De Lucia Tapas Bar
Click map markers to see address, phone number and hours of operation for each location
In a Nutshell
Ultra-casual ambiance sitting at one of two small bars overlooking the cooks constructing the tapas, De Lucia offers extraordinarily good tapas that venture outside of traditional Spanish cuisine in a very good way. Absolutely delicious. Always a good conversation with others sitting at the communal bar.
Read the full review
De Lucia promotes itself as a tapas bar. Located in Mercado San Telmo, this is just another pleasant surprise in long string of those I’ve been experience over the past month, while rediscovering San Telmo. Just a day earlier I had spent a few pleasant hours in the tapas bar in Sagardi, a few blocks away, one of our favorite restaurants in the city and had sampled their expansive array of tapas.
That was a pleasant experience. The tapas were good but not memorable by any means.
De Lucia is located in the Mercado SanTelmo, a small portal of shops and restaurants under a single roof, offering mostly artisanal crafts and antiques. In the center are some small vendors of food products. Bakers. Butchers. And several small kiosks posing as small restaurants, most having no more than ten or so seats available at a counter, behind which the cook or cooks prepare and serve the food.
We recently visited and reviewed a small kiosk serving choripans, La Choripanería.
Immediately across a walkway from La Choripanería in the market is De Lucia.
They offer a variety of Spanish plates, but specialize in tapas, the smaller plates of food with three or four bites, that are popular accompaniments to beer and wine in bars throughout Spain.
There are six seats along one counter, and six along the other.
The options on the menu are diverse. But I opted for the platter of tapas, an assortment of five bruschetta-like tapas called montaditas, each topped with some combination of unique ingredients.
The long paddle with the five tapas in the slideshow is what I’m describing, each sitting on a thin slice of a French baguette. One was topped with thin slices of carrots in a sweet syrup, another with sweet beet puree topped with anchovies, and another, with a couple of slices of blood sausage drizzled with high-quality olive oil and herbs, and the fifth, a large slice of an Argentine chorizo sausage, topped with a traditional salsa criolla.
The assortment of five tapas was a bit expensive for what amounted to a large platter of appetizers. But, in this case, the higher cost was, in my opinion, warranted. These were exceedingly more interesting flavors than the tapas we had sampled the evening before at Sagardi.
These were delicious, as are the various other plates that were laid out. Mollejas, Papas Bravas, perfectly cooked sautéed shrimp, and meat balls.
Although the ambiance might be lacking, the counter seating is conducive to meeting new people. A great choice for tourists looking to share their experiences with one another. The service was top-notch, and friendly.
This is a restaurant where the book is better than the cover.