Barcelona has many indoor and outdoor markets that can provide locals and tourists alike with enjoyable shopping experiences. La Boqueria, located right at the Las Ramblas, is probably the most popular one specializing in the sale of fresh produce, including a wide variety of locally grown fruits and vegetables. Fresh meat and seafood is also available.
Today, La Boqueria is considered the cleanest and best planned market in all of Barcelona. It is well known and highly regarded for its impressive steel and coloured glass roof and for the noteworthy and memorable ornament (featuring a large medallion bearing the La Boqueria name) at its main entrance.
La Boqueria covers 2580 square meters of space, includes 300 kiosks (small, independent shops) and is the largest indoor market in all of Spain.
People who come into the market through its Las Ramblas main entrance are likely to be dazzled by the kiosks and small stalls with their elaborate and carefully planned displays of tempting fruits, vegetables, sweets and nuts. Artistically arranged so that they seem hard to resist, the combination of colours, scents and aromas make it difficult to pass some stands without making a purchase.
La Boqueria’s best feature may be its huge fresh seafood section. It is in this part of the market that shoppers can find an almost endless bounty of freshly caught fish and seafood – everything from tuna to salmon to cuttlefish to an amazing array of shellfish, including many types and sizes of shrimps, mussels, octopus, oysters, lobster and rare, but interesting species tasty enough to grace a dinner table. As is true wherever fresh seafood is sold, some of the catch may still be alive.
La Boqueria is, of course, best known for fresh fruits, vegetables, meats and seafood. However, other food items are also available. For example: many kiosks sell typical Catalan and Spanish foods, including cured cheeses, famous Iberian hams, goat cheeses, numerous varieties of olives and much more. As you might expect, it costs less to buy these items at the market than it would cost you to order them as part of a meal in a restaurant.
If you get tired of walking through the market and shopping, you can take a break at any one of a number of food stands inside the market that will prepare a snack for you. It can be a memorable experience to select a fresh food product and then watch as it is cooked to perfection – for your enjoyment – right before your eyes. You can enjoy freshly prepared tapas or something more substantial.
Some very useful tips: La Boqueria offers the promise of a wonderful experience. In fact, you’re likely to find foods you didn’t even know existed. Everything sold there is top quality, always fresh and sometimes somewhat expensive, certainly too costly for shopping daily. So, here’s some advice: always ask the vendor for the price before you buy. If you don’t do that, you may find that the item you’ve purchased is more costly than you thought and you have to pay for it because it’s already been packed for you.
It’s also a good idea to “shop around” before you buy. There are 300 stalls (kiosks) in the market, many of which sell the same food items. Some vendors may sell more cheaply than others. For example: shops in the front of the market at its main entrance tend to charge more than other shops because they are set up to attract the attention of tourists.
La Boqueria is a customer friendly market. You’ll find that many vendors will willingly – and happily – scale fish for you, chop cuts of meat for hamburger or provide other, similar services – if you ask.
Finally, if you’re interested in a bargain, go to La Boqueria late in the day, between 5:00 P.M. and 6:00 P.M. This is the time when vendors are getting ready to close their stalls for the day, are a little tired, anxious to go home and may be willing to empty their shelves for you by selling their remaining produce at discounted prices. Significant savings are often available. In fact, visitors to the market in summer can enjoy cool, refreshing granizados (fresh fruit cocktails served in plastic glasses) for as little as 1 Euro for two drinks. That’s a bargain!
Here’s a warning: La Boqueria is a popular market and is almost always very crowded. Large crowds draw pickpockets. Always keep your belongings close to you and if you happen to hear loud “whistling”, be even more observant. A pickpocket is probably somewhere close.
So once you are in Barcelona, make sure to visit La Boqueria fresh produce market and find delicacies that will tempt your palate.
Author Resource:-
Olga Simon lives and works in Barcelona for more than 5 years. As a writer, she has decided to share with her audience a view of the places and attractions she has visited in Barcelona. Read more of Olga's Guide to Barcelona on the website http://www.way2barcelona.com/travel-guide/