Berenjenas con Miel
Crispy fried aubergine rounds drizzled with amber honey — a 1,000-year-old Moorish tapa still served in every bar in Córdoba. Order them hot, eat fast.
Discover the art of tapas in Córdoba, where the tapeo tradition lives on across generations of neighbourhood bars.
The tapa in Córdoba is not a starter — it is a social format, a philosophy of eating, and a direct descendant of the Moorish mezze tradition that survived the reconquest in the bars and taverns of the Andalusian city. Córdoba's tapas have a specific character shaped by the province's agricultural wealth: salmorejo (cold tomato cream, thicker than gazpacho, with a consistency approaching hummus), berenjenas con miel de caña (batter-fried aubergine with sugar-cane molasses — the Moorish connection explicit in the sweetness), croquetas de jamón (fried croquettes with a molten béchamel interior) and flamenquín (rolled and breadcrumbed pork loin). In many traditional Córdoban bars, the tapa still arrives free with each drink ordered — one of the most civilised customs in Spanish social life and one that rewards bar-hopping over restaurant dining. The tapeo — moving from bar to bar, standing rather than sitting, eating small amounts of many things — is the authentic Córdoban way of spending an evening, and its social choreography of ordering, eating and moving on is as much the experience as the food itself.
Crispy fried aubergine rounds drizzled with amber honey — a 1,000-year-old Moorish tapa still served in every bar in Córdoba. Order them hot, eat fast.
Córdoba's best spring street food: tiny snails served steaming in aromatic cumin-mint broth. A seasonal tradition from March to May — don't miss them.
Crispy fried cuttlefish strips from Córdoba's tapas bars — meatier than calamares, part of the Andalusian pescaíto frito tradition. Around €4-8 a portion.
Córdoba's empanadas use olive oil dough — either stuffed with seasoned meat or filled with cabello de ángel pumpkin jam. A Moorish-era bakery tradition.
Thin pork loin wrapped around serrano ham, breaded and fried to a shattering golden crust. Córdoba's iconic tapa since the 1960s — find the best here.
Melt-in-your-mouth acorn-fed Iberian ham from Córdoba's Los Pedroches valley, cured 36 months. Spain's finest cured meat — where to taste it in the city.
Caramelised pork skewers marinated overnight in cumin, paprika and cinnamon — a Moorish recipe unchanged since the 8th century. Order them at every bar.
Thicker than gazpacho, silkier, and topped with hard-boiled egg and serrano ham — salmorejo is the dish Córdoba is famous for. Taste it at its best here.
Grilled pork loin, serrano ham, fried green pepper and tomato in crusty bread — the Andalusian street sandwich that fills Córdoba's bar counters at lunch.
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.