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The DiverXO Ceiling
Food

The DiverXO Ceiling

By Mes Prestiges Editorial Team Last reviewed May 2026
7 min read
Food

Madrid's avant-garde tier asks a harder question than 'is it good'. At DiverXO, Coque and DSTAgE, the question is how far a kitchen can go before technique becomes the whole point — and whether it should.

At the very top of Madrid's kitchens, the conversation stops being about whether the food is good — that is assumed — and becomes about ambition itself. How far can a chef push the form before invention outruns pleasure? Where is the ceiling, and what does a cook do when they reach it? Few cities in Europe ask these questions as loudly as Madrid, and none answers them more divisively than DiverXO.

Dabiz Muñoz's three-star room is the most polarising fine-dining experience in Spain, and deliberately so. The meal arrives as a kind of controlled chaos — pig-themed porcelain, dishes that lunge between Cantonese, Mexican and Castilian within a single bite, a tempo that refuses to let you settle. To some it is the most exciting table on the continent; to others it is technique performing for its own applause. Both readings are fair, which is precisely why it matters. DiverXO is the ceiling against which everything else in the city is measured. Its more accessible sibling, StreetXO, runs the same restless intelligence at a counter, for those who want the idea without the four-hour commitment.

The serious alternatives define themselves partly in relation to it. Coque takes the opposite path — a family kitchen of immense classical control, where the avant-garde is expressed through precision rather than provocation, and where the journey through cellar, kitchen and dining room is its own quiet argument. Saddle, sleek and assured, has won its star by proving that refinement and generosity are not opposites; it is the room you book when you want ambition without anxiety.

Then there is the deeper bench, which is where Madrid's real strength shows. Ramón Freixa Atelier builds intricate, intellectually composed plates inside the calm of Salamanca. DSTAgE channels a looser, more personal kind of avant-garde, the chef's own restless curiosity made edible. El Invernadero, over in Chamberí, has built a whole grammar around vegetables, treating a root or a leaf with the reverence others reserve for turbot or pigeon — and in doing so quietly answers the DiverXO question from the other direction.

What the visitor learns by moving across this tier is that the ceiling is not a single height. It is a spectrum of intentions: provocation at one end, precision at the other, and a great deal of genuine thought in between. The confident booking here is not the most starred or the most photographed. It is the kitchen whose ambition you actually want to spend an evening inside — and Madrid, generously, gives you several to choose from.

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