Skip to main content
Spanish Food World UK
The Cookbook
The Magazine
The Guide
Buy Spanish Food
The Home of UK Spanish Food Lovers

Search form

  • Spanish Recipes
  • How To?
  • Ingredients & Product Guides
  • Regional Cuisine
  • Spanish Food Culture
  • Interviews & Opinion
  • Spanish Food News
  • Tapas Bars & Spanish Restaurants
  • Spanish Shops
  • Spanish Catering
  • Vouchers & Offers
  • Updates by Email
  • Subscribe to RSS
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Like us on Facebook

Spanish Postres - ain't that sweet

Category: 

  • Interviews & Opinion

Region: 

  • Andalucia
Chef, Kevin Richardson
What's for Pudding?

Can Spanish restaurants actually deliver a memorable pudding? Something to please even the sweetest tooth? Not around my way they can't.

Andalucia has a woeful record when it comes to 'afters.' Too often restaurant owners see postres only as an opportunity to make profit on something that comes out of the freezer. I shall go to my grave reciting the list of ubiquitous sweets on offer as recited by a waiter. Helado? Natilla? Flan? etc etc. Call me fussy but i don't want to end my meal with an ice cream or frozen solid pudding that has come out of a packet. Surely there is a market for home made, imaginative puddings in Spain.

As ever, chefs in the north of  Spain show more imagination than their southern counterparts. A fact acknowledged by one of the best chefs in Andalucia.

Kevin Richardson of Mirador Cerro Gordo at La Herradura says:- "Andalucia is simply not cuisine orientated and that applies to postres every bit as much as main meals. Spanish customers automatically ask for flan, creme caramel etc. I have to gently tell them that we don't serve such puddings but that we do offer dishes created on site and that, perhaps, they might like to try something new. Sadly, the answer is often 'no'; but those who do try our puddings are every bit as happy as our north European customers."

And he's right. If you are serving the British in Spain you don't have to be as predictable as offering something smothered in custard or strawberries with fake cream. Likewise Spanish chefs down south should be bolder and stop thrusting an ice cream on a diner wanting to complete a meal out with a stand out postre. My plea to restaurants all over Spain is to step outside of their comfort zone.

As Kevin Richardson told me: "Many restaurant owners are resting on their laurels. They say: 'This is the way we have always done it, and this is the way we will always do it'; "that's what i hear so often." Nobody has more of a sweet tooth than the Spanish. So those who cater should realise that were they to deliver attractive puddings, some people will visit their restaurant purely because of that fact.  Create them and they will come. After all, the proof of the pudding is in just how many people want to eat it.

Share Your Opinion!

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
Vernon's picture
By Vernon
Writer, TV producer & author of a guidebook to the 100 best tapas bars in the Spanish city of Granada. He's produced food & travel programmes for UK broadcasters. He's written for newspapers and magazines in the UK and Spain. He's travelled all over Spain tasting tapas - all in the name of research, he insists.



Other Great Recipe Sites

  • American Recipes

This website is owned and operated by The Tapas Lunch Company Ltd.
Unit 1, Johnston Logistics UK, Harling Road, Snetterton, Norwich, NR16 2JU.
Registered in England and Wales, Company No. 5595951, VAT Reg. No. GB 869 8107 73.
Images and text that are the property of The Tapas Lunch Company are copyright and must not be reproduced without permission. Some images and text used under licence.
© 2011 The Tapas Lunch Company Ltd.
We are a friendly, transparent, open and honest company - just ask for help if you need it.
Website by Say No! to the Office - Small Online Business Consulting

  • Create new account
  • Request new password