Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Mutignano, Italy

    Bacucco d'Oro

    290Pearl Points

    Regional Abruzzo cooking, Michelin-noted, genuinely affordable.

    Bacucco d'Oro, Restaurant in Mutignano

    About Bacucco d'Oro

    A family-run Abruzzese trattoria in Mutignano with Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, a 4.4 Google rating across 624 reviews, and a menu built entirely on regional sourcing: arrosticini, barbecued meat, mushrooms, and the regional dessert pizza dogge. At the € price point, it is the most direct value case for credentialed traditional Abruzzo cooking in the Teramo area.

    Verdict

    Bacucco d'Oro is a family-run trattoria in Mutignano that earns two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) without straying an inch from its Abruzzese roots. At the € price point, it is one of the most direct value propositions in the region: traditional dishes built on local sourcing, a terrace with sea views, and a concise wine list that stays firmly within Abruzzo. If you are in Teramo province and want a credentialed, no-fuss introduction to the regional table, book here. If you want innovation or a multicourse tasting format, look elsewhere.

    Getting There and the Space

    The drive matters here. From the Adriatic coast you take a winding uphill road to reach the trattoria, and the physical arrival sets the tone: this is a place you travel to deliberately, not one you stumble upon. The terrace commands sea views that make it the obvious place to sit when weather allows. The setting is rural and unhurried, which means the room itself does much of the work in communicating what kind of meal you are about to have. Space, pace, and view are aligned. For context on what else is in the area, see our full Mutignano restaurants guide.

    What the Menu Tells You About the Sourcing

    The menu at Bacucco d'Oro is deliberate in its narrowness, and that narrowness is the point. Almost everything on the plate is meat-focused, rooted in the pastoral traditions of inland Abruzzo: arrosticini (skewered grilled meat, the regional signature), barbecued meat, and fragrant mushrooms. The one exception is salted cod, which has a long coastal tradition in this part of Italy and earns its place on an otherwise land-facing menu.

    What this signals is a kitchen that is not trying to cover every category. Sourcing here is implicitly local and seasonal because the dishes themselves demand it: arrosticini made with anything other than the correct cut of Abruzzese lamb simply does not taste right, and the mushroom preparations depend on what the season provides. You are not eating a menu that has been engineered for a broad audience. You are eating what this region actually produces.

    The dessert list includes pizza dogge, a layered preparation with sponge cake, custard, confectioner's cream, and Alkermes liqueur. This is a regional speciality that rarely appears on menus outside Abruzzo, and its presence here is a useful indicator of how seriously the kitchen takes local identity. The wine list follows the same logic: it focuses on Abruzzo producers, keeping the pairing direct and the selection coherent.

    For a regional comparison at a similar price tier and philosophy, Borgo Spoltino in Mosciano Sant'Angelo and Casa D'Angelo in Fara Filiorum Petri both work in the Abruzzo tradition and are worth considering if your itinerary allows multiple stops.

    Ratings and Trust Signals

    Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms consistent kitchen output. This is not a starred restaurant, but Michelin Plate status means inspectors consider the cooking good enough to flag. The Google rating sits at 4.4 across 624 reviews, which at that volume is a reliable signal rather than a statistical anomaly. The combination of independent inspection credibility and sustained public approval over hundreds of covers gives this trattoria more verified standing than most places at the € price level.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Booking is rated easy, but the trattoria's location and modest scale mean you should not assume a table is available on arrival, particularly for terrace seats in good weather. Call or arrange in advance where possible. Budget: € price range, making this one of the most accessible Michelin-recognised options in the Teramo area. Dress: No formal dress code is listed; the setting and price point suggest relaxed smart casual is appropriate. Getting there: Drive from the coast via the uphill road; this is not a venue accessible on foot from a town centre. Consider pairing with a stay nearby — see our full Mutignano hotels guide for options.

    Who Should Book

    Bacucco d'Oro works well for food and travel enthusiasts who want to eat regionally rather than fashionably. If your interest is in understanding what Abruzzo actually tastes like at the table level, this menu is more instructive than a tourist-facing restaurant in a city centre. It is also a good choice for groups who want a shared, informal meat-focused meal with a serious provenance behind it. Solo diners and couples will find the setting and format equally accommodating given the casual structure of the room.

    It is a less obvious fit for anyone seeking a formal occasion restaurant, a long tasting menu, or seafood as the main event. The salted cod aside, the kitchen does not pivot toward the coast on the plate, even though the view faces it.

    For broader exploration of the area, our Mutignano bars guide, our Mutignano wineries guide, and our Mutignano experiences guide cover what else the area offers around a meal here.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Bacucco d'Oro good for a special occasion?

    It depends on what kind of occasion. Bacucco d'Oro suits a relaxed, meaningful meal with someone who appreciates regional Italian cooking over ceremony. The terrace sea views and a menu rooted in Abruzzo tradition — arrosticini, barbecued meats, pizza dogge — make it memorable on those terms. If you need a formal dining room or a tasting menu format, a starred restaurant in the region would be a better fit.

    How far ahead should I book Bacucco d'Oro?

    Book at least a few days in advance, particularly for weekend lunch or dinner. The trattoria is family-run and modest in scale, so capacity is limited. Its location outside the main tourist circuit means demand is more manageable than coastal restaurants, but turning up without a reservation is a risk not worth taking given the drive up from the coast.

    Is Bacucco d'Oro worth the price?

    Yes, straightforwardly. At a single-euro price range, Bacucco d'Oro is one of the more affordable ways to eat at a Michelin-recognised restaurant in Italy. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) confirm the kitchen is consistent. Compared to Dal Pescatore or Osteria Francescana, you are trading room polish and wine depth for genuine regional cooking at a fraction of the cost.

    What should I wear to Bacucco d'Oro?

    This is a family trattoria in a rural Abruzzo village, not a hotel dining room. Casual, comfortable clothing is appropriate. There is no indication in the venue's Michelin recognition or price positioning of any dress requirement beyond looking presentable.

    Is Bacucco d'Oro good for solo dining?

    Workable, but not the obvious choice. The trattoria format and its meat-focused menu — arrosticini, barbecued dishes — skew toward sharing across a table. Solo diners can absolutely eat here, but the experience is better suited to a pair or small group. If solo dining flexibility is a priority, a restaurant with a counter or broader à la carte range would give you more options.

    Location

    Via del Pozzo, 8, 64025 Mutignano TE, Italy

    Mutignano, Italy

    Compare Bacucco d'Oro

    Award Winners Like Bacucco d'Oro
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Bacucco d'Oro
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert NiederkoflerMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Dal PescatoreMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Osteria FrancescanaMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Quattro PassiMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    RealeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€

    A quick look at how Bacucco d'Oro measures up.

    Also Consider

    Bacucco d'Oro sits at the opposite end of the price and format spectrum from most of its Michelin-recognised Italian peers. Reale in Castel di Sangro is the obvious regional comparison: also Abruzzo-rooted, but operating at €€€€ with a progressive, modern format that has earned it a place among Italy's most discussed tasting-menu destinations. If you want to understand Abruzzo through a contemporary creative lens and are prepared to spend significantly more, Reale is the destination. Bacucco d'Oro is the right choice when the brief is traditional, regional, and accessible.

    Further afield, Dal Pescatore in Runate, Osteria Francescana in Modena, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico all represent €€€€ Italian fine dining with starred recognition and multi-month booking windows. They are not competing for the same occasion. Bacucco d'Oro books easily, costs a fraction of the price, and delivers something none of those restaurants offer: an unfiltered, terrace-view version of what Abruzzese families actually eat.

    Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone is the closest peer in format terms, a regionally anchored Italian with a strong local identity, but operates at €€€€ on the Amalfi coast. For explorers who want depth in a specific regional tradition without the fine-dining price tag or the booking difficulty, Bacucco d'Oro is the clearer choice. Pair a meal here with a visit to Borgo Spoltino or Casa D'Angelo for a broader read on the Abruzzo table.

    Recognized By

    Explore Mutignano

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Bacucco d'Oro on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.