need private dining capacity or a long tasting-menu format should go to Cancook or La Prensa. Readers looking for the easiest booking and lowest financial commitment while still eating well in Saragossa should start with Crudo, then use our full Saragossa restaurants guide to calibrate the rest of the trip.
Recognized By
Explore Saragossa
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