logo
World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record

World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record

In the heart of Spain's capital, Sobrino de Botín holds a coveted Guinness World Record as the world's oldest restaurant. Exactly 300 years after it opened its doors, Botín welcomes droves of daily visitors hungry for Castilian fare with a side of history.
But on the outskirts of Madrid, far from the souvenir shops and tourist sites, a rustic tavern named Casa Pedro makes a bold claim.
Its owners assert the establishment endured not just the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s and the Napoleonic invasion in the early 1800s, but even the War of Spanish Succession at the start of the 18th century – a lineage that would make Casa Pedro older than Botín and a strong contender for the title.
'It's really frustrating when you say, 'Yes, we've been around since 1702,' but … you can't prove it,' says manager and eighth-generation proprietor Irene Guiñales. 'If you look at the restaurant's logo, it says 'Casa Pedro, since 1702', so we said, 'Damn it, let's try to prove it.''
Irene Guiñales, owner and manager of Casa Pedro. Photo: AP
Guiñales, 51, remembers her grandfather swearing by Casa Pedro's age, but she was aware that decades-old hearsay from a proud old-timer would not be enough to prove it. Her family hired a historian and has so far turned up documents dating the restaurant's operations to at least 1750.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How tourists are crushing hotspots in Europe, world's most visited region
How tourists are crushing hotspots in Europe, world's most visited region

South China Morning Post

time6 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

How tourists are crushing hotspots in Europe, world's most visited region

Suitcases rattle against cobblestones. Selfie-snappers jostle for the same shot. Ice cream shops are everywhere. Europe has been called the world's museum, but its record numbers of visitors have also made it ground zero for concerns about overtourism. In 2024, 747 million international travellers visited the continent, far outnumbering any other region in the world, according to the United Nations' World Tourism Barometer. Southern and western Europe welcomed more than 70 per cent of them. As the growing tide of travellers strains housing, water and the most Instagrammable hotspots in the region, protests and measures to lessen the effects of overtourism have proliferated. Among the factors driving the record numbers are cheap flights, social media, the ease of travel planning using artificial intelligence , and what UN tourism officials call a strong economic outlook for many rich countries that send tourists despite some geopolitical and economic tensions. An activist holds a banner that reads 'stop cruises' as part of a march to demand measures against mass tourism in Mallorca, Spain, on June 15, 2025. Photo: EPA-EFE Citizens of countries such as the United States, Japan, China and the United Kingdom generate the most international trips, especially to popular destinations such as Barcelona in Spain and Venice in Italy.

World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record
World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record

South China Morning Post

time13-06-2025

  • South China Morning Post

World's oldest restaurant in Madrid faces challenge as nearby tavern eyes Guinness record

In the heart of Spain's capital, Sobrino de Botín holds a coveted Guinness World Record as the world's oldest restaurant. Exactly 300 years after it opened its doors, Botín welcomes droves of daily visitors hungry for Castilian fare with a side of history. But on the outskirts of Madrid, far from the souvenir shops and tourist sites, a rustic tavern named Casa Pedro makes a bold claim. Its owners assert the establishment endured not just the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s and the Napoleonic invasion in the early 1800s, but even the War of Spanish Succession at the start of the 18th century – a lineage that would make Casa Pedro older than Botín and a strong contender for the title. 'It's really frustrating when you say, 'Yes, we've been around since 1702,' but … you can't prove it,' says manager and eighth-generation proprietor Irene Guiñales. 'If you look at the restaurant's logo, it says 'Casa Pedro, since 1702', so we said, 'Damn it, let's try to prove it.'' Irene Guiñales, owner and manager of Casa Pedro. Photo: AP Guiñales, 51, remembers her grandfather swearing by Casa Pedro's age, but she was aware that decades-old hearsay from a proud old-timer would not be enough to prove it. Her family hired a historian and has so far turned up documents dating the restaurant's operations to at least 1750.

How the Lady of the manor renovated her Cotswold property to be a home and business
How the Lady of the manor renovated her Cotswold property to be a home and business

South China Morning Post

time03-06-2025

  • South China Morning Post

How the Lady of the manor renovated her Cotswold property to be a home and business

In 2018, after 15 years in Hong Kong, Briton Alice Fortescue heard her ancestral roots calling when a perfect storm drew her, her husband, Robert Derry, and their two Hong Kong-born children back to the family estate, Ebrington Manor. 'The idea had always been to build a business [in Hong Kong] and sell it,' says Fortescue, who inherited the honorific 'Lady' from her father, Charles Fortescue, 8th Earl Fortescue. In fact, the couple, who moved to Hong Kong in 2003, had built two successful businesses in the events sector, selling both to the same buyer who offered Derry a job in Britain, where Fortescue could also continue her work in the rugby sevens-related events she'd started in Hong Kong. The 80-hectare grounds include a lake fed by a natural spring, a boathouse, rose gardens and an orchard. Photo: Nick Church Photography 'Rob's father was not well,' says Fortescue. 'My father was getting on as well, and he asked if we'd be interested in taking on the house.' Her parents, living in the main house at the time, would downsize into the (now renovated) old farm buildings on the estate. Having grown up in Ebrington since the age of three months, London-born Fortescue knew every inch of the three-storey Cotswold manor set on 80 hectares (of the original 800) near Chipping Campden, in Gloucestershire, southwest Britain, complete with summer house, lake house, ponds, orchards and rose gardens. 'Maintaining a house like this is hugely expensive,' says Fortescue. 'We always knew we'd have to incorporate some sort of commercial venture to make it work.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store