Restaurant in Sant Climent de Llobregat, Spain
El Racó
290ptsTraditional Catalan cooking, surprisingly affordable.

About El Racó
A Michelin Plate restaurant at single-euro pricing, El Racó delivers multi-generational Catalan cooking — blue-footed Prat chicken, Butifarra sausage, mountain chickpeas with lobster — on a pedestrian street in Sant Climent de Llobregat. With a 4.7 Google rating from nearly a thousand reviews and easy bookings, this is the best-value argument for a detour southwest of Barcelona.
Who Should Book El Racó — and When
If you are travelling through the Barcelona hinterland with a serious interest in traditional Catalan cooking and want a meal that punches well above its price point, El Racó in Sant Climent de Llobregat is the right call. This is a restaurant for the food-focused traveller who values craft over spectacle: multi-generational family cooking, a Michelin Plate recognition for 2024, and a Google rating of 4.7 across nearly a thousand reviews. The single-euro price range means you can eat here without any financial hesitation — the question is only whether the drive out from Barcelona is worth it. It is, under the right conditions.
The Venue
El Racó sits along a pedestrian street in the centre of Sant Climent de Llobregat, a small town in the Baix Llobregat comarca southwest of Barcelona. The room is quiet and unhurried in the way that only long-established neighbourhood restaurants tend to be , the kind of place where the staff have been answering the same questions about the menu for years and have opinions about it. There are two dining areas: one for à la carte service, and a second room adjacent to the kitchen that operates around a daily menu. If you want the fuller picture of what the kitchen does, the à la carte room gives you access to the more interesting dishes. The atmosphere reads as relaxed without being casual to the point of careless , the cooking is taken seriously even when the room is not trying to impress anyone.
The restaurant has passed through at least two generations of the same family, which in practical terms means the kitchen has accumulated something that newer restaurants cannot replicate: a stable, rehearsed repertoire. Chef Gèrard Solís is locally known as the "cherry chef" , a nickname that tells you something about how embedded the restaurant is in the identity of the town, where cherries are a prized seasonal product. That kind of local specificity is a reliable indicator that a restaurant is cooking for its community rather than for a passing audience, and the food reflects it.
What to Eat
The Michelin-documented specialities at El Racó include blue-footed chicken of the Prat breed, grilled Butifarra sausage, and "mountain" chickpeas with lobster , a pairing that is more textually interesting than it sounds, combining the earthiness of dried legumes with the sweetness of crustacean. In season, cherry-based desserts are the kitchen's signature move. These are not dishes designed to provoke or surprise; they are dishes designed to be cooked correctly, and at this price tier, cooking them correctly is the entire achievement. For anyone building an itinerary around Catalan regional cooking , rather than progressive Spanish cuisine , El Racó covers the ground that the tasting-menu restaurants in this comparison set do not.
Booking and Practical Details
Booking at El Racó is direct. No months-in-advance planning is required the way it is at destination restaurants in the region , this is an easy booking at a community restaurant, not a competitive reservation exercise. That said, the daily menu room fills with regulars at lunch, so if you have a preference for the à la carte dining room or a specific day, booking a few days ahead is sensible. Reservations: Easy , a few days' notice is typically sufficient, though calling ahead for weekends is advisable. Budget: Single-euro price range (€) , among the most accessible price points for Michelin-recognised cooking in the Barcelona area. Dress: Casual; no formality expected or required. Getting there: Sant Climent de Llobregat is accessible by road from Barcelona; the restaurant is on a pedestrian street in the town centre, so plan parking accordingly. For more options in the area, see our full Sant Climent de Llobregat restaurants guide, and for where to stay nearby, our Sant Climent de Llobregat hotels guide. If you are planning a broader day out, bars, wineries, and experiences in the area are also worth checking.
Pearl Verdict
El Racó delivers a level of food quality and culinary specificity that its price point does not prepare you for. A Michelin Plate at single-euro pricing is a meaningful signal: the guide recognises the cooking without the kitchen needing to charge restaurant-destination prices to sustain it. For the food traveller who wants to eat genuinely regional Catalan cooking in a room that has not been redesigned for Instagram, this is the argument for going. The cherry desserts in season are the detail worth timing your visit around.
Pearl Picks Nearby
- Estrella in Rupit , Catalan, worth considering if you are exploring the broader Catalan countryside dining circuit
- Cal Marquès in Camprodon , another regional Catalan option for context on what the cuisine looks like across different sub-regions
- Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona , if you want to step up to a higher-production Catalan kitchen on the same trip
- Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria , for the serious multi-day Spain itinerary extending into the Basque Country
- Ricard Camarena in València , if creative Spanish cooking with strong regional grounding is the theme of your trip
- Atrio in Cáceres , for Extremaduran comparison on the same Spain circuit
- DiverXO in Madrid , the opposite end of the Spanish dining spectrum; relevant if you are building a contrast-driven itinerary
- Mugaritz in Errenteria , if conceptual cooking is on the agenda elsewhere on the trip
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is El Racó good for solo dining? Yes. A restaurant with a daily menu room adjacent to the kitchen is well-suited to solo diners who want to eat well without ceremony. The price point (€) removes any financial awkwardness about ordering a full meal alone, and the unhurried pace of the room makes it comfortable rather than isolating.
- Is El Racó worth the price? Straightforwardly yes. Michelin Plate recognition at the single-euro price tier is a strong value signal , you are getting food quality that is formally acknowledged without paying the premiums associated with destination dining. For traditional Catalan cooking at this level, there are very few comparable options in the greater Barcelona area.
- Does El Racó handle dietary restrictions? Contact details are not available in our current data, so we cannot confirm specific dietary accommodation. Given the traditional Catalan focus of the menu, meat and poultry dishes are central to the kitchen's repertoire; if you have significant restrictions, calling ahead before booking is advisable.
- What are alternatives to El Racó in Sant Climent de Llobregat? El Racó is the most formally recognised Catalan restaurant in Sant Climent de Llobregat in our current data. For the broader area, our Sant Climent de Llobregat restaurants guide covers what else is available locally.
- What should I order at El Racó? The Michelin-documented dishes give a clear steer: blue-footed Prat chicken, grilled Butifarra sausage, and mountain chickpeas with lobster are the kitchen's signature territory. If you are visiting in cherry season, the dessert programme around the town's signature fruit is the specific reason to time a visit accordingly.
- Is El Racó good for a special occasion? It depends on what kind of occasion. For a low-key, food-focused celebration where the meal itself is the point, yes. The room is not a formal event space, and the price range does not support a long-evening splurge format the way a higher-tier restaurant would. For a milestone dinner requiring ceremony and production, look elsewhere in the Barcelona dining scene.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at El Racó? The database records a daily menu format rather than a formal tasting menu in the destination-restaurant sense. At the single-euro price tier, the daily menu represents the kitchen's leading everyday cooking at accessible prices , that is a different proposition from a curated tasting menu at a starred restaurant, but it is not a lesser one if traditional Catalan cooking is what you are after.
- Can I eat at the bar at El Racó? We do not have confirmed bar seating data for El Racó. The restaurant operates two dining rooms , one for à la carte service and one for the daily menu , but no bar configuration is documented in our current data. If bar seating matters to your plan, it is worth confirming directly when you book.
Compare El Racó
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| El Racó | Catalan | € | Somewhat tucked away along a pedestrian street in the centre of town, this longstanding hidden gem has passed from one generation to the next, in so doing successfully carrying the weight of family history on its shoulders. In its dining rooms, one for à la carte dining, the other next door to the kitchen and focused on the daily menu, enjoy traditional Catalan cuisine that features specialities such as “blue-footed chicken” (Prat breed), grilled Butifarra sausage, “mountain” chickpeas with lobster and, in a nod to the town’s star product, imaginative desserts featuring cherries in season. There’s a reason that chef Gèrard Solís is known locally as the “cherry chef”!; Somewhat tucked away along a pedestrian street in the centre of town, this longstanding hidden gem has passed from one generation to the next, in so doing successfully carrying the weight of family history on its shoulders. In its dining rooms, one for à la carte dining, the other next door to the kitchen and focused on the daily menu, enjoy traditional Catalan cuisine that features specialities such as “blue-footed chicken” (Prat breed), grilled Butifarra sausage, “mountain” chickpeas with lobster and, in a nod to the town’s star product, imaginative desserts featuring cherries in season. There’s a reason that chef Gèrard Solís is known locally as the “cherry chef”!; Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Quique Dacosta | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| El Celler de Can Roca | Progressive Spanish, 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 | — |
| Aponiente | Progressive - Seafood, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Sant Climent de Llobregat for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is El Racó good for solo dining?
Yes. With two separate dining rooms — one for à la carte, one focused on the daily menu — solo diners can sit comfortably without feeling underserved. The daily menu format in particular suits a single diner who wants a full Catalan meal at a single-euro price point without committing to a multi-course à la carte spread.
Is El Racó worth the price?
Yes, straightforwardly. A Michelin Plate at a single-euro price range is rare anywhere in Spain, and El Racó delivers documented specialities — blue-footed Prat chicken, grilled Butifarra, mountain chickpeas with lobster — at that level. For the value-to-quality ratio, few restaurants in the Barcelona hinterland come close.
Does El Racó handle dietary restrictions?
The menu at El Racó is rooted in traditional Catalan cooking with meat, poultry, and seafood as anchors. Specific dietary accommodation information is not available in the venue record, so check the venue's official channels before booking if you have dietary restrictions. The narrow traditional format suggests flexibility may be limited.
What are alternatives to El Racó in Sant Climent de Llobregat?
Sant Climent de Llobregat is a small town and El Racó is its standout dining option. For comparable traditional Catalan cooking with more resources, look to Barcelona city restaurants in the Baix Llobregat area. El Racó's specific combination of multigenerational family ownership, Michelin recognition, and low pricing is not replicated locally.
What should I order at El Racó?
The Michelin-documented specialities are the starting point: blue-footed chicken of the Prat breed, grilled Butifarra sausage, and mountain chickpeas with lobster. If visiting in cherry season, the desserts featuring Sant Climent's local cherries are a reason in themselves to time your visit — chef Gèrard Solís is known locally as the cherry chef for good reason.
Is El Racó good for a special occasion?
It works well for a low-key special occasion where the focus is on food quality rather than formal dining theatre. The family-run setting and traditional Catalan menu make it a meaningful choice for food-led celebrations. If you need a grander setting or tasting-menu format, look instead at higher-tier restaurants in Barcelona proper.
Is the tasting menu worth it at El Racó?
El Racó operates a daily menu format rather than a structured tasting menu in the destination-restaurant sense. The daily menu room, positioned next to the kitchen, is the practical choice for most visitors and represents the clearest value at the single-euro price tier. À la carte is available separately for those who want to build their own meal around the signature dishes.
Recognized By
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