Sign up with email

or

Already a member? Log in.

Trouble logging in?

Not a member? Sign up!

Update: This spot is sadly no longer open.

Ikastola means school in Basque. Covering the wall on the right as you walk in is a huge green chalkboard, inviting all to have a hand in the décor. Offering well-priced food and drinks in a cozy, unpretentious atmosphere, this laid-back bar evokes public school right down to the wooden furniture.

The venue is owned by three local Basques who met in London and who have known each other since they were knee-high. Guillermo, David and Laura hail from Amurrio, a town in the province of Álava in the Basque Country, roughly halfway between Vitoria and Bilbao.

“There weren’t really any bars serving sandwiches,” explains Guillermo. “So we wanted to open a place in Gràcia that would fill that niche.” Thus, the concept for Ikastola was born: a neighborhood bar specializing in bocadillos (sandwiches). “The public had an appetite and we delivered.” We agree.

At the helm are artists and students moonlighting as salad and sandwich artists. On any given night, Miriam might till the register and tend the bar while Laura makes the best bocatas in Gràcia. On another night, the duo might swap roles. When business ebbs, Laura and Miriam casually read while Arcade Fire plays in the background.

The venue has become a Gràcia favorite, equally popular with the stroller set as with the party crowd. Mamás y papás arrive promptly at 7:00 to park their Maclarens and enjoy a drink before tucking their precious creatures into bed, while marchosos (partiers) congregate here in the later hours to refuel (and keep drinking) before marching on to their next bar.

Befitting an institution that prides itself on its sandwiches, bocadillos/bocatas are made to order with delicious, all-natural bread from long-running bakery Forn Boix in El Raval; sizes are generous and prices are reasonable, at €5 for a whole sandwich or €3.50 for a half. We particularly recommend #5, with jamón and melted Brie and #11, with pesto, jamón and Parmesan. Ikastola also offers fresh salads and a few items para picar (to nibble), such as the #3 salad with sliced tomato, feta, olive tapenade and fresh basil.

The lovely terrace in back, which recently doubled in size, is a perfect spot to while away a summer evening with friends while sharing a €10 bottle of Rioja. Open till 10:30 p.m., Ikastola’s patio is so idyllic it conjures up “recess” more than any “school” we’ve ever attended.

Editor’s note: This review was originally published on July 24, 2012.

  • July 4, 2014 El Xiringo (0)
    As a side benefit of his former life as a financial advisor, Xavier Maymo got to spend […] Posted in Barcelona
  • Ksovrelebis SakalmakheAugust 27, 2018 Ksovrelebis Sakalmakhe (0)
    We had no sooner finished unpacking our Tbilisi lives from the car for a Garikula […] Posted in Tbilisi
  • The Perfect Spring Day: PortoApril 22, 2024 The Perfect Spring Day: Porto (0)
    In the song that became almost an anthem of Porto, the famous songwriter Rui Veloso […] Posted in Porto
Hollis DuncanHollis Duncan

Published on July 17, 2013

Related stories

July 4, 2014

El Xiringo: Trading Places

Barcelona | By Paula Mourenza
BarcelonaAs a side benefit of his former life as a financial advisor, Xavier Maymo got to spend 20 years dining at some of Europe’s finest restaurants. When he would return home after his business trips, he would relax by recreating the dishes he had enjoyed at these restaurants in his own kitchen. His mother had…
trout kavtiskhevi
August 27, 2018

Ksovrelebis Sakalmakhe: House of Trout

Tbilisi | By Paul Rimple
TbilisiWe had no sooner finished unpacking our Tbilisi lives from the car for a Garikula summer, when our neighbor Zakhar stopped by to welcome us with a firm handshake and a bristly cheek kiss. He sat down and immediately told us about a restaurant he had recently visited in Kavtiskhevi, a neighboring village about 12…
April 22, 2024

The Perfect Spring Day: Porto

Porto | By Rafael Tonon
PortoIn the song that became almost an anthem of Porto, the famous songwriter Rui Veloso describes the city where he was born in phrases like “of this beautiful and darkening light” and “seeing you abandoned like that in that brownish timbre.” Certainly, Veloso, one of the best-known artists in Portuguese music, wasn’t thinking about Porto…
Select your currency
USD United States (US) dollar
EUR Euro