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Contribute Feedback What Claire Raynaud likes about La Maison du Pata Negra:
super restaurant type side Spanish but in the heart of the market of the Capuchins! super choice of pintxos, perfect in group of 4 or 6 to spend a very good time. Try foie gras, grilled duck brochettes and hams of course! View all feedback.
What Sigurd Mørch doesn't like about La Maison du Pata Negra:
Food is good and very well prepared. Ingredients seem of good quality and fresh. The place is very small and if you are lucky to get a table will be shared with many other people but at least you can sit somewhere. Tha really bad...point of thisplace is the treatment of the woman at the till. It was extremely bad ans she was really rude to us when we just wanted to pay and we waited for more than 10 minutes. View all feedback.
If you are looking for us on the Sundays we spend in Bordeaux, it’s probably an easy bet that you will find us at Maison de Pata Negra in the bustling Capucines Market. Yes, there are other tapas restaurants in town, but Pata Negra seems...somehow more special each time we come. As always, the counters are filled with platters and platters of freshly made tapas chorizo sausage with manchego cheese and olives, quail eggs with roasted peppers, white fish paste with a dollop of black caviar, serrano ham topped with manchego cheese and quince paste the list goes on and on. And there are always surprises that are delightful. This year we tried two new hot tapas crispy fried skirts and tubes of calamari served with wedges of lemon, as well as gambas large sauteed head 0n shrimp, delightfully spiced, their meat moist and very sweet. The system at this little place is deceptively simple. Your server seats you and asks for your drink order in our case a bottle of 100 percent garnacha rosé from Navarro. He puts your order ticket in a shot glass in the middle of the table. You are handed platters and urged to circle the counters loaded with trays to pick your own choices from the dozens of tapas. The offerings range from little glasses of gazpacho all the way to tapas prepared as a strawberry tart. Each tapa has a pic stuck in it, color coded to their costs. As you eat, you put your pics in the shot glass. When you are done your server will accompany you to the cashier, who will count your pics and total your bill. As I have said many times, Pata Negra is a wonderful place to go for people with different appetites. You simply eat as much or as little as you want. But let me not leave out what I consider the bests tapas of all two from southwestern France. With the first of these tapas both served warm a skewer with chunks of sauteed duck breast is laid down over the bread. The warm juices from the pieces of duck soak the bread turning each bite into a moist, savory morsel that leaves you licking your fingers. But better yet is my all time favorite. A slice of foie gras is seared and laid down over the bread, dripped with aged balsamic vinegar and finished with a small dollop of fig jam. This tapa is so tender, moist and savory that each bite virtually melts on your tongue. In years past, Madame Patricia and Monsieur Pascal, who own the restaurant and head the team preparing this cornucopia of treats, have tried several methods of equitably serving both the duck breast and foie gras tapas. This year, when servers emerged from the kitchen with platters of these tapas, they put them down on a counter near a silver bill. The bell was given a couple of rings to invite all those interested. Be vigilant; these tapas go fast. I was headed for the last of the foie gras tapas when another patron picked it up. “Desole”, sorry, he said with a shy smile. On the next platter, I was ready. So my tip for this year is to ask to be seated, if possible, at the community table near the bell. We were in the center, two French couples about our age sat on one side of us, a young French couple with two very charming kids sat on the other. Greetings were made in French, but then those who called up a little English got to practice. In no time, as each party ate away, filling its shot glass with pics, we had all become friends. Completely stuffed, we finished off our meal with glasses of the delicious and light Spanish apple liqueur, Manzana.
This place was buzzing when we got here Sunday morning. And you can see why. This place is amazing. Food is excellent. Service great. I couldn’t recommend highly enough. Husband and wife run. Awesome.
OMG so glad we got a recommendation to come here on our arrival into Bordeaux. We headed to the market and this place stood out, as I love tapas. Deciding was hard and then I saw on the menu Foie Gras. That got me...captivated, and they cooked it for me. Wow, so amazing, fresh and succulent along with perfectly cooked. Haven't had this since our last trip to France 3 years ago. I am still thinking about it. All the tapas was lovely and the service friendly.
Great food, ambiente and service. a wonderful taste of Spanish in bordeaux. they value that waiting and a good value for the quality of food. I recommend la maison du pata negra.
This is a cool spot on the market. it is a tapas joint, but they must taste the fois gras on the toast cooked. this is a super vibrating place, but they don't push it..so just chill and take it.