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San Sebastián

A city defined by a perfect bay and an even better meal.

Built in service to a single bay, La Concha, this is Basque country at its most elegant. The old town (Parte Vieja) holds the world's highest concentration of bars, but the city's ambition extends to the three-star temples in the surrounding hills. It is Belle Époque grace and a profound obsession with food, side-by-side.

The city has more Michelin stars per square meter than anywhere else on earth, a product of its private 'txoko' gastronomic societies.

La Concha's white balustrade was installed in 1910 and has barely changed since — the same ironwork that framed the bay for visiting royalty still catches the salt spray today.

The local txakoli wine is poured from a great height not for show, but to aerate the slightly effervescent, acidic wine.

  • The ritual crawl is 'txikiteo'. One or two pintxos and a small drink per bar, then move on. Never settle in.
  • Order hot pintxos from the blackboard, not just the cold ones on the bar. The kitchen-made dishes are where the artistry is.
  • A 'zurito' is a small glass of beer, and a 'txikito' is a small glass of wine. Order them to pace yourself.
  • Book Michelin-starred restaurants months in advance. Lunch seatings are often easier to secure and offer the same menu.
  • Most shops close for siesta from roughly 1:30 PM to 4:30 PM. Plan your shopping around it.
  • The 16 and 18 buses from the Boulevard in Centro are the easiest way to get to the Michelin restaurants in the hills.

Where Things Are

Four neighborhoods to orient your first visit