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Mallorca's Restaurants: Expensive, Similar—and Now Lacking Courage

Mallorca's Restaurants: Expensive, Similar—and Now Lacking Courage

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A German top chef criticizes the island's gastronomy: prices are too high, too much sameness, and too little passion. What could help now.

Why Many Mallorca Restaurants Are Struggling Right Now

In Palma, between the Mercat de l’Olivar and Passeig Mallorca, you hear it more often: tables stay empty, guests save or prefer to cook themselves. A German top chef does not spare criticism: too many establishments have lost their own character and are now charging prices that no longer match the service on offer.

Price vs. Memory

Many tourists no longer pay automatically. If the dinner tastes like a bag of chips from the supermarket, then the anger is big — and the wallet stays closed. The innkeepers' arguments that purchase prices have risen are true; but they do not explain why the concept is missing at the same time and convenience products are finding their way into the kitchen.

Hotels Feed the Trend

On the Portixol beach or during breakfast in Santa Catalina, it's noticeable: hotels invest massively in buffets and everyday comfort. They offer vegan and gluten-free options, nicely presented, and keep guests in-house. For many restaurants that means fewer walk-ins and higher expectations that they often cannot meet.

The Locals as the Benchmark

The locals are now giving the establishments the red card. If regular customers no longer come regularly, something is wrong with pricing and quality. A place cannot live on ambience alone; the kitchen must convince — again and again, not just once.

What Is Missing: Personality

The chef's advice is simple and radical: move away from the mainstream. Whoever serves the same ceviche, the same tuna tartare, and the same sushi influence everywhere has lost its identity. Instead, there is a need for courage to put their own handwriting on the menu — a few dishes that can rightly be called ‘this is our thing’.

Concrete Steps, No Complaints

That means: less convenience, more product love (visit the market early in the morning, use sobrassada or local tomatoes correctly), and a menu that tells more clearly what the house stands for. Also: retain staff, invest in training, and offer guests experiences they can't get at the supermarket.

Does it hurt? Yes. Will it happen quickly? No. But the only way out of the slump is to push hard again — with chefs who still believe in sauces, and hosts who listen to the island's pulse. And who knows: perhaps guests will prefer dinner to the next furniture store.

Short and honest: Price increases are real. Boring dishes are too. Passion remains the best currency.

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