• Small plate tapas chorizo served at our famous bar in London

    SPICY CHORIZO AT RESTAURANT MAYFAIR

ONE OF THE BEST SPANISH RESTAURANTS IN LONDON

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Chasing Chorizo

When you hear the word chorizo, you probably think of that spicy, firm, red sausage you can buy from supermarkets – and you’d be right, that is chorizo. The thing is, though, that it’s only one type of chorizo.

Tapas Chorizo

In Spain alone there are hundreds of regional varieties of chorizo. They can be smoked or unsmoked, spicy or sweet and include herbs and other ingredients as well as the usual chopped pork and pork fat seasoned with garlic, smoked paprika and salt (in fact, the word chorizo probably derives from the Latin salsicia meaning salted). Spanish chorizo can be long or short and hard or soft. Chorizo de Pamplona, for instance, is a thicker sausage with more finely ground meat.

  • Spanish tapas chorizo in traditional terracotta dish

    CHORIZO IN MAYFAIR

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    Even the word Chorizo Changes from Region to Region:

    In Basque it is txorizo; in Catalan, xoriço and in Galician chourizo. And it doesn’t stop there.

    Spanish Chorizo in London

    Portuguese chouriço includes pork, fat, paprika, garlic and salt, although wine and hot peppers are used too. In some varieties, white pepper, piri-piri, cumin and cinnamon are used. And in Mexico, chorizo can be made with beef, venison, chicken or turkey. In the Philippines, chorizo can even be made with tuna, which is just weird.

    On the rewilded Knepp Estate south of Horsham in West Sussex, they make a delicately-flavoured chorizo from free-range longhorn cattle (and a little pork).

    • Spanish tapas chorizo calamaris in traditional terracotta dishes

      WHATEVER ELSE CHORIZO IS, IT’S NOT JUST SAUSAGE.

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      At El Pirata restaurant in Mayfair’s Down Street, customers have enjoyed various takes on his famous ingredient.

      But to get back to Spain, chorizo is, of course, a staple ingredient of tapas dishes. It’s served fried and simmered in red wine as chorizo al vino tinto, or with cider as chorizo al sidra, you can have it in tortilla with bread, or by itself alongside Spanish cheese, olives nuts and pickles.

      The Best Chorizo Served at El Pirata of Mayfair

      At El Pirata restaurant in Mayfair’s Down Street, customers have enjoyed various takes on his famous ingredient. It has been served as mentioned above, in red wine and cider, but also as part of the pinchos morunos con chorizo (marinated chicken skewers) and you can even have it with mussels in a superb mejillones con chorizo.

      Whatever else chorizo is, it’s not just sausage.

      • Tapas premium chorizo served in traditional terracotta dish
        El Pirata serving the best Spanish tapas, a top tapas bar and Mediterranean restaurants in London since 1994 superb group party room Mayfair.
        CONTACT

        5 – 6 Down Street,
        Mayfair, London W1J 7AQ

        Get Directions

        020 7491 3810
        dine@elpirata.co.uk

        GETTING HERE

        Hyde Park Corner Station (5-minute walk)
        Piccadilly Line

        Green Park Station (5-minute walk)
        Piccadilly, Jubilee, and Victoria Lines

        Victoria Station (15-minute walk)
        Victoria, District, and Circle Lines / National Rail

        OPENING HOURS

        Tuesday to Saturday
        12pm – 10:45pm

        We are open for indoor
        and outdoor dining.

        Closed bank holidays.

        El Pirata serving the best Spanish tapas, a top tapas bar and Mediterranean restaurants in London since 1994 superb group party room Mayfair.
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        El Pirata serving the best Spanish tapas, a top tapas bar and Mediterranean restaurants in London since 1994 superb group party room Mayfair.
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