Patatas Bravas
Madrid, Spain (tapas bar tradition)
Patatas bravas are Spain's most debated tapa: fried potato cubes served with a sauce that varies enough by region to ignite genuine culinary arguments. The Madrid style uses a paprika-forward, tomato-based salsa brava with cayenne heat; the Catalan interpretation pairs crisp potatoes with both romesco and alioli, creating a more complex, layered plate. What is constant is the potato's texture — double-fried (or par-boiled then fried) to achieve an exterior that shatters under pressure while the interior remains fluffy. The potatoes must be genuinely bravas (brave, spicy) — the name is not decoration. Sauce is spooned over liberally rather than served alongside, so every cube is saturated.