Granada has four dishes that are either unique to the city or done better here than anywhere else. Then there are a handful of supporting acts worth knowing.
A small rolled sponge cake, soaked in sugar syrup and rum, filled with custard, and browned briefly on top. Created in the 1890s by pastry chef Ceferino Isla in Santa Fe (a town 10 kilometres west of Granada), and named in honour of Pope Pius IX. Every pastelería in the city sells them; quality varies considerably. The best are eaten fresh, slightly warm. At around €1.50 each, ordering two to compare shops is a reasonable research investment.
Full dish guide → Plato alpujarreño is the mountain plate: blood sausage, pork loin, chorizo, jamón, fried egg and potatoes. It comes from the Alpujarras villages and has no pretension. Order it when you're in the hills, not in a city restaurant. In Granada itself, it appears on tourist menus at a markup that reflects its heritage more than its cost.
Habas con jamón (broad beans sautéed with cured ham) is a spring dish. When broad beans come in fresh in March and April, Granada kitchens do them well — soft, sweet, just enough jamón to season. Outside spring, they're made with frozen beans and it shows.
Remojón granadino is a salad of oranges, spring onion, black olives, hard-boiled egg, and flaked salt cod. The citrus-salt combination is Moorish in origin and unlike anything you'll find in northern Spain. Good in summer, strange in December.
Berenjenas con miel — thin-sliced aubergine, fried crisp, drizzled with cane honey — is one of the few traditional dishes that's also vegetarian-friendly. The honey is from sugar cane grown on the Málaga coast, not bee honey, which gives it a darker, slightly bitter edge. Order it as a starter; it disappears fast.