The restaurants below have been listed alphabetically and classed into four different pricing categories:
$$$$ (over €30)
$$$ (€20 to €30)
$$ (€10 to €20)
$ (up to €10)
These prices are for a three-course meal for one, including tax and service, but not drinks.
Corral del Agua Offers romantic dining in a pretty, enclosed patio within a converted 18th-century palace.
Callejón del Agua 6
Tel: 95 422 4841.
Price: $$$
Egaña Oriza One of Seville’s finest
and most exclusive restaurants serving beautifully presented Basque cuisine.
Calle San Fernando 41
Tel: 95 422 7254.
Website:
www.restauranteoriza.com Price: $$$$
El Rinconcillo This charismatic bar/restaurant dates back to 1670, is probably the oldest tapas bar in town and is claimed by some to be the birthplace of tapas.
Calle Gerona 40
Tel: 95 422 3183.
Price: $-$$
La Albahaca Black-tie efficiency with a smile in an evocative 1920s mansion in the Barrio Santa Cruz; inventive angles on Andalucian and Basque themes.
Plaza de Santa Cruz 12
Tel: 95 422 0714.
Price: $$$$
Mesón Don Raimundo A veritable museum of Sevillan knick-knacks housed in a beautiful 14th-century building in addition to being a restaurant of style offering value for money.
Argote de Molina 26
Tel: 95 422 3355.
Price: $$-$$$
Nightlife:There are a great many watering holes in Seville catering for all styles of outing. For a quiet drink ideal for people-watching head to the area surrounding the cathedral. Another good starting point to the evening is at one of the bars in the Santa Cruz district. From there, Calle Betis and Plaza Alfalfa is where most of the action continues until the early hours.
Bars: P. Flaherty, Calle Alemanes 7, is a lively Irish-themed bar and a popular meeting spot next to the cathedral. In the same area,
Antiguedades, Argote de Molina 40, is another busy bar with a bizarre theme that changes from month to month.
Fundición, Calle Betis 49, is a friendly bar playing good music right in the middle of Calle Betis, and
Burbujas, Calle Radio Sevilla, is a bubbly bar serving an assortment of champagne cocktails.
Maya Soul, Calle Betis 41, meanwhile, has trendy sofas with big-screen TV, free Wi-Fi and sushi bar (Wednesday and Thursday).
Clubs: Sala Boss, Calle Betis 67 (website:
www.salaboss.es), is a huge club, busy in the week and packed at weekends.
Aduana, corner of Avenida Raza and Cardenal Bueno Monreal (website:
www.aduana.net), one of Seville’s most popular nightspots, plays house, electro and electro on one dance floor, pop on the other. And
Bestiario, Calle Zaragoza 33, is a funky cafe bar often staying open until sunrise.
Live Music: La Carbonería, Calle Levies 18, is a busy, three-stage bar with an eclectic bill of performances from poetry to flamenco. Also worth checking out are
Café Jazz Naima, Calle Trajano 45 (website:
www.naimacafejazzcom), a small and hip jazz bar with live music at the weekends, and
La Sirena, Alameda de Hércules 34, a favorite haunt featuring local live bands and musicians, is one of several lively trendy bars in this vicinity.
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