Where to Start with Omar Allibhoy
Omar Allibhoy was born in Madrid in 1984 to a Spanish mother and an Indian Muslim father. He began cooking at five years old, and by his teens he knew food was his future. He trained professionally at some of Spain’s most demanding kitchens, including a formative stint under Ferran Adrià at El Bulli, widely considered the most influential restaurant of its generation. At 21, he moved to London, where he worked under Gordon Ramsay at Maze. Ramsay called him “the Antonio Banderas of cooking.” Allibhoy went on to become head chef at El Pirata de Tapas in Notting Hill before launching his own restaurant chain, Tapas Revolution, in 2010. His first cookbook, “Tapas Revolution” (2013), became the fastest-selling Spanish cookbook of its year. He followed it with “Spanish Made Simple” (2017), aimed at making everyday Spanish meals accessible to home cooks. His YouTube channel has become a major resource for Spanish cooking enthusiasts, with his paella tutorial alone reaching nearly six million views. Allibhoy’s mission has always been the same: to show people that Spanish food is not complicated, just honest.
Start here
Tapas Revolution
Omar Allibhoy · 224 pages · 2013 · Easy
Themes: spanish tapas, home cooking, beginner-friendly, classic recipes
The breakthrough book on approachable Spanish tapas cooking, written by Madrid-born chef Omar Allibhoy. Featuring 120 recipes that cover everything from tortilla de patatas and patatas bravas to croquetas, grilled meats, and desserts, this book makes authentic Spanish cooking feel achievable for any home cook with a well-stocked pantry.
Why Start Here
Allibhoy trained under Ferran Adrià at the legendary El Bulli and later worked with Gordon Ramsay at Maze in London, but his first cookbook is the opposite of haute cuisine. He writes for people who want to eat well on a Tuesday night, not impress a Michelin inspector. His tortilla recipe strips the dish down to its essentials and walks you through every step with the kind of precision that builds confidence. His patatas bravas comes with a sauce recipe that tastes like it belongs in a Barcelona tapas bar, not a home kitchen.
The book is organized into clear sections covering vegetables, salads, rice dishes, meat, fish, cakes, and desserts. Each recipe uses everyday storecupboard ingredients and straightforward techniques. There is no molecular gastronomy here, no foam or spherification. Just solid, honest Spanish food explained by someone who grew up eating it and spent his career learning how to teach it to others.
What makes this book particularly effective as a starting point is Allibhoy’s instinct for simplicity. He knows which steps matter and which ones you can skip. He tells you when a shortcut works and when it does not. The result is a collection of recipes that actually get cooked, not just admired.
What to Expect
A 224-page cookbook that prioritizes accessibility without sacrificing authenticity. The recipes assume basic kitchen skills but no prior experience with Spanish cooking. Most dishes can be prepared in under an hour, and ingredient lists rarely extend beyond what you would find at a standard supermarket, supplemented by a few Spanish staples like smoked paprika, good olive oil, and chorizo. The tone is encouraging and unpretentious.