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Thick slice of golden and creamy tortilla de patatas served on a plate
Tapa omelette-espagnole

Tortilla de Patatas: Spain's Potato Omelette in Córdoba's Bars

Golden outside, impossibly creamy within — Spain's potato omelette at its finest in Córdoba's tapas bars. Find the best version at Bar Santos any time of day.

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At a glance

Category
Tapa
Origin
An iconic dish of Spanish cuisine that emerged in the 19th century following the introduction of the potato. Its invention is claimed by several regions, but it became a universal symbol of Spanish gastronomy and an essential in every tapas bar.
Temperature
Served hot
Season
Year-round
Wine pairing
Montilla-Moriles fino or a light young red wine
Difficulty
Medium

On this page

The dish with no off-season

Tortilla de patatas shows up at breakfast, lunch, and midnight. It's on the bar top as a tapa, on the restaurant menu as a racion, and in the supermarket fridge as a last resort. In Córdoba it's as fundamental as salmorejo — one of those dishes where every bar has an opinion about how to do it right, and regulars form loyalty based on texture alone.

Three ingredients: potatoes, eggs, and olive oil. The onion question is genuinely divisive. Ask for con cebolla or sin cebolla and the bartender will have a view.

What the recipe actually requires

The potatoes are sliced thin and confited slowly in olive oil — not fried hard, but cooked gently until soft. They get salted, then combined with beaten eggs. The mix goes into a hot pan, the sides set, then comes the flip. A good tortilla is creamy at the centre — not raw, but not fully set either. The outside should be lightly golden, not brown.

This is harder than it sounds. The flip is where most home cooks lose it. The best bars in Córdoba make them fresh throughout the day, so the one you eat at 1pm is not the same one that went in the case at 10am.

Where to eat it

Bar Santos and Taberna Salinas are the reference addresses in Córdoba. Casa Pepe de la Judería and Bodegas Campos make generous versions that follow the classic recipe. In the popular neighbourhoods, local bars make fresh tortillas every morning — the best option for an early lunch.

The natural drink is a chilled Montilla-Moriles fino. The dryness and slight bitterness of the wine work against the richness of the eggs and oil without overwhelming the potato flavour.

A note on history

Tortilla de patatas appears in written records from the early 19th century, after the potato had established itself in Spanish cooking. Its precise origin is contested — multiple regions claim it — but it settled into a genuinely universal symbol of Spanish bar food fast enough that the argument about who invented it has mostly stopped mattering.

Good for

Food Lovers Families Budget Solo Gastronomy

Main ingredients

  • potatoes
  • eggs
  • olive oil
  • onion (optional)
  • salt

Allergens: eggs

Reporter notebook

Insider tips

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

What to order

Ask for it 'jugosa' if you want the creamy centre

A properly made tortilla should be slightly underset in the middle. If you ask for it 'jugosa' (juicy), the bartender knows you want the good version — not the dry, overcooked one that's been sitting in the display case since morning.

Best time

Order the one that just came out of the kitchen

If you see a tortilla being flipped behind the bar, that's the one you want. A fresh tortilla served within 10 minutes of cooking is a different dish from one that's been cooling for two hours. Ask 'es recién hecha?' (is it freshly made?).

Local custom

Take the onion side — most locals do

The con cebolla vs sin cebolla debate is real, but in Córdoba the majority lean toward onion. The caramelised sweetness balances the egg and oil. If you're trying it for the first time, go with onion.

Frequently asked questions

Where can I try tortilla de patatas in Córdoba?

Bar Santos and Taberna Salinas are the reference addresses. Bodegas Campos and Casa Pepe de la Judería make generous versions that follow the classic recipe. Local neighbourhood bars in the Centro and San Basilio make fresh tortillas every morning — the best option for an early lunch.

Is tortilla de patatas suitable for vegetarians?

Yes. The classic recipe uses potatoes, eggs, olive oil, and salt — no meat or fish. It is vegetarian and gluten-free. It does contain eggs, so it is not suitable for vegans. Some versions add onion, which does not affect its vegetarian status.

What wine pairs well with tortilla de patatas?

A chilled Montilla-Moriles fino is the local pairing. The dryness and slight bitterness of the wine work against the richness of the eggs and olive oil without overwhelming the potato flavour. A young, light red also works. Avoid heavy or tannic reds.

Should I order tortilla de patatas with or without onion?

Both are traditional. The onion (con cebolla) version has caramelised sweetness that balances the egg and oil — most Córdobans lean toward this version. The without-onion (sin cebolla) version is purer and simpler. If you are trying it for the first time, go with onion.

How do I know if the tortilla de patatas is freshly made?

Ask 'es recién hecha?' (is it freshly made?). A good tortilla should have a creamy, slightly underset centre — what locals call 'jugosa' (juicy). If it looks dry or has been sitting under glass for hours, ask for the next one out of the kitchen. The best bars make fresh tortillas throughout the day.

Where to taste it in Córdoba