
Spanish Food: Tapas, Paella, and Wine
Spanish eating is built around grazing and sharing, not courses. A tapa runs $2–6, a casual sit-down meal $12–25 per person, a nice dinner with wine $25–45. The two things worth getting right: tapas (order several small plates per group and share, don't get one entrée each) and paella (a specific Valencian rice dish, not a catch-all word for 'seafood rice' — the version aggressively advertised on a tourist-street menu board is almost never the good one). Dinner rarely starts before 9pm.
Spanish food is one of the easiest cuisines in the world to get slightly wrong as a visitor — not because the food is complicated, but because the culture around eating it (when, how much, how it's shared) trips up almost every first-timer in exactly the same ways. Here's how to actually do it.
How tapas ordering really works
Tapas are meant to be shared, ordered a few at a time across an evening, not assigned one-per-person like an entrée. A typical group of two or three orders 4–6 small plates total, plus bread and a bottle of wine, and lets the meal unfold over an hour or two rather than arriving all at once. In parts of Andalusia — Granada especially — a small tapa still comes free with every drink, unasked.
| Dish | What it is | Approx. price |
|---|---|---|
| Jamón ibérico | Cured Iberian ham, thinly sliced — the good stuff isn't cheap and shouldn't be | $8–20 per plate |
| Patatas bravas | Fried potatoes with spicy tomato sauce and aioli | $4–7 |
| Gambas al ajillo | Garlic shrimp sizzled in olive oil | $6–12 |
| Tortilla española | Potato and egg omelet, served warm or room temperature | $3–7 |
| Croquetas | Fried béchamel croquettes, usually ham or mushroom | $4–8 for a plate |

Paella — get the real thing
Paella is a specific rice dish from Valencia, traditionally cooked over an open flame in a wide, shallow pan and taking 20+ minutes to prepare properly to order. If a restaurant serves it instantly, all day, every day, with a laminated photo menu and a tout standing outside trying to seat you, it's almost certainly a pre-made tourist version. Look for restaurants that require ordering paella at least 20–30 minutes ahead, or a minimum of two people — that's usually a good sign it's cooked fresh.
Spanish wine, briefly

Rioja (bold reds from the north) and Ribera del Duero are the two names worth knowing if you want a safe, high-quality bet with dinner; a glass at a decent restaurant runs $4–8 and a full bottle from a wine shop can be excellent for $8–15. Cava, Spain's answer to Champagne (mostly from Catalonia), is a good-value sparkling option worth trying at least once.
Dietary needs
Vegetarian travelers do reasonably well in bigger cities (ask for 'sin carne' or look for 'vegetariano' on menus) but should double-check, since ham and stock show up in unexpected places, including some 'vegetable' tapas. Vegan travelers will need to be more deliberate — cities do better than small towns. Halal options are increasingly available in Madrid and Barcelona, less so in smaller Andalusian towns. Gluten-free is well understood in most restaurants ('sin gluten') given Spain's general awareness of celiac disease.
What dinner actually looks like
| Meal type | Typical time | Price per person |
|---|---|---|
| Breakfast (coffee + pastry) | 8–10am | $3–6 |
| Lunch (often the biggest meal) | 2–3:30pm | $12–20 (menú del día often better value) |
| Tapas / evening drinks | 7–9pm | $10–20 for several plates |
| Dinner (kitchens often open ~8:30–9pm) | 9–11pm | $15–30 |












































