Casa Balbino ★ 4.9
6 by the glassPlaza del Cabildo, Sanlucar de Barrameda
A Sanlucar institution on the main plaza, famous for langostinos and manzanilla. The most photographed bar in the Sherry Triangle. Open until late nightly.
The list: The famous langostino and manzanilla bar on Sanlucar's main square. La Gitana and Solear manzanilla served ice-cold alongside the town's celebrated prawns. Stand at the bar or claim an outdoor table.
Tip: The langostinos de Sanlucar are among the best prawns in Spain; the combination with a glass of La Gitana manzanilla on a warm Andalucian evening is one of the region's peak food experiences.
Tabanco El Pasaje ★ 4.9
5 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A historic Jerez tabanco in a barrel-vaulted alley passage, combining traditional barrel-drawn sherry with spontaneous flamenco performances from local artists.
The list: Sherry from the barrel in a 19th-century alley passage with flamenco. Fino, amontillado and oloroso; no frills, no menu, pure fortified culture.
Tip: The most authentic tabanco-flamenco combination in the Sherry Triangle; the music is spontaneous rather than staged.
El Corregidor Bodega Bar ★ 4.5
20 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A converted bodega bar near the Jerez Alcazar with a focus on aged amontillado, oloroso and palo cortado. Serious sherry crowd in the evenings.
The list: A wine bar set in a former bodega warehouse near the Alcazar, specialising in aged sherries. Strong selection of amontillado, palo cortado and oloroso by the glass alongside bar snacks.
Tip: The palo cortado selection at El Corregidor is the best in Jerez for the style; ask for the oldest available expression.
Tabanco La Constancia ★ 4.6
5 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A historic Jerez tabanco on Calle Medina preserving the original neighbourhood fortified-wine bar format: sherry drawn from barrels, zinc-topped tables, tiled walls.
The list: One of Jerez's oldest surviving tabancos on Calle Medina, drawing fino, manzanilla, amontillado and oloroso from American oak butts at a tiled bar. The format: no food menu, no cocktails, sherry from the barrel only.
Tip: The fino drawn from the oldest butt in the house is the one to order; ask the bartender for the barrel with the white chalk tick mark.
Gonzalez Byass Sunset Bodega Tasting ★ 4.8
5 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
Gonzalez Byass offers evening tasting sessions in its historic bodega complex adjacent to the Alcazar. The sunset light across the 19th-century solera room is the most cinematic tasting setting in Jerez.
The list: Gonzalez Byass runs evening tasting sessions (18:00-21:00) of the Tio Pepe fino range including en rama and Palmas stages of ageing alongside tapas in the historic solera room.
Tip: The evening sessions are less crowded than daytime tours; book the 18:30 slot for the best light in the cathedral courtyard.
Emilio Lustau Evening Almacenista Tasting ★ 4.7
5 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
Lustau's private evening tastings of the Almacenista single-bodega range: five wines from five different small producers across the Triangle, tasted in the historic bodega cellar.
The list: Lustau offers evening private tasting sessions of the Almacenista range, single-bodega sherries purchased from small-scale producers across the Triangle. Usually five wines over 90 minutes.
Tip: The Almacenista range is the most diverse and educational way to taste across multiple Jerez soleras in one session; book directly on the Lustau website.