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World's oldest restaurant faces a challenge from another tavern

World's oldest restaurant faces a challenge from another tavern

Independent2 days ago

Sobrino de Botín has proudly held the coveted Guinness World Record as the world's oldest restaurant since 1987.
Exactly three hundred years after it opened its doors in the heart of Spain 's capital, Botín welcomes droves of daily visitors hungry for Castilian fare with a side of history.
But away from the well-trodden tourist paths, a rustic tavern named Casa Pedro makes a bold claim.
Its owners claim the establishment on the outskirts of Madrid 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,' said 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.''
Guiñales, 51, remembers her grandfather swearing by Casa Pedro's age, but she was aware that decades-old hearsay from a proud old-timer wouldn't 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.
That puts them within striking distance of Botín's record.
Clients and rivals
Both taverns are family-owned. Both offer Castilian classics like stewed tripe and roast suckling pig. They are decorated with charming Spanish tiles, feature ceilings with exposed wooden beams and underground wine cellars. And both enjoy a rich, star-studded history.
Botín's celebrated past includes a roster of literary patrons like Truman Capote, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Graham Greene. In his book 'The Sun Also Rises,' Ernest Hemingway described it as 'one of the best restaurants in the world." While Casa Pedro may not have boasted the same artistic pedigree, it boasts its own VIPs. Its walls are adorned with decades-old photographs of former Spanish King Juan Carlos I dining in one of its many rooms. The current Spanish monarch, King Felipe VI, dines there, too, albeit more inconspicuously than his father.
But the similarities between the two hotspots end there.
Casa Pedro was once a stop on the only road heading north from the Spanish capital toward France. Its clientele is largely local regulars, like David González and Mayte Villena, who for years have spent every Friday lunching at the tavern.
'It wouldn't change a thing for us,' Villena said about the restaurant someday securing the Guinness title.
Botín, on the other hand, is a stone's throw from Madrid 's famed Plaza Mayor, where any day of the week, tour guides are herding groups around town — and often straight through the restaurant's front door.
Antonio González, a third-generation proprietor of Botín, concedes that the Guinness accolade awarded in 1987 has helped business, but said the restaurant had enough history to draw visitors even before.
'It has a certain magic,' he said.
Pretenders to the crown
The question then becomes: How can either restaurant definitively claim the title? Guinness provides its specific guidelines for the superlative only to applicants, according to spokesperson Kylie Galloway, noting that it entails 'substantial evidence and documentation of the restaurant's operation over the years."
González said that Guinness required Botín to show that it has continuously operated in the same location with the same name.
The only time the restaurant closed was during the COVID-19 pandemic, as did Casa Pedro.
That criteria would mean that restaurants that are even older — Paris ' Le Procope, which says it was founded in 1686, or Beijing's Bianyifang, founded in 1416, or the 1673-established White Horse Tavern in Newport, Rhode Island — aren't eligible for the designation.
La Campana, in Rome's historic centre, claims over 500 years of operation, citing documents on its menu and in a self-published history. Its owners say they have compiled the requisite paperwork and plan to submit it to Guinness.
A dream for Casa Pedro
Guiñales and her husband couldn't consult archives from the former town of Fuencarral, now a Madrid neighbourhood. Those papers went up in flames during the Spanish Civil War. Instead, they delved into Spanish national archives, where they found land registries of the area from the First Marquess of Ensenada (1743-1754) that showed the existence of a tavern, wine cellar and inn in the small town as of 1750.
In their spare time, the couple continues to hunt for records proving that Casa Pedro indeed dates back to 1702, as is proclaimed on its walls, takeout bags and sugar packets.
But even if they dig up the final documents and wrest the Guinness honour from Botín, Guiñales concedes that her restaurant's quiet location makes it unlikely to draw Botín's clientele in central Madrid.
'To think that we could reach that public would be incredible,' Guiñales said. 'It's a dream, but it's a dream.'

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Silver-tongued Trent Alexander-Arnold finds just the right words on his Real Madrid debut, writes IAN HERBERT
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‘Call me Trent': Alexander-Arnold arrives at Madrid with dreams of Alonso and glory
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Well, that was unexpected. Trent Alexander-Arnold took out the earpiece, made his way to the stage at Real Madrid's training ground and said: 'Buenas tardes, a todos': Good afternoon, everyone. So far, so standard. But then he delivered the next line in Spanish too, then the one after that, and the one after that. He kept going until he got to the end of his speech, when he delivered the one line everyone invariably does on the day they are presented here: 'Hala Madrid!' It wasn't long – one minute and one second, in all – but it was long enough to win them over already. 'I think it surprised a lot of people,' Alexander-Arnold said when he had made his way over to the press room. 'For me it was important to do that, to have a good start.' He wasn't wrong: there had been a kind of double-take as he went on, an increasing admiration, and this was a very good start: delivered smoothly, with no cue cards, only the tiniest pause at one point and in genuinely good Spanish, accent and all. 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'There's a contrast of emotions, two different ends of the scale,' Alexander-Arnold said. 'Experiencing everything I did [at Liverpool], what I had done. It was an honour, it was always going to be emotional for me. I am happy with the send-off, the way the club treated me, the way the fans were. That was outstanding, I couldn't say a bad word. 'I was speaking to players, the manager, the owners, and they were all incredible. I had a lot of support, a huge amount of help, and an amazing conversation with the owners that lasted a couple of days. They thanked me for everything I gave, wished me well on my future journey and said they would have me back at the club at any point. 'To have those words was amazing. And to be here now facing a new challenge is equally exciting. Not many players get to experience this. I am very lucky and very proud. To play for Real Madrid is a fantastic honour, an achievement in itself.' 'Ten or 11 years ago, this is not something you dream of because it is just out of reach: there's only a select handful that get a chance to be part of this,' Alexander-Arnold added, but it had become real. 'It was not a question of where to go; it was whether or not to go,' he said. 'I knew that if I was ever to leave Liverpool, it would only be to Real Madrid. And it gets to the point where you have to make a decision whether to go or stay. It wasn't an easy decision. I had been there so long. But in my mind it is the right one. 'I am fortunate to have played for the biggest club in England and now the biggest in Spain, and both have massive histories. I am much happier playing with these players than against them. I am sure we can strike up a good connection and get the chemistry going. Hopefully I can give them many, many assists.' 'I feel mature, ready, experienced enough to go and be successful somewhere else. It's an opportunity you have to think about seriously and I did.' Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion Asked if his attacking qualities might be more appreciated in a Spanish football culture, rather than in England where focus perhaps falls on defensive flaws, Alexander-Arnold replied: 'That's not something I have really thought about, to be honest. I do what I am told; I did that with two managers at Liverpool. If people don't appreciate the way I play, it is what it is. As long as the manager and the players appreciate me then: whatever.' There will be two familiar faces waiting for him in Madrid: his close friend Jude Bellingham and the former Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso, who has just taken over as coach. Alexander-Arnold, though, denied that agent Bellingham had played a key role in bringing him to the Bernabéu. 'It wasn't exactly what people thought it was,' he said. 'We spoke. We spoke a lot about Liverpool and Madrid. That's just the kind of conversations we have as players and friends. In the national team, [Bellingham] was the only one who knew what it was like to be at Real Madrid so everyone was asking questions. A lot of people think he played a huge part in me coming here but the club speaks for itself.' 'I grew up a Liverpool fan watching Istanbul [Liverpool's 2005 Champions League triumph] and now [Alonso] is a manager and doing incredible things,' Alexander-Arnold said. 'I have spoken to him and it is good to have that communication. I told him he was a big idol growing up so to be able to work with him is a dream. Watching him pass a ball influenced me to train harder at that and set standards – I explained that to him as well. I will be a sponge around him, trying to soak up all the information I can.' On the back of the new shirt is a No 12 and just 'Trent'. 'That's easily explained,' Real Madrid's new signing said. 'I always found that in Europe the whole name thing confused a lot of people. Double barrelled. Some called me Alexander, some called me Arnold, some both, some Alex. Some Trent. I thought: let's make it simple. Trent's my name. Trent on the back, let's make it Trent. That's what people can call me.'

Watch: Trent Alexander-Arnold wows at Real Madrid unveiling by speaking fluent Spanish
Watch: Trent Alexander-Arnold wows at Real Madrid unveiling by speaking fluent Spanish

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The era of Alexander-Arnold the Liverpool legend is officially over and that of Trent the Galactico has begun at Real Madrid. The presentation of the right-back's No 12 'Trent' jersey at his formal Bernabeu unveiling completed the journey from the Anfield academy to the heights of those footballers considered so famous that they are referenced by Christian name, the request symbolic of a new brand and a fresh start. 'It is quite an easy explanation,' said the 26-year-old. 'I have always found when I travel to Europe the name confuses a lot of people with it being three names, double-barrelled. People call me Arnold, Alexander, Alex and Trent. I just thought let's make it simple with Trent on my back. That's my name so that's what I guess people will call me.' That said, those watching the England player's opening address could have been forgiven for thinking adopting the title Don Juan might have been as appropriate. If Alexander-Arnold's transfer was considered the consequence of a prolonged Bernabeu seduction, this time the charm offensive was from the £10 million recruit as the ex-Kop idol introduced himself in fluent, pitch perfect Spanish. 🗣️🇪🇸 Señor Alexander-Arnold #WelcomeTrent — Real Madrid C.F. 🇬🇧🇺🇸 (@realmadriden) June 12, 2025 'Thank you for this opportunity. It does not happen every day. It is a dream come true and I am happy and proud to be here. I want to show Real Madrid fans how I play. I am going to give my all for the team,' Alexander-Arnold said in the native tongue of the Madridistas. 'Wow. Impressive. He has clearly had this on his mind for a couple of years,' swooned the translators from Real Madrid TV. 'A few months,' Alexander-Arnold later clarified, no doubt aware that cynics will presume this was an inauguration speech long in its preparation. Given he is such a quick learner, those advertising foreign language crash courses have found a new poster boy. Tougher assignments await the England man in La Liga, but as first impressions go this could not have been better choreographed, even if those left behind at Anfield tuning in may have been watching from behind the sofa, struggling to readjust to such an unfamiliar sight. Alexander-Arnold proved adept at identifying potential hand grenades within questions, careful to be respectful of all that he has left behind while deferential to the status and history of the club he has joined. Asked to compare Real Madrid and Liverpool, he suggested the biggest difference might be the weather. 'I'm fortunate to have played for the biggest club in England and now I am at the biggest club in Spain. There are a lot of similarities,' he said. 'You are expected to win. You are expected to perform week in and week out. That does not change. We are expected to win trophies. That is a demand. We have to deliver. 'It was never a question of where [to go], it was whether or not to go. I have known for a long time that if I did leave Liverpool it would only be for Real Madrid. It was not an easy decision because of how long I have been there for, but eventually you have to make a decision and in my mind it was the right one.' When Alexander-Arnold was encouraged to say he had dreamed of being a Real player even when training on the pitch as a Liverpool teenager in the Champions League, he politely declined the invitation. 'At that time, 10 or so years ago, I was not thinking about being here today,' he said, while the references to his Kop sending-off rightly focused on the day of the trophy presentation and the well-wishers of the club's hierarchy, as well as players, staff and the majority of supporters. Ironically, the formalities began like a tribute to Liverpool as an assortment of clips showcased Alexander-Arnold's many spectacular assists and goals under Jurgen Klopp and Arne Slot. Whatever Real paid to sign the right-back a month early, Liverpool might have grounds to charge more in syndication rights given how many of the commentaries were courtesy of the Premier League's champions own media channel. The Anfield connection continued with references to Real's new manager, Xabi Alonso, being one of Alexander-Arnold's boyhood idols. 'He inspired me because of the way he passed the ball. I told him that,' said the defender of the former Liverpool midfielder. Another topic he seemed enthusiastic to address was the notion that England team-mate Jude Bellingham has acted as a super-agent on Real's behalf, the friendship between the pair vastly over-exaggerated as influential in the move. 'A lot of people think he played a large part in me coming here, but the club speaks for itself,' Alexander-Arnold said. 'We spoke a lot about Liverpool and Madrid as players and friends. You want to know what it's like, of course.' Of all the questions, one stood out as the wolf in sheep's clothing, a seemingly innocuous request to sum up the qualities of Real's local hero Dani Carvajal, whose position Alexander-Arnold wants to make his own. 'He is a fantastic player and I have nothing but respect,' he said, aware there is no bigger legend than the home-grown hero. Alexander-Arnold was that once. Now 'Trent' has accepted the challenge of matching the standards of one of the VIP guests listening to his every word, Roberto Carlos, alongside the current crop of superstars. 'I'm very lucky and proud to be here,' Alexander-Arnold said. 'These are the kinds of players I want to play with. I have admired them. I have played against them, so I know how good they are. To be a part of the team and to be playing with them, rather than against them, will be good.'

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