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    Restaurant in San Antonio, United States

    Ladino

    250pts

    Michelin-recognised Mediterranean at mid-range prices.

    Ladino, Restaurant in San Antonio

    About Ladino

    Ladino is a Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised Mediterranean restaurant in San Antonio's Pearl District, earning back-to-back awards in 2024 and 2025. At $$, it delivers Sephardic-influenced cooking at a price point that makes repeat visits practical. With a 4.6 Google rating across 713 reviews and easy booking, it's the strongest value-to-quality option in its category in the city.

    Should You Book Ladino?

    Brunch seats at Ladino go fast — and with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025, that's unlikely to change. At the $$ price point, this is one of the few places in San Antonio where Michelin-validated Mediterranean cooking won't require a splurge budget. If you've been once, the case for a return visit is direct: chef Berty Richter's kitchen earns its accolades consistently enough that repeat visits hold up. Book it, especially for weekend service.

    The Space

    Ladino sits at 200 E Grayson Street in the Pearl District, San Antonio's most concentrated stretch of food-forward dining. The address puts it in a building that is part of a larger mixed-use development — a setting that trades historic texture for a polished, contemporary frame. Expect a dining room designed with intention: the Pearl District's venues tend toward open, airy layouts with sightlines that feel considered rather than accidental. For a returning visitor, the spatial logic matters: if you're planning a weekend brunch, the room's scale means the ambient noise level climbs as it fills, so arriving closer to opening gives you a noticeably quieter experience. The layout also makes it workable for solo diners at the bar or counter-adjacent seating, which is worth knowing if you're coming alone.

    The Food

    Ladino's cuisine is Mediterranean, but the kitchen is operating with a Sephardic lens , the name itself references Judeo-Spanish culture and language. That framing shapes the menu in ways that distinguish it from generic mezze-and-flatbread territory. Chef Berty Richter brings a culinary perspective rooted in Middle Eastern, North African, and Iberian influences, which gives the menu depth that holds across multiple visits. The Bib Gourmand designation is specifically awarded by Michelin for good cooking at a moderate price , it is not a consolation award but a specific recognition that the value-to-quality ratio is well above average. Two consecutive years of that recognition signals consistency, not a one-year anomaly. For brunch specifically, Mediterranean formats translate well to morning service: egg-based preparations, spiced proteins, and grain dishes are all natural fits for the cuisine type, and the $$ pricing means you can order broadly without the bill becoming an issue. If you visited previously for dinner, the weekend brunch is worth treating as a separate experience rather than a lighter version of the same meal.

    Value and Booking

    The $$ price range positions Ladino well below the cost of a comparable Michelin-recognised meal in most other American cities. For context, Bib Gourmand restaurants in New York or San Francisco , such as the calibre of venues recognised alongside Le Bernardin in New York City or Lazy Bear in San Francisco , often sit at the higher end of the $$ bracket or cross into $$$. Ladino at $$ in San Antonio represents genuine value. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means you don't need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for something like Alinea in Chicago or The French Laundry in Napa. That said, the Bib Gourmand profile raises local awareness, and weekend brunch slots are the most competitive window. Booking a few days ahead is sensible; same-day availability is possible on quieter weekday services but not something to rely on for a weekend visit.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google Reviews: 4.6 out of 5 (713 reviews)
    • Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024, Michelin Bib Gourmand 2025
    • Price: $$
    • Cuisine: Mediterranean (Sephardic influence)

    Practical Details

    DetailLadinoLeche de TigreCullum's AttaboySoutherleigh
    Price Range$$$$$$$$$
    CuisineMediterraneanFrench / PeruvianFrenchAmerican
    AwardsMichelin Bib Gourmand (2024, 2025), , ,
    Booking DifficultyEasy, , ,
    Google Rating4.6 (713), , ,
    Address200 E Grayson St #100San AntonioSan AntonioSan Antonio

    For more options across the city, see our full San Antonio restaurants guide, our full San Antonio bars guide, and our full San Antonio hotels guide.

    How It Compares

    Within the Pearl District and the broader San Antonio dining scene, Ladino holds a position no other venue at this price point currently occupies: Michelin-recognised Mediterranean cooking that remains accessible for regular visits. Mixtli is the city's most decorated tasting-menu option and operates at $$$$ , the right choice if you want a structured, multi-course experience, but not a weekly proposition. Ladino fills a different role: it's the kind of place you return to rather than save for an occasion.

    For brunch specifically, Ladino has fewer direct competitors. Southerleigh Fine Food and Brewery operates at $$$ and leans American with a brewery format , better for a relaxed, beer-forward weekend afternoon than a focused brunch. Cullum's Attaboy at $$ offers a French-influenced alternative at the same price tier, worth considering if you want something more familiar in format. Leche de Tigre brings French-Peruvian cooking at $$ and is a strong alternative if you want a change of direction after a few Ladino visits.

    The clearest comparison signal: if value-to-quality ratio and Michelin credibility are your main filters, Ladino is the answer at this price point in San Antonio. If you want maximum ambition and don't mind the cost, Mixtli is the upgrade. For everything else in the city, see guides to venues like Isidore, Aleteo, 2M Smokehouse, and Barbecue Station.

    Compare Ladino

    Is Ladino Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Ladino$$Easy
    Leche de Tigre$$Unknown
    Mixtli$$$$Unknown
    Boudro’s on the RiverwalkUnknown
    Cullum's Attaboy$$Unknown
    Southerleigh Fine Food & Brewery$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in San Antonio for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Ladino good for solo dining?

    Yes. At the $$ price point, Ladino is a low-commitment solo meal with serious credibility behind it — two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards signal consistent kitchen quality. The Pearl District address also means easy pre- or post-dinner wandering. Solo diners wanting bar seating should check in advance, as availability is not confirmed in current listings.

    Can Ladino accommodate groups?

    Small groups of two to four are the practical fit here. Ladino's Pearl District setting and $$ pricing make it accessible for a group meal without requiring a special-occasion budget. Larger parties should check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and booking options, as group-specific policies are not publicly documented.

    Can I eat at the bar at Ladino?

    Bar seating availability is not confirmed from current venue data, so call ahead if that's your preferred format. For walk-in flexibility, arriving at off-peak times improves your odds at a venue this size. The Pearl District location means alternatives are close if you're turned away.

    Is Ladino worth the price?

    At $$, it's a straightforward yes. Back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025 at this price tier is unusual for any American city, let alone San Antonio. Comparable Michelin-recognised meals in New York or Chicago cost significantly more. Chef Berty Richter's Mediterranean menu with a Sephardic lens gives the kitchen a specific point of view rather than a generic cuisine category.

    How far ahead should I book Ladino?

    Book at least one to two weeks out. The combination of Michelin Bib Gourmand status and a concentrated dining neighbourhood like the Pearl District keeps demand steady. Weekend brunch in particular fills fast — don't assume you can walk in on a Saturday morning and get a table.

    What should I order at Ladino?

    Specific menu items are not documented in the current venue record, so ordering advice would be speculation. What the venue data confirms: the kitchen works within a Mediterranean framework shaped by Sephardic culinary tradition, which is a narrower and more defined lens than generic Mediterranean. Ask your server what's driving the menu that week.

    What should a first-timer know about Ladino?

    Ladino is a Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant at $$ pricing, which means the value-to-quality ratio is the main reason to go. It sits at 200 E Grayson Street in the Pearl District, San Antonio's most food-dense neighbourhood, so it pairs well with other stops in the area. The cuisine is Mediterranean with a Sephardic influence under chef Berty Richter — this is not a broad crowd-pleaser menu, so come with some curiosity for the format.

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