# 11 Best Canelons in Barcelona

> The 11 best canelons in Barcelona, ranked on history and canelons reputation. From Gaig's truffle-bechamel benchmark to 1786 Can Culleretes and modern Catalan kitchens. The Sant Esteve classic, year-round.

- **Canonical URL:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-canelons
- **City:** Barcelona, Spain
- **Published:** 2026-06-20
- **Author:** Justin Mota, Guidavera founder
- **Reading time:** 12 min

## Introduction

This is the canelons list we send to friends, and it's a very Catalan obsession. Canelons (canelones in Spanish) are the pasta tubes stuffed with rostit, slow-roasted meat leftovers usually built from veal, pork and chicken, gratinated under a blanket of bechamel. They're the dish Catalan families eat on Sant Esteve, the 26th of December, made from the meat roasted the day before. But the best versions are on tables all year. Our top pick, Gaig, is the canelon every other kitchen in the city quietly measures itself against: a roasted-meat filling under truffle cream. From there the list runs from Can Culleretes (1786, the oldest restaurant in Catalonia) through 1830s institutions to modern Catalan kitchens doing lamb, oxtail and roast-pullet versions. Prices run from about 9.50 euros for a plate at the classic houses up to 26 euros for the truffle versions.

## Key picks at a glance

- **Best overall** — [Gaig Barcelona](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/gaig-barcelona): The truffle-bechamel-rostit canelon that the rest of the city measures against, from the Gaig family kitchen in les Corts.
- **Best historic** — [Can Culleretes](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-culleretes): Canelons 'els de sempre' at the oldest restaurant in Catalonia, open since 1786.
- **Best guide-level** — [Petit Comitè Gaig](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/petit-comite-gaig): The Gaig canelon with black truffle cream in a Repsol Sol dining room.
- **Best modern** — [La Gormanda](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/la-gormanda): Lamb canelon with ras el hanout and Elvira Garcia fresh cheese, a modern-Catalan rethink of the classic.

## A guide to Canelons in Barcelona

### What are canelons, and how are they different from Italian cannelloni?

Canelons are the Catalan version of stuffed pasta tubes, and the difference is all in the filling. The Catalan classic is built on rostit: slow-roasted or braised meat, traditionally a mix of veal, pork and chicken, often enriched with foie and frequently finished with a truffle bechamel. Italian cannelloni usually go the ricotta-and-spinach route with a tomato base. That's why an Italian trattoria's cannelloni and a Catalan casa de menjars' canelons are two genuinely different dishes, even though the shape is the same. This list is about the Catalan one. Where a Catalan kitchen also does a vegetable or seafood version, we note it.

### Why are canelons a Christmas dish in Barcelona?

Canelons are tied to the Christmas cycle. Catalan families roast a big cut of meat on Christmas Day, then mince the leftovers, bind them with their reduced jus and bechamel, and turn them into canelons for Sant Esteve, the feast day on the 26th of December. It's leftovers cooking elevated into one of the region's most beloved dishes. Every December the local food press runs a 'best canelons' guide, which is really a Sant Esteve buying-and-eating guide. The dish has become so central that plenty of restaurants keep it on the carte all year, and the takeaway shops that specialise in nothing else do their biggest business in the last week of December.

### What's a great canelon actually made of?

Start with the pasta: fresh sheets, rolled thin, beat the dried tube every time. The filling should taste like real roasted meat with proper depth, not a bland paste. The bechamel matters as much as the meat, smooth and well seasoned, and at the top houses it's lifted with black truffle. The gratin is the finish: a browned, bubbling top under the grill that gives you that contrast between crisp edges and soft centre. The best kitchens here run the spectrum, from three-meat rostit classics to single-meat versions built on lamb, oxtail, duck or roast chicken.

> "Catalans roast the meat on Christmas Day, then mince the leftovers into canelons for Sant Esteve. That's the whole story on a plate."

## How we built this list

We built this list the slow way, and a canelons list needs a different lens than a general restaurant guide. We started from the dish: which Barcelona kitchens are actually singled out for their canelons, by the people and publications who take the dish seriously, and which ones locals eat for Sant Esteve year after year. Then we weighted it the way a dish guide should be weighted, historic importance and canelons-specific reputation first, general venue prestige second. We cross-checked our own eating against chefs, neighbours and the friends we trust most with food. Takeaway-only canelons shops, however good, sit outside a sit-down list. Italian-style cannelloni belong to a different guide. No restaurant pays for placement, and Guidavera has no affiliate or sponsorship relationships with any venue here. If a place made this list, it earned it on the plate.

## The 11 best Canelons Restaurants, compared

| # | Restaurant | Neighbourhood | Price | Distinction | Signature dish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | [Gaig Barcelona](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/gaig-barcelona) | les Corts | €€€ | — | Canelons Gaig amb crema de tofona (truffle cream) |
| 2 | [Can Culleretes](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-culleretes) | el Barri Gòtic | €€ | — | Canelons 'els de sempre' (traditional house cannelloni) |
| 3 | [7 Portes](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/7-portes) | Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera | €€ | — | Festa Major cannelloni with truffle |
| 4 | [Ca l'Estevet](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ca-lestevet) | el Raval | €€ | — | Homemade cannelloni |
| 5 | [Petit Comitè Gaig](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/petit-comite-gaig) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | Gaig cannelloni with black truffle cream |
| 6 | [Suculent](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/suculent) | el Raval | €€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | — |
| 7 | [Ca l'Isidre](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ca-l-isidre) | el Raval | €€€ | Repsol 1 Sol | Traditional Catalan meat cannelloni |
| 8 | [Semproniana](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/semproniana) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€ | Repsol Solete | Mini black sausage cannelloni |
| 9 | [La Gormanda](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/la-gormanda) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€ | Repsol Recomendado | Lamb cannelloni with ras el hanout and Elvira Garcia fresh cheese |
| 10 | [Cafè de l'Acadèmia](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/cafe-de-lacademia) | Barri Gòtic | €€ | — | Cannelloni with braised pork cheeks, bechamel and Reixago cheese |
| 11 | [Rooster & Bubbles](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/rooster-and-bubbles) | El Born | € | — | Rotisserie chicken cannelloni (Canelon de pollo a l'ast) |

## The 11 best Canelons Restaurants in Barcelona

### 1. Gaig Barcelona

*The most-cited canelons in Barcelona*

- **Neighbourhood:** les Corts
- **Address:** Carrer de la Nau Santa Maria, 5, Les Corts, 08017 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €€€
- **Website:** https://bcn.restaurantgaig.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/gaig-barcelona

If there's one canelon every other kitchen in Barcelona quietly measures itself against, it's the one from the Gaig family. The canelons Gaig with truffle cream has been on the family's tables for generations, and it's the dish most local lists put at the top: a roasted-meat filling under a truffle cream that turns a comfort dish into something you go quiet over. The setting is les Corts, where Gaig Barcelona runs as the family's daytime Catalan dining room, with Carles Gaig (fourth generation) at the helm. The carte is seasonal Catalan built around heritage recipes, but the canelon is the reason this one sits at number one. At 24 euros it's an honest price for the benchmark version of a dish the whole city has an opinion on.

**Order:**
- Canelons Gaig amb crema de tofona (truffle cream) (€24.00)

### 2. Can Culleretes

*Canelons 'els de sempre' at the oldest restaurant in Catalonia*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Barri Gòtic
- **Address:** Carrer d'en Quintana, 5, Ciutat Vella, 08002 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://culleretes.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-culleretes

Can Culleretes opened in 1786, which makes it the oldest restaurant in Catalonia, and the canelons 'els de sempre' (the same ones as always) are exactly what the name promises: the traditional house version, unchanged, the kind of thing Barcelona families have eaten here for generations. There's a spinach-and-cod-brandade version too if you want something lighter. The dining rooms are all tile and old photographs, and the cooking keeps to the cuina catalana canon, escudella, fricando, bacalla a la llauna, alongside the canelons. At 9.50 euros a plate, it's one of the best-value classics on this list, and the history is the kind you can't fake. They even vacuum-pack the canelons to take away through their online shop, which is a very Sant Esteve thing to do.

**Order:**
- Canelons 'els de sempre' (traditional house cannelloni) (9.50€)
- Spinach cannelloni with cod brandade (9.50€)

### 3. 7 Portes

*Truffled Festa Major canelons since 1836*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
- **Address:** Passeig d'Isabel II, 14, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://7portes.com/en
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/7-portes

7 Portes has been serving since 1836, one of the oldest restaurants in the city, and while it's best known for paella, the truffled cannelloni is one of its biggest hits. The Festa Major cannelloni with truffle is the one to order, a celebration-day version of the dish dressed up with truffle, alongside the standard 7 Portes cannelloni and a vegetable version. The 19th-century dining rooms, marble and mirrors, still make a meal here feel like an occasion, and the kitchen runs non-stop through the afternoon, so you can eat canelons at off-hours when half the city is still at work. It's not the most experimental canelon in town, but it's a genuine piece of Barcelona dining history.

**Order:**
- Festa Major cannelloni with truffle (€19)
- 7 Portes cannelloni (€17.50)

### 4. Ca l'Estevet

*Raval casa de menjars with homemade canelons*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Raval
- **Address:** Carrer de Valldonzella, 46, 08001 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://www.restaurantestevet.com/
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ca-lestevet

Ca l'Estevet is a long-standing Raval institution, and the homemade cannelloni is one leg of a very traditional Catalan menu. This is old-school casa de menjars cooking, the kind of place where the canelons share the carte with the long-cooked classics that define Catalan home food. The room is unfussy and the prices are fair, with the homemade canelons at 16 euros. Come for the canelons, but the whole register here is exactly the comforting, slow-cooked Catalan cooking the dish belongs to. A genuine neighbourhood survivor in a part of town that's changed around it.

**Order:**
- Homemade cannelloni (€16)

### 5. Petit Comitè Gaig

*The Gaig canelon in a Repsol Sol dining room*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Passatge de la Concepció, 13, 08008 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://petitcomite.cat
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/petit-comite-gaig

Petit Comite Gaig is where the Gaig canelon gets the refined dining-room treatment. It holds a Repsol Sol, with Carles Gaig as culinary director, and the Gaig cannelloni with black truffle cream is the house signature, the same family formula that anchors the top of this list, plated with more polish. The cooking is traditional Catalan with a haute-cuisine approach, and the canelon at 26 euros is the dish to build a meal around. If you want the Gaig canelons in a more formal setting in the Eixample, this is it. The canelon is the house signature here, and it's an easy first canelon for anyone who wants to understand why Catalans get so worked up about the dish.

**Order:**
- Gaig cannelloni with black truffle cream (€26)

### 6. Suculent

*Modern Catalan in the Raval, a critics' canelon*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Raval
- **Address:** Rambla del Raval, 45, 08001 Barcelona (el Raval)
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.suculent.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/suculent

Suculent is Toni Romero's modern-Catalan house in the Raval, holding a Repsol Sol, and it's one of the kitchens local critics single out for its canelon. Romero's whole 'sucar lent' (dip slowly) philosophy is about deeply worked stocks and bold Mediterranean sharing plates, which is exactly the sensibility that makes a great canelon, a dish that lives or dies on the depth of its filling. The carte is built around casual sharing plates with serious technique behind them, from the duck croquette that's become a Barcelona reference to bone marrow with caviar. It's the entry point to the modern wave of Catalan kitchens that have taken the canelon seriously rather than treating it as a museum piece.

### 7. Ca l'Isidre

*Truffle-and-mushroom canelons at a Repsol Sol Catalan classic*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Raval
- **Address:** Carrer de les Flors, 12, 08001 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.calisidre.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ca-l-isidre

Ca l'Isidre has been a Raval institution since 1970, founded by Isidre Girones and now holding a Repsol Sol with Jordi Juan Santigosa in the kitchen and Nuria Girones running the house. The traditional Catalan meat cannelloni is a Sant Esteve reference, and the kitchen also does a version with shaved black truffle and wild mushrooms in a brown sauce. This is classic Catalan cooking rooted in excellent market produce and a deep respect for ingredients, the kind of place that's fed Barcelona's food world for decades. At 15 euros the meat canelon is a fair price for canelons cooked by one of the city's most respected Catalan kitchens.

**Order:**
- Traditional Catalan meat cannelloni (€15)

### 8. Semproniana

*Ada Parellada's black-sausage canelons*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Rosselló, 148, 08036 Barcelona (L'Eixample Esquerre)
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://www.semproniana.net
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/semproniana

Semproniana is Ada Parellada's long-running Eixample restaurant, with a Repsol Solete, and her mini black-sausage cannelloni is a house staple. It's a playful, modern-Catalan take, the canelon stuffed with black butifarra (the Catalan blood sausage), and it comes in three sizes so you can order it as a small bite or a proper plate. Parellada is one of the most distinctive voices in Catalan cooking, and the whole menu has that mix of tradition and invention. The mini canelon shows up in her tasting selections too, which tells you how central it is to the kitchen. A good pick if you want a canelon that's recognisably Catalan but doesn't just replay the rostit classic.

**Order:**
- Mini black sausage cannelloni (S €6.50 / M €9.75 / XL €14.75)

### 9. La Gormanda

*Lamb-and-ras-el-hanout canelon, modern Catalan*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer d'Aribau, 160, 08036 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Recomendado
- **Website:** https://lagormanda.com/es
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/la-gormanda

La Gormanda is Carlota Claver's modern-Catalan kitchen in the Eixample, Repsol Recomendado, and its canelon is one of the more inventive on this list: lamb with ras el hanout and Elvira Garcia fresh cheese. That North African spice blend with lamb is a long way from the standard veal-and-pork rostit, and it's exactly the kind of confident rethink that's keeping the dish alive in younger kitchens. At 22.50 euros it sits at the higher end for a canelon, but it's a genuinely different version you won't get at the classic houses. Come here when you've eaten the traditional canelons around town and want to see where a modern Catalan chef takes the form.

**Order:**
- Lamb cannelloni with ras el hanout and Elvira Garcia fresh cheese (€22.50)

### 10. Cafè de l'Acadèmia

*Braised pork-cheek canelons in the Gotic*

- **Neighbourhood:** Barri Gòtic
- **Address:** Carrer dels Lledó, 1, 08002 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://gruposantelmo.com/en/restaurant/el-cafe-de-lacademia/
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/cafe-de-lacademia

Cafe de l'Academia is a Gotic favourite, and its canelon is a standout: stuffed with braised pork cheeks, under bechamel, finished with Reixago cheese. That galta (cheek) filling is a slow-cooked, deeply savoury take on the dish, and it sits on a carte of solid Catalan home cooking in one of the prettiest corners of the old city. At 16.50 euros it's fairly priced for the quality, and the setting, a small dining room on a quiet Gotic square, is the kind of place locals guard. If you're after a canelon with a bit more richness than the standard rostit, the pork-cheek version is the one.

**Order:**
- Cannelloni with braised pork cheeks, bechamel and Reixago cheese (16,50€)

### 11. Rooster & Bubbles

*Roast-pullet canelon from a Born rotisserie*

- **Neighbourhood:** El Born
- **Address:** Pla de Palau, 12, Ciutat Vella, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://roosterandbubbles.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/rooster-and-bubbles

Rooster & Bubbles is the new-wave entry, a Born rotisserie where the canelon is built on rotisserie chicken, canelon de pollo a l'ast, under bechamel and oven-gratinated. It's the modern, casual end of the canelons spectrum: roast-chicken filling, done with care, at an easy 9.50 euros a plate. The whole concept is rooted in pollo a l'ast, Barcelona's beloved spit-roast chicken, which makes the canelon a natural signature rather than a menu afterthought. A good pick if you want a contemporary, no-fuss version of the dish without the truffle-and-occasion weight of the guide-level kitchens.

**Order:**
- Rotisserie chicken cannelloni (Canelon de pollo a l'ast) (€9.50)

## Honourable mentions

- **[El Mercader de l'Eixample](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/el-mercader-de-l-eixample)** (la Dreta de l'Eixample) — Canelons a la Barcelonina, the Barcelona-style roast-meat version, at an Eixample kitchen doing organic, market-driven Catalan classics. €15.
- **[Casa Ángela](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/casa-angela)** (La Sagrada Família) — A canelon of beef, lamb and foie-gras near the Sagrada Familia. €15.
- **[Vivanda](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/vivanda)** (Sarrià) — Jordi Vila's Sarria house does a classic three-meat canelon (70% chicken, 20% pork, 10% veal), oven-gratinated. €18.
- **[Bardeni-Caldeni](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/bardeni-caldeni)** (la Sagrada Família) — The Bib Gourmand meat bar near the Sagrada Familia runs an oxtail canelon, plus a truffle-and-bechamel version. €20.
- **[Cal Boter](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/cal-boter)** (la Vila de Gràcia) — A Gracia family Catalan house with a Repsol Solete, the kind of neighbourhood casa de menjars where canelons belong.

## The Canelons scene in Barcelona

Canelons sit at the centre of Catalan home cooking, which means the best ones in Barcelona come from two kinds of kitchen: the historic cases de menjars that have served them for over a century, and the modern Catalan restaurants that have made canelons a signature. The dish peaks around Sant Esteve on the 26th of December, when the whole city eats it and the specialist takeaway shops run flat out, but the restaurants on this list serve it year-round. Expect to pay roughly 9.50 to 16 euros a plate at the traditional houses and up to 26 euros for the truffle versions at the guide-level kitchens.

## Know before you go

### 1. Sant Esteve is canelons day

The 26th of December is when the whole city eats canelons. If you want them at a restaurant on that day, book well ahead, and if you want to take them home, the specialist shops are slammed in the days before, so order early. The rest of the year it's far easier.

### 2. Catalan canelons, not Italian cannelloni

If you want the real Catalan dish, look for canelons built on rostit (roast meat) or a named meat like lamb, oxtail or roast chicken, usually under bechamel. Ricotta-and-spinach cannelloni in a tomato sauce is the Italian dish, which is a different thing.

### 3. Prices are honest at the classic houses

A plate of canelons runs about 9.50 euros at Can Culleretes and Rooster & Bubbles, around 15 to 16 euros at Ca l'Isidre, El Mercader, Casa Angela and Cafe de l'Academia, and up to 26 euros for the Gaig truffle version at Petit Comite Gaig. Cheaper than most people expect for the dish's reputation.

### 4. The truffle versions are worth it

If you're going to splurge on canelons, do it where the bechamel is finished with black truffle. Gaig, Petit Comite Gaig, Ca l'Isidre and Bardeni-Caldeni all run truffle versions, and the truffle-and-roasted-meat combination is what makes the dish memorable rather than just comforting.

## Glossary

- **Canelons** — The Catalan name for pasta tubes stuffed with a filling, traditionally rostit (slow-roasted meat), and gratinated under bechamel. Canelones is the Spanish spelling. The canonical Catalan filling is a mix of veal, pork and chicken.
- **Rostit** — Slow-roasted or braised meat, the traditional canelons filling. Classically built from veal, pork and chicken roasted together, minced and bound with their own reduced jus, sometimes enriched with foie.
- **Sant Esteve** — Saint Stephen's Day, the 26th of December, the day after Christmas. In Catalonia it's the traditional day to eat canelons, made from the meat roasted on Christmas Day.
- **Bechamel** — The white sauce, made from butter, flour and milk, that blankets canelons before they're gratinated. At the top kitchens it's finished with black truffle.
- **Casa de menjars** — A traditional Catalan home-cooking restaurant, the kind of place where canelons, escudella and fricando have been on the menu for generations.

## Frequently asked questions

### What's the best canelons restaurant in Barcelona?

Gaig is the most-cited canelons in Barcelona. The canelons Gaig with truffle cream, made by the Gaig family in les Corts, is the version most local lists rank first and the benchmark other kitchens measure against. A plate is 24 euros.

### What are canelons made of?

Catalan canelons are pasta tubes stuffed with rostit, slow-roasted meat traditionally built from veal, pork and chicken, then gratinated under bechamel. Top kitchens finish the bechamel with black truffle and sometimes add foie to the filling.

### What's the difference between canelons and Italian cannelloni?

Canelons are the Catalan version, filled with rostit (roast meat) under bechamel. Italian cannelloni are usually ricotta and spinach in a tomato base. Same pasta shape, genuinely different dishes. This guide is about the Catalan one.

### Why do Catalans eat canelons on Sant Esteve?

Sant Esteve is the 26th of December, the day after Christmas. Catalan families roast meat on Christmas Day, then mince the leftovers into canelons for the 26th. It's leftovers cooking turned into one of the region's most loved dishes.

### How much do canelons cost in Barcelona?

Canelons run about 9.50 euros a plate at classic houses like Can Culleretes and Rooster & Bubbles, around 15 to 16 euros at Ca l'Isidre, El Mercader, Casa Angela and Cafe de l'Academia, and up to 26 euros for the Gaig truffle version at Petit Comite Gaig.

### Where can I find traditional canelons in Barcelona?

The most traditional canelons come from the historic houses: Can Culleretes (1786) serves canelons 'els de sempre', Ca l'Estevet is a long-standing Raval house with homemade canelons, and 7 Portes has run its truffled Festa Major version since 1836.

### Which Barcelona restaurants do truffle canelons?

For truffle canelons, Gaig and Petit Comite Gaig both do the Gaig version with truffle cream, Ca l'Isidre does a version with shaved black truffle and wild mushrooms, and 7 Portes runs a truffled Festa Major cannelloni.

### Where can I find modern or creative canelons in Barcelona?

For modern canelons, La Gormanda does a lamb and ras el hanout version, Semproniana does a black-sausage canelon, Bardeni-Caldeni runs an oxtail version, and Rooster & Bubbles does a rotisserie-chicken canelon.

### Can I get canelons to take away for Sant Esteve in Barcelona?

Yes. Can Culleretes sells vacuum-packed canelons through its 'Culleretes A Casa' online shop, and Barcelona has specialist takeaway canelons shops that do their biggest business in the days before Sant Esteve on the 26th of December.

### Where can I find the oldest canelons in Barcelona?

Can Culleretes, open since 1786, is the oldest restaurant in Catalonia and serves its canelons 'els de sempre'. 7 Portes (1836) is the other historic canelons house on this list, alongside the long-standing Raval house Ca l'Estevet.

## About the author

**Justin Mota** — Guidavera founder

Justin Mota is the founder of Guidavera. He has lived in Spain for over 10 years and runs a native AI agency alongside building this platform. Food has always been the way Justin connects with friends, and Guidavera started as the list he kept sending to everyone visiting Barcelona. He built it for himself and his friends first, and now hopes it can transform the way people discover great food experiences everywhere.

More: https://guidavera.com/about

---

This guide is the canonical machine-readable version of https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-canelons. Every claim is verifiable against the linked restaurant profiles. Source: Guidavera (https://guidavera.com).
