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    La Coruña

    4.0 (3 reviews)
    ModerateSpanish
    Closed 12:00 pm - 3:30 PM, 8:00 PM - 12:30 am (Next day)

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    Miramar - Miramar Dining-room

    Miramar

    4.3(18 reviews)
    10.1 kmSan Cristobal
    $$

    Unique. A testimony of the Buenos Aires rotisseries, with a…read moremostly Spanish casa-de-comidas-menu, with a few pasta additions. Its architecture is actually very interesting, because these casa de comidas no lomger exist in Spain, so this like the Carmenère of the restaurant type. Its architecture and design is both super nice and dusty. The cafe part being the most refined of the establishment. The food is tasty and homey. Don't expect to be surprised. Not surprising is actually the goal here. The service is respectful and professional. A good experience everyone should have at one point.

    Definitely old school ambiance. I mean, this is really traditional Argentine-Spanish fare - one of…read moreour number selected the lengua a la vinagreta - the tender as could be sliced tongue in a very garlicky vinegar dressing (130 pesos), and I picked the caracoles, or snails (220 pesos), which turned out to be in an excellent tomato and onion sauce. Our third wasn't having either of these oddities, and opted for a plate of quite good smoked salmon with capers (280 pesos). Not so traditional, but tasty nonetheless. I was all set to order the place's famed rabo de toro, braised oxtail, which the waiter pimped for enthusiastically as the best dish on the menu, until I spotted that they had a special of the day of venison ravioli. He opined that they, too, were excellent, and in fact so good that the waiters and cooks were back in the kitchen sneaking extras whenever people ordered them. And, he was right - huge, plump ravioli filled with well spiced venison, in a creamy venison and mushroom reduction sauce. (270 pesos) Our salmon eater decided to stay with salmon, and went with nearly as good as the above, salmon filled squid-ink ravioli with fresh prawns, in a cream sauce. (390 pesos) And, our third, decided on the lechon, suckling pig, which was falling apart tender, and absolutely delicious. It could have used something to go with it - but this is old school, you have to order your side dishes separately. (320 pesos) It's not cheap, though not ridiculous - still, maybe a touch more than I'd expect in an old school bodegón, even with today's prices. Add in a cubierto charge (35 pesos each), a single shared bottle of water, a bottle of wine, and three coffees, and we racked up a 2285 peso tab, plus tip (we rounded to 850 pesos apiece), or about $66, $22 each, for 3 people. They do take credit and debit cards, a nice plus for this type of place, where many of them don't. And I do want to go back and try the oxtail!

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    Miramar - Miramar

    Miramar

    Miramar - Miramar

    Miramar

    Miramar - Rabo de Toro

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    Rabo de Toro

    Iñaki

    Iñaki

    4.9(15 reviews)
    11.2 kmMonserrat

    Excellent Spanish cuisine and very nice service. Reservations are highly recommended.read more

    We went for a round of shared appetizers while we considered our main courses. This is still a…read moreplace where, if you want to watch your spending, you need to pay attention to the righthand column on the menu, as appetizer prices range from a low of 20 pesos (a single medium sized grilled sardine), on up to 950 pesos, for a plate of jamón jabugo, the famous imported, acorn-fed cured ham from Jabugo, Spain. We stayed a bit more modest with a small plate of boquerones, cured small sardine fillets (105 pesos), their justifiably famed house specialty of calamaretes guernicas, fried baby squid in a cider and onion sauce (versus the version I tried on my first visit of just fried with wedges of lemon) (230 pesos), and a perfectly executed tortilla española (220 pesos). Although there are a couple of non-seafood dishes on the menu, the specialty really is fish and shellfish. And, the fish "most used" is the abadejo, or ling-cod (similar to pollack or haddock). A trio of preparations on a theme here, all with their "santurzana" sauce, a fondue of tomatoes, peppers, and onions. Then, varied with additions, first, and easily the runaway star, the abadejo a la bizkaina, with a touch of mildly spicy chili. The quite good abadejo a la americana, with a splash of cream and some prawns, also quite good. Less successful, the abadejo ajo arriero, with garlic and egg - the flavor was fine, we just didn't expect it to be a big bowl of mashed fish, especially given the plump, perfectly cooked fillets on the other two dishes. It felt more like something that ought to be spooned over rice. (390, 405, 380 pesos, respectively.) Again, a glance at the price column is in order, with tariffs running from a low of 340 to a high of 2400 pesos per plate (the latter being an octopus dish for two). There's also a short list of available fish off the grill, with a choice of house sauces, the above mentioned santurzana, a salsa verde, and the uniquely Argentine roquefort sauce (pretty much an abomination, created at some point in this country's past, no doubt to mask the off flavors of fish that was a touch past its prime). A plate of grilled swordfish with salsa verde was as delicious as the version I'd tried so many years ago, though I still find their interpretation of "green sauce" to be not so green. A more Argentine specialty, and probably the least successful on the table, a rather bland and somewhat overcooked fillet of chernia, (stone bass, wreckfish), buried under a heap of undressed arugula leaves, some shavings of parmesan, and a mound of capers. (370 and 340 pesos.) One of the things that can make Iñaki a bit more expensive, other than the 50 peso/person cubierto charge, is that virtually none of the main courses come with any accompaniment. An order of papas al natural, two overcooked potatoes, broken up and drenched with paprika and olive oil (tasty, if too soft), runs 60 pesos, and is really more geared to 1-2 people than 6, and likewise the espinacas a la crema, creamed spinach, a small ramekin for 120 pesos. But, we ate well - pretty much all the food was delicious (I'd skip that chernia and arugula dish, unless you're on a diet or something), service was excellent, and we certainly weren't hungry for more. We passed on desserts, had a round of coffees, and then our waiter "invited" us to a round of limoncello. A common enough offering in more Italian restaurants, an odd choice for a Basque restaurant. Then again, patxaran, which would be a more classic of the region (or hard-cider), is a bit too expensive here in Argentina to be used as a giveaway. We also added to the tab with a large pitcher of sangria for half the table and a bottle of wine for the other half. All told, with tip, we spent a few over 5000 pesos, basically 850 apiece, or just over US$34, which really isn't bad for the level of quality. Stays on my top 5 list for Spanish and Basque restaurants in town.

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    Iñaki
    Iñaki
    Iñaki - Arroz especial

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    Arroz especial

    La Coruña - spanish - Updated July 2026

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