Restaurant in Collado Mediano, Spain
Koma
290ptsBocuse d'Or chef, mountain setting, easy booking.

About Koma
Koma is a Michelin-recognised modern kitchen inside the La Torre Box Art hotel in Collado Mediano, run by Bocuse d'Or Europe competitor Rubén Amro. At a €€ price point with easy booking, it delivers a level of technical ambition that is hard to match at this tier in the Madrid region. Start with the à la carte and order the liquid cocido fritters.
A 4.6-rated modern kitchen in the Sierra de Guadarrama worth planning around
Koma earns a 4.6 on Google across 332 reviews, which for a restaurant in a small mountain town outside Madrid is a meaningful signal. This is not a tourist trap riding on scenic location. Chef Rubén Amro has won multiple Spanish food awards and competed at the Bocuse d'Or Europe, one of the most demanding chef competitions on the continent. Michelin has recognised the kitchen with a Plate in both 2024 and 2025. At the €€ price range, the value case is strong before you even look at a menu.
Koma sits inside the La Torre Box Art hotel in Collado Mediano, accessed through the garden and housed in a glass-fronted pavilion. The room itself makes a case for a visit: natural light floods the space, the garden frames the setting, and the architecture is clean enough that it does not compete with the food. For anyone travelling from Madrid, roughly 50km north into the Sierra de Guadarrama, this setting is a genuine change of context. Weekends, when the mountain air is cooler and the light shifts through the glass, are the most compelling time to book. If you are visiting in autumn or early winter, the pavilion works especially well as the garden transitions around it.
What to focus on across multiple visits
Amro runs both an à la carte and a tasting menu. The à la carte updates traditional Spanish cuisine with considered nods to Asian technique, a combination that gives you enough range to eat here two or three times without the menu feeling repetitive. On a first visit, the à la carte is the right call: it lets you move through the kitchen's range at your own pace and test the Asian-inflected dishes alongside the traditional ones. The Michelin inspectors specifically flag the liquid "cocido" fritters as something not to miss, which is a rare level of specificity from a guide that typically stays vague. Order them.
On a second visit, the tasting menu is the logical progression. It gives Amro's kitchen more room to sequence flavours and show the full technical range that earned him the Bocuse d'Or berth. At a €€ price point, a tasting menu here costs a fraction of what you would pay at destination restaurants of comparable ambition in Madrid or the Basque Country. If you have already done the à la carte and want to understand what this kitchen is actually capable of at full stretch, the tasting menu is where that answer sits.
A third visit, if you find yourself returning to the Sierra de Guadarrama, is leading used to revisit whatever stood out on the first two and track how the menu evolves seasonally. Amro's integration of Asian technique into a traditional Spanish base means the menu has natural room to shift with ingredients, which gives the kitchen more seasonal flexibility than a purely regional tasting menu would.
Practical details
Koma is in Collado Mediano at Paseo de los Rosales 48, within the La Torre Box Art hotel. Booking is rated easy, which is rare for a Michelin-recognised kitchen with this kind of chef credential. That accessibility is part of the value: you do not need to plan weeks ahead or set calendar reminders for a reservation drop. For a day trip from Madrid, aim for Saturday lunch when the mountain setting is at its leading and you can take your time without an early week commute back. Phone and website details are not listed in our current data, so booking directly through the hotel is the most reliable route. Check our full Collado Mediano restaurants guide for updated contact information.
While in the area, our Collado Mediano hotels guide covers where to stay if you want to make a weekend of it. The La Torre Box Art hotel itself is the obvious anchor. If you are looking to extend the trip, the bars guide, the wineries guide, and the experiences guide cover the surrounding area.
How It Compares
Koma sits in a different tier from Spain's major destination restaurants, and that is not a criticism. Quique Dacosta in Dénia, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María are all €€€€ operations requiring advance planning, significant budgets, and in most cases a dedicated trip. Koma is €€, easy to book, and close enough to Madrid for a half-day visit. For a food enthusiast who has already done the marquee Spanish tables, Koma offers a genuinely different proposition: a serious chef working at a regional scale with real technique and no waiting-list friction.
If you are deciding between Koma and a Madrid-based option like DiverXO, the comparison does not really hold. DiverXO is a full-scale avant-garde production at a different price point and booking difficulty. Koma is for the reader who wants a skilled, award-recognised kitchen in a beautiful setting at a price that does not require a special occasion to justify. Among Spanish restaurants at this price tier, that combination of Bocuse d'Or credibility, Michelin recognition, and accessible booking is harder to find than it should be.
Pearl picks — if Koma appeals to you
- Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona — for a step up in scale and Michelin weight within Spain
- Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria , if you want to benchmark Koma's tasting menu against one of Spain's most decorated formats
- Ricard Camarena in València , similar balance of technique and regional identity at a higher price point
- Atrio in Cáceres , another hotel-restaurant combination worth a dedicated trip if the La Torre format interests you
- Mugaritz in Errenteria , for readers who want to push further into Spain's most conceptually demanding kitchens
- Frantzén in Stockholm and Maison Lameloise in Chagny , European hotel-restaurant benchmarks for context on what Koma's format can grow into
Frequently asked questions
- What should a first-timer know about Koma? Book the à la carte on your first visit. The menu blends updated traditional Spanish cooking with Asian technique at a €€ price point, and the liquid "cocido" fritters are specifically flagged by Michelin inspectors as the dish to order. Chef Rubén Amro competed at the Bocuse d'Or Europe, so the technical level is higher than the price suggests. The restaurant is in the La Torre Box Art hotel in Collado Mediano, about 50km from Madrid, making it a realistic day trip rather than a dedicated destination stay.
- Does Koma handle dietary restrictions? No specific dietary restriction information is listed in our current data. Because the kitchen blends traditional Spanish and Asian techniques across both à la carte and tasting menu formats, it is worth contacting the hotel directly before booking if you have specific requirements. The tasting menu in particular typically requires advance notice of restrictions at any serious kitchen.
- Can I eat at the bar at Koma? No bar seating information is available in our current data. The restaurant occupies a glass-fronted pavilion within the La Torre Box Art hotel, accessed via the garden. For seating options, contact the hotel directly when booking.
- What are alternatives to Koma in Collado Mediano? Koma is the most credentialled modern kitchen in Collado Mediano with Michelin recognition and a Bocuse d'Or-linked chef. For the wider Sierra de Guadarrama area, see our full Collado Mediano restaurants guide. If you are willing to travel into Madrid, DiverXO operates at a higher price tier and booking difficulty. For a comparable mountain-setting experience, Koma is the clearest answer at the €€ level.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Koma? Yes, particularly on a second visit once you have used the à la carte to calibrate the kitchen's range. At a €€ price point, a tasting menu from a Bocuse d'Or Europe competitor with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition represents meaningful value relative to what similar ambition costs elsewhere in Spain. First-timers should start with à la carte; repeat visitors should commit to the full tasting menu to see what Amro's kitchen does at full stretch.
Compare Koma
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Koma | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Easy |
| Quique Dacosta | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| El Celler de Can Roca | Progressive Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Arzak | Modern Basque, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Azurmendi | Progressive, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Aponiente | Progressive - Seafood, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
How Koma stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Koma?
Book the tasting menu on your first visit. Koma sits inside the La Torre Box Art hotel in Collado Mediano, about an hour from central Madrid, and chef Rubén Amro's Bocuse d'Or Europe credentials make it worth the detour. The glass-fronted pavilion accessed through the hotel garden means arrival matters — it's a destination format, not a casual drop-in. Booking is rated easy for a Michelin Plate venue, so there's no reason to delay.
Does Koma handle dietary restrictions?
The database doesn't include specifics on dietary accommodation, but Koma runs both a tasting menu and an à la carte, which gives more flexibility than single-format restaurants. check the venue's official channels via the La Torre Box Art hotel to confirm before booking, especially for the tasting menu where substitutions are harder to manage.
Can I eat at the bar at Koma?
No bar dining is documented for Koma. The restaurant occupies a glass pavilion within a hotel property, which typically means table service is the standard format. If counter or bar seating is a priority, this isn't the venue to count on for that.
What are alternatives to Koma in Collado Mediano?
Koma is the clear destination restaurant in Collado Mediano. If you're open to a short drive within the Sierra de Guadarrama, the broader Madrid mountain corridor has rural options, though none with Koma's Michelin recognition or a Bocuse d'Or-nominated chef. For a comparable price point with more urban convenience, Madrid city itself offers a wider field.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Koma?
At a €€ price range, yes. Koma's tasting menu is chef Rubén Amro's showcase format, and given his Bocuse d'Or Europe appearance and multiple Spanish food awards, it's where the kitchen's skill is most legible. The liquid cocido fritters are specifically flagged as a highlight — don't skip them. The à la carte works if you prefer flexibility, but the tasting menu is the stronger case for the drive from Madrid.
Recognized By
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