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Andorran Gastronomy: Mountain Flavours
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Gastronomy · 8 min read · Updated January 2026

Andorran Gastronomy: Mountain Flavours

From trinxat to escudella, Andorran cuisine has deep mountain roots. A complete guide to eating well in the Principality.

Andorran mountain cuisine

Andorran gastronomy is inseparable from its geography: mountains rising above 2,900 metres, valleys isolated for centuries and a tradition of self-sufficiency that has shaped an honest, ingredient-driven, seasonal cuisine. Influenced by Catalan and French cooking — its two neighbours with open borders — yet with an identity of its own, forged through long winters and high-altitude larders.

Unlike other Pyrenean gastronomies, Andorra's has managed to preserve its traditional recipes without falling into the trap of tourist-oriented folklore. Trinxat is still cooked at home, herbal liqueurs are still drunk after dinner and fresh ceps are still bought at the autumn market.

Good to know: Andorran cuisine shares many dishes with the Catalan Pyrenean kitchen — particularly with the Pallars Sobirà and Alt Urgell regions — but prepares them with ingredients native to its own territory: mountain potatoes, village-raised pork and mushrooms from the fir forests.

Iconic dishes to try

Trinxat de muntanya

The most representative dish of Andorran cuisine. A kind of winter-cabbage cake (col de la tardor) mixed with boiled potato, pressed flat in a pan with lard and invariably topped with a slice of cansalada — crispy cured pork belly. Simple, hearty and absolutely delicious on a snowy day. You will find it in virtually every traditional restaurant in Andorra.

Escudella

The quintessential Andorran stew. A rich broth of seasonal vegetables — carrot, turnip, leek, potato, cabbage — with pilota (a large meatball of minced meat and herbs), chickpeas and various cuts of pork and beef. In Andorra it is served in two courses: first the broth with noodles or soup pasta, then the meat and vegetables. It is a festive winter dish that at Christmas becomes escudella de galets.

El cuinat

A humble pulse stew with deep Andorran roots. Made with white beans, spinach, salt cod and a base of olive oil and garlic. It is the quintessential Lenten dish, though today it appears on menus year-round in the most traditional eating houses of the Principality.

Civet de jabalí

Big-game hunting is part of Andorra's gastronomic identity. Civet — a slow-cooked stew marinated in red wine for at least 24 hours — of wild boar, red deer or roe deer is served in autumn, when the hunting season is at its peak. A slow, aromatic and characterful preparation.

DishSeasonWhere to find itAverage price
Trinxat de muntanyaYear-roundBordas and traditional restaurants12–16 €
Escudella andorranaAutumn–winterAndorran cuisine restaurants15–22 €
El cuinatLent / year-roundEating houses, bordas10–14 €
Civet de jabalíAutumnGame restaurants18–26 €
Ceps a la planxaAutumnSeasonal restaurants14–20 €

The bordas: dining with history

Bordas are the stone-and-timber buildings of the Pyrenean valleys, originally used as high-mountain barns and stables. In Andorra, many have been converted into restaurants that retain the original architecture — slate roofs, dry-stone walls, enormous fireplaces — and serve mountain cuisine in a genuine setting.

Eating in an Andorran borda is an experience that goes beyond the plate: you dine surrounded by centuries-old wooden beams, with a wood fire burning a metre and a half away and the smell of the grill in the air. No screens, no background music. Just good produce prepared without artifice.

Top recommended bordas: La Borda Pairal 1630 (Andorra la Vella), Borda de l'Avi (Escaldes), Borda Raubert (Sant Julià de Lòria). Always book in advance: seating is limited and demand is high at weekends.

Mountain wines and liqueurs

Andorra has no wine denomination of its own — the terrain and climate are not suited to large-scale viticulture — but it does have a strong tradition of mountain liqueurs. Herbes del país (eau-de-vie macerated with alpine herbs such as gentian, mint and thyme) is the digestif of choice, and every borda has its own recipe.

As for wine, the best restaurant lists in Andorra offer an excellent selection of Spanish and French wines at very competitive prices, since there is no VAT on wine in Andorra. A Ribera del Duero gran reserva that costs 45 euros in Spain will be 28–32 euros here.

Where to eat in Andorra

Andorra's dining scene is diverse: traditional Andorran restaurants, international cuisine, Japanese, Italian and burger joints. But if you are looking for the gastronomic essence of the Principality, focus on these types of establishment:

The bordas already mentioned are the number-one choice for authentic mountain cooking. The eating houses (casas de comidas) in the smaller parishes — Ordino, Canillo, La Massana — offer affordable set lunches featuring local produce. Hotel restaurants at four- and five-star properties have elevated Andorran cuisine with contemporary technique while keeping a strong link to local ingredients.

Average price per person: At a borda or Andorran restaurant, expect to pay between 30 and 55 euros per person with drinks at dinner. Set lunches at eating houses run 14–20 euros including house wine.

Practical tips

Always book for weekends. Top restaurants in Andorra fill up on Friday and Saturday nights, especially during ski season (December to April). Book at least 48 hours in advance.

Mealtimes follow Spanish hours. Lunch is served between 13:00 and 15:30; dinner between 20:00 and 22:30. Arriving at 12:00 looking for lunch may leave you waiting.

Take advantage of duty-free drinks prices. With no VAT, alcohol in restaurants is notably cheaper than in Spain or France. It is well worth ordering a good bottle of wine: the price difference is real.

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