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Barcelona : Places to eat

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  • Uptairs sells honey, preserves and other foods made in convents and monasteries all over Spain. Downstairs you can sample all the delicacies in a cozy café on the site of a 15th century baths.

  • Traditionally enjoyed in the morning, cafè amb llet is an ample cup of milky coffee.

  • This airy and spacious café, with salmon walls and mirrors, is an ideal spot for a quick coffee away from the crowds. Service is speedy and a touch more formal than most places in Gràcia.

  • Superb Catalan cuisine and top-notch desserts are served at this restaurant in an 18th-century building.

  • Cafè de l’Òpera

    Kick back at this elegant, late 19th-century café while rubbing shoulders with a mixed crowd, tended to by vested cambrers (waiters). This former xocolateria (confectionary café) – named after the Liceu opera house opposite – still serves fine gooey delights such as xurros amb xocolata (strips of fried dough with thick chocolate). It is near to perfect for people-watching on La Rambla.

  • Plaça Comercial is dotted with cafés, including the laid-back Café del Born, which evolves into an amiable bar as night descends.

  • Said to be the oldest café in the Eixample, with dark wooden interiors that have not changed for a century. An unpretentious and authentic spot for a quiet coffee.

  • This café-bar is a cut above the others in the lively, bohemian Plaça del Sol. The atmosphere buzzes, the conversation inspires and the excellent coffee keeps on coming.

  • This is an ideal place to find a young, friendly crowd and good conversation. The only connection with the theatre here seems to be the velvet curtains on the sign over the door of this scruffy, but busy, café.

  • Cafè d’Estiu

    Tucked away on the patio of the Museu Frederic Marès (Museu Frederic Marès) is this alluring, sun-strewn terrace café, replete with stone pillars, climbing ivy and orange trees.

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