There are, in the vast and rather opinionated world of Spanish gastronomy, a few creations that resist reinvention. The Gilda is one of them. Or so one might think.
What is a Gilda?
Traditionally, the Gilda — a small but assertive banderilla — brings together a green olive, anchovy (anchoa) and pickled guindilla, occasionally accompanied by a boquerón. A composition of salt, acid and heat. A bite designed not to explain itself, but to provoke.
In Spain, asking “gilda qué es” is to enter a small but fascinating universe of aperitivo culture — one that sits somewhere between ritual and spontaneity. It is, in essence, a perfect imbalance.
A Question of Evolution
And yet, as with many classics, the question inevitably arises: What is a Gilda today — and what might it become?
Enter Mrs. Olivia
At Food Save the Queen, classics are not merely revisited. They are reinterpreted, edited and given a new narrative.
Mrs. Olivia is precisely that: not a replacement for the Gilda, but an expansion of its language.
A collection of banderillas, if you will — though one might hesitate to call them that so plainly. Some remain close to the familiar. Others wander, quite deliberately, into unexpected territory.
A Collection of Variations
Each Mrs. Olivia variation explores a different balance — a different way of understanding what a Gilda could be.
Olivia de Sardina brings together lomo de sardina, pepinillo, tomate cherry, naranja y queso curado — a composition where salty, acidic, sweet and rich meet in careful tension. Not unlike a classic gilda de anchoa, though with a broader, more expressive palette.
Olivia de Túnna shifts the focus towards intensity and umami, combining atún, tomate seco, cebolla and oliva negra into a deeper, more contemplative interpretation of the aperitivo.
Olivia de Lubina offers a more refined expression: lubina, puerro encurtido, guindilla y zanahoria — acidic, gently spicy, and notably balanced. One might say this is where the Gilda learns restraint.
Olivia de Pollo, built around pollo escabechado, marks a surprising departure — yet entirely coherent. A reminder that the logic of the Gilda is not its ingredients, but its structure of flavour.
Beyond the Banderilla
Of course, no aperitivo exists in isolation. Mrs. Olivia finds its natural companions in the FSQ universe.
Bood & Marie — a reinterpretation of the classic Bloody Mary — and the house vermouth, structured and quietly expressive, extend the experience beyond the bite into something more layered, more deliberate.
A Spanish Classic, Reconsidered
For those searching “gilda cecina y queso”, or wondering whether a boquerón belongs alongside an anchovy, Mrs. Olivia offers no strict answers.
Not what is correct, but what is possible.
A Final Note
In a moment where tradition is often either preserved or disrupted, Food Save the Queen chooses a third path: to interpret, to compose, to expand.
Mrs. Olivia does not replace the Gilda. It simply suggests that even the most iconic banderilla might, under the right conditions, become something rather more interesting.


