
Pintxos Paradise
As food writer Jonathan Gold "warned" me before we went to San Sebastian, "the pintxos bars in the old town are among the best in Spain." Although you can't feel any sense of competition--the convivial spirit spills over from one bar to the next, and there are certainly enough customers to go around--you can see it and taste it. Every spot crafts its small-plate specialties to perfection, and a few, like Zeruko, above, take their pintxos into otherworldly realms of avant-garde food architecture. For pure satisfaction (amazing warm pintxos cooked to order) and neighborhood ambiance, we kept returning to Astelehena and La Cuchara De San Telmo, both recommended by AFAR contributor Lisa Abend. But nothing beats Zeruko, http://bit.ly/HbvQQ0, for a visual spectacle and experimentation with ingredients and presentation.
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DiscussWant to know more? Ask about or comment on this Highlight!I fully agree, San Sebastian's pintxos are worth the whole trip alone! We went on a Pintxo Tasting Tour with the dedicated pintxo guide Jon Warren of San Sebastián Food http://www.sansebastianfood.com/en/
At 85 euro, that was a lot more expensive than simply exploring on your own, but great fun. And with one glass of wine at every stop (6 pintxo bars in total) the mood in the group got merrier and merrier as the evening went.




