Diego Cabrera, redefiniendo la coctelería para el universo FSQ.

A New Language Emerges: Diego Cabrera Joins the FSQ Universe

There are those who make cocktails. And then there are those who construct worlds.
Food save the Queen, refined gourmet experiences.

A few notes on who we are (and why We ware so much about taste)

There are brands that begin with a product. Others, with a strategy. Ours began with a question.

A few notes on the art of caviar en

There are few ingredients as widely recognised — and as frequently misunderstood — as caviar.
Mr. Bombín: artisanal chocolate where flavour, texture, and design meet.

A most distinctive icon

There are chocolates one tastes and then there are those one recognises.
Food save the Queen Christmas hampers: premium rituals for modern luxury gifting.

A christmas collection, quite worthy of gifting

There are gifts one sends. And then there are those one composes. At Food save the Queen, Christmas is not approached as a season of excess, but as a succession of rituals — carefully constructed moments that transform the act of gifting into something rather more considered. Not a gesture. A system.
Champagne: elegance, balance, and the art of enjoying every bubble.

On the proper enjoyment of Champagne

There are drinks one consumes. And then there is champagne.
Bood & Marie, a classic cocktail reimagined by Diego Cabrera for Food Save the Queen.

A rather splendid new arrival

There are cocktails one orders. And then there are those that are reconsidered.
Mrs. Olivia, the Gilda by Food save the Queen: a refined take on the classic spanish pintxo.

Mrs. Olivia, or how the gilda found a new voice

There are, in the vast and rather opinionated world of Spanish gastronomy, a few creations that resist reinvention.