When elBulli closed, its alumni did not scatter — they stayed and rebuilt the way Barcelona cooks at the top. The result is a city of avant-garde rooms that prize ideas and looseness over white tablecloths, from the world's most coveted booking to a two-star tasting menu served at a bar.
Ferran Adrià's elBulli closed in 2011, but its real legacy is not a museum on a Catalan cove — it is the kitchens its alumni built across Barcelona. The defining trait of this generation is not technique for its own sake; it is a refusal of stiffness. The most exciting tables in the city look more like bars than temples, and that is the point.
Disfrutar is the apex. Founded by three former elBulli head chefs, it holds three Michelin stars and was named the World's Best Restaurant in 2024, its playful, technically dazzling menu the single most coveted booking in Barcelona, served in a luminous Mediterranean-modern room. Enigma is the philosophical counterpoint: the lone survivor of Albert Adrià's elBarri group, reopened as a two-star, twenty-five-course immersion inside an RCR Arquitectes space of wire-mesh clouds — theatre and craft without gimmickry, for the design-and-food obsessive.
Mont Bar shows where the looseness leads. It earned a second star in 2026 while keeping the format of a bar: a long marble counter where you can take the tasting menu or simply order à la carte, an avant-garde kitchen that stays intimate and genuinely fun. Dos Palillos pushes the idea further still — Albert Raurich, elBulli's former head chef, runs a black-lacquered counter blending Japanese, Chinese and Spanish tapas into a precise sequence built in front of you.
Two more rooms carry the lineage with quieter confidence. Cinc Sentits holds two stars for Jordi Artal's self-taught reworking of Catalan products and memory, cool and unshowy and value-led by three-star standards. In El Raval, Suculent puts the elBulli training to work on tradition itself — chef Toni Romero reworks Catalan and Spanish classics with modern technique in a warm tiled bistro, one of the quarter's genuine culinary anchors.
What unites them is an inversion of the old hierarchy. The skill is total, but it is deployed to make you comfortable, not to remind you where you are. The counter, the open kitchen, the option to come for one plate or twenty — these are deliberate choices, the diaspora's collective verdict that brilliance and ease are not enemies.
Book Disfrutar months out and treat it as the pilgrimage it is. But understand that the same DNA runs through a stool at Mont Bar or a seat at Dos Palillos for a fraction of the ceremony. The elBulli idea did not end on that cove; it moved into the city and learned to relax.