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Plate of artichokes braised à la montillana with white wine and aromatic herbs
Main Course plat-braise-legumes

Alcachofas a la Montillana

Artichoke hearts braised in Montilla white wine with garlic and olive oil — a spring-only dish from Córdoba's countryside. Try them at Taberna Salinas.

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At a glance

Category
Main Course
Origin
Originating from the Montilla-Moriles region of Córdoba province, this traditional dish celebrates the marriage of local artichokes and the famous white wine of the area, reflecting the richness of Andalusian rural cooking.
Temperature
Served hot
Season
Spring (March to May), during the fresh artichoke season
Wine pairing
Montilla-Moriles dry white or fino, echoing the wine used in the preparation
Difficulty
Medium

On this page

A spring dish from the countryside

Alcachofas a la montillana is the kind of recipe that doesn't travel well on a menu description but makes complete sense on a plate. Artichoke hearts, slow-braised in Montilla wine with garlic, olive oil, and fresh parsley, until the artichokes have absorbed the wine and the cooking liquid reduces to a light, fragrant sauce.

This is countryside cooking from the Montilla-Moriles region — the same area that produces the wine used in the dish. The combination is not decorative; the wine's slight dryness and fruity character soften the artichoke's natural bitterness and add a depth you don't get from water or stock.

The recipe in brief

Artichoke hearts go into a wide pan with a generous pour of extra-virgin olive oil, finely chopped garlic, and diced onion. Add Montilla white wine, enough to partially submerge them, then cover and braise low and slow. The artichokes turn tender without going soft, and the sauce concentrates around them. Some versions include diced serrano ham. The vegetarian preparation — without the ham — is more common and cleaner in flavour.

The result is not elaborate. It's the kind of dish that works because the main ingredient is handled with restraint rather than technique.

When to eat it

Fresh artichokes peak from March to May. That's the window when this dish is at its best in Córdoba's restaurants. Outside that season, it still appears on menus — but the artichokes won't be the same.

Served as a generous tapa or a light main course with rustic bread to mop up the sauce. Pairs naturally with a dry Montilla-Moriles white or fino — drinking the same wine used in the cooking closes the loop in a satisfying way.

Where to find it

Taberna Salinas and Bodegas Campos are the two addresses most associated with traditional Córdoba cooking and both serve this dish. It also appears at La Casa de Manolete Bistro. Like berenjenas con miel, it's a reminder that the most interesting Córdoba dishes are often the vegetarian ones.

Good for

Food Lovers Wellness Couples Gastronomy Cultural

Main ingredients

  • artichokes
  • Montilla white wine
  • garlic
  • olive oil
  • parsley
  • onion

Reporter notebook

Insider tips

Practical observations gathered the way a local journalist would keep them: short, specific, and more useful than brochure copy.

Best time

Order them in March to May when the artichokes are fresh

Outside spring, most restaurants use preserved artichokes. The difference is obvious — fresh ones have a bitterness and texture that preserved cannot match. Ask your waiter if the artichokes are seasonal before ordering.

Pairing tip

Drink the same Montilla wine used in the cooking

Ask for a dry Montilla-Moriles white or fino — the same grape variety goes into the dish. Drinking the cooking wine alongside the food closes a loop that makes the pairing feel inevitable rather than incidental.

What to order

Ask for the vegetarian version without ham

Some restaurants add diced serrano ham. The version without it is cleaner and lets the artichoke-wine combination speak. If you want ham, order it separately — you'll taste both ingredients better.

Frequently asked questions

Where can I try alcachofas a la montillana in Córdoba?

Taberna Salinas and Bodegas Campos are the most reliable addresses for this dish. La Casa de Manolete Bistro also serves it. The dish is more common at traditional lunch restaurants than at tapas bars.

Is alcachofas a la montillana suitable for vegetarians?

The base recipe is vegetarian — artichokes, Montilla wine, garlic, olive oil, parsley, and onion. Some versions include diced serrano ham, which makes them unsuitable for vegetarians. Ask specifically for the version without ham ('sin jamón') when ordering. The dish is also gluten-free.

What wine pairs well with this dish?

Drink the same Montilla-Moriles dry white or fino used in the cooking. The artichoke's natural bitterness works well with the wine's slight dryness, and pairing the cooking wine with the finished dish creates a coherent table. Avoid tannic reds — they clash with artichoke's natural compounds.

Is it a starter or a main course?

It can function as either, depending on the portion size. At most traditional restaurants, it arrives as a generous tapa or a light main course. Rustic bread for mopping up the braising sauce is standard accompaniment.

When is the best time to eat this dish in Córdoba?

March to May, when fresh artichokes are in season. Outside that window, most restaurants use preserved artichokes, which have a noticeably different texture and less bitterness. Always ask whether the artichokes are fresh before ordering.