Walk the famous La Boqueria market with a chef, then cook a real Catalan paella and a couple of tapas by hand before sitting down to eat what you made with sangria in hand. It's three hours, minutes off La Rambla, and a low-stress way to take Barcelona home in your hands rather than your camera roll. The near-port safety net if a long mountain or vineyard run feels too tight against your all-aboard.
What to expect
You'll start at La Boqueria market with a chef guide introducing the vibrant produce and Catalan ingredients, then move to the kitchen to roll up your sleeves and cook a real paella and two tapas by hand under instruction. The rhythm flows from market sensory overload—color, noise, vendors—to focused, measured cooking where you learn technique in a small group. After three hours of chopping, stirring, and tasting, you sit down to eat what you've made with sangria in hand, transforming the morning's market finds into your own meal.
Direct wins, $50-115pp. The ship's tapas/food/wine tours run $128-195pp; this hands-on class is ~$79pp, a $50-115pp saving, and you actually cook rather than just follow a guide between bars. As a safety-net it is unbeatable for the clock: it's central, short, and books in fixed time slots, so you can pick the session that fits your remaining port hours with zero coach risk.
Good to know
Sessions run at 10:30, 13:00, 16:00, and 18:45; a 10:30 start gives you a full 6+ hours back on ship before evening all-aboard, while the 13:00 slot works if your port window is shorter. The venue is central, just minutes off La Rambla near Liceu metro—walkable from the pier or a quick taxi, with minimal coach risk. Book ahead through Cook & Taste to secure your time slot and session; the EUR 72 price includes all instruction, equipment, recipes, and beverages, so there are no surprise costs. Plan to return to the ship by your all-aboard time with a 30–45 minute buffer built in; the class ends by its scheduled time (e.g., 13:45 for the 10:30 session), leaving you a safe window to walk or cab back to the pier.