A holiday in Andalucia promises an abundance of treats for your tastebuds - from fried anchovies to the finest jamon iberico, writes Cathy Packe.
The outskirts of Algeciras, an industrial city across the bay from Gibraltar, are an unlikely location for a fine restaurant. But the Meson El Copo on Calle Trasmayo in Palmones-Los Barrios has a formidable reputation.
Diners throng to the place for lunch and dinner, eager to feast on the 30 varieties of fish and seafood on offer. The restaurant employs its own boats to fish in the waters of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, and the catch is brought in fresh each day.
Fish features prominently on menus all along the Andalucian coast. Often it is coated in flour and fried: anchovies, small sole, baby hake, squid served together as pescaito frito, which originated in Malaga but is now popular elsewhere, too.
In Cadiz it is often served in a paper cone. There, too, a whole fish, usually bream or seabass, is often cooked in a hard casing of salt, which is lifted off to reveal a succulent fish beneath.