Restaurant in Badalucco, Italy
Serious cooking at a fair price, off the tourist trail.

A Michelin Plate-recognised chef's restaurant in a converted village kindergarten in Badalucco, Umami offers contemporary Ligurian tasting menus at the €€ price tier — one of the better value-to-quality ratios in northwestern Italy. Booking is easy, the format is flexible, and the summer river terrace gives it a genuine seasonal advantage. Worth the detour if you are anywhere near the Argentina valley.
Umami sits at the €€ price tier, which in the context of a Michelin Plate-recognised tasting menu in a tiny Ligurian village makes it one of the more compelling value propositions in northwestern Italy's dining circuit. You are not paying Riviera resort prices here. For a first-timer, that means you can commit to the tasting menu format — or order from it à la carte , without the financial risk that comes with a first visit to a multi-course €€€€ restaurant. The Michelin Plate recognition (2025) confirms the kitchen is cooking at a level worth seeking out, even before you factor in the price.
The backstory matters here only as a logistical signal: a young chef with experience at well-regarded restaurants took over the building that once served as the village kindergarten in Badalucco, a small settlement in the Argentina river valley in the Ligurian hinterland. The conversion is the context, not the story. What matters for your decision is that this is a purpose-driven dining room in a village setting , not a casual trattoria, not a tourist-facing restaurant, but a chef-led project with a clear editorial point of view expressed through its tasting menus.
In summer, the outdoor terrace opens practically on the banks of the Argentina river. If you are visiting between June and September, book a table outside. The river setting is a functional advantage, not a scenic flourish , it makes the meal cooler and quieter than the interior during warm months, and the proximity to the water means the kitchen has access to local ingredients shaped by that valley specifically.
The format at Umami is a tasting menu from which individual dishes can also be ordered à la carte style. For a first-timer, this is the right structure: you get the arc of a chef's full menu if you want it, or the flexibility to order two or three dishes if you are not ready to commit to a full progression. The cuisine is described as contemporary, with strong influence from local Ligurian traditions , which in this valley means Argentina river valley produce, Ligurian olive oil, fresh herbs, and the kind of ingredient-led cooking that does not need a lot of architectural complexity to make its point.
The tasting menu format here is not the long, ceremony-heavy progression you would encounter at a three-Michelin-star room. It is designed to be approachable , the Michelin distinction is a Plate rather than a Star, which is a useful calibration tool. A Plate means the food is good, the kitchen is serious, and the experience is worth going out of your way for, without the expectation of theatrical tableside service or a 12-course commitment. If you want to understand what the chef is doing, take the full menu. If you are with someone who prefers flexibility, the à la carte option from the same menu means you are not locked in.
Because no specific dishes are confirmed in available data, order guidance is limited here , but the local-tradition framing is a reliable signal that seasonal produce from the Argentina valley will be prominent. Ask the kitchen what is in season when you arrive; the answer will tell you what to order.
Badalucco is not a destination you pass through. It sits inland from the Ligurian coast, in the Argentina valley behind San Remo. If you are based on the coast , in San Remo, Imperia, or further west toward the French border , Umami is a viable lunch or dinner excursion. If you are planning a dedicated trip, pairing it with a stay in the valley or a coastal base makes logistical sense. Check our full Badalucco hotels guide for accommodation options in the area.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. At a €€ restaurant in a small village, you are unlikely to face the weeks-long waitlists common at destination restaurants in major Italian cities. That said, summer weekends near the river terrace will fill up faster than the rest of the year , if you want that outdoor table in July or August, book ahead rather than assuming walk-in availability. No phone or online booking portal is listed in current data; the most reliable approach is to contact the restaurant directly through local search or visit in person if you are already in the valley. See our full Badalucco restaurants guide for further context on dining in the area.
| Detail | Umami (Badalucco) | Comparable Reference Point |
|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€ | €€€€ at comparable Michelin-recognised Italian restaurants |
| Award | Michelin Plate (2025) | Michelin Star venues require longer advance booking |
| Format | Tasting menu + à la carte from the same menu | Fixed tasting only at most starred Italian rooms |
| Setting | Village dining room + river terrace (summer) | Urban or resort settings at most regional peers |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate to Hard at recognised Italian destination restaurants |
| Google rating | 4.7 (147 reviews) | Benchmark for reliable quality at this tier |
For bars and other experiences in the area, see our Badalucco bars guide, our Badalucco wineries guide, and our Badalucco experiences guide.
Book Umami if you are within reach of the Argentina valley and want a serious, chef-driven meal at a price point that makes the tasting menu format low-risk. The Michelin Plate and 4.7 Google rating across 147 reviews give you enough confidence for a first visit without requiring a leap of faith. The à la carte flexibility within the tasting menu structure makes it genuinely accessible for mixed groups or first-timers who are not sure how much they want to commit. If summer, prioritise the river terrace. If you want a starred Italian experience in the northwest, the comparison section below will point you to the right alternatives , but Umami is the right call for the price, the setting, and the format.
See the full comparison section below.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Umami | €€ | Easy | — |
| Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Dal Pescatore | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Enoteca Pinchiorri | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Enrico Bartolini | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Calandre | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Badalucco for this tier.
Book at least two to three weeks ahead, especially for summer visits when the outdoor terrace on the Argentina river is in use. Badalucco is a small village with limited covers, and a Michelin Plate recognition at €€ pricing means demand outpaces the size of the room. If you are planning a specific travel date, earlier is safer.
Umami is a small village restaurant in a converted kindergarten — not a large-format dining room. Groups should check the venue's official channels well in advance to confirm capacity. The tasting menu format works for groups if everyone is aligned on the same meal structure, but spontaneous large-party walk-ins are unlikely to be accommodated.
There is no bar seating documented for Umami. The format is a tasting menu with an option to order individual dishes à la carte style, suggesting a seated-table service model. In summer, the outdoor riverside space adds a second seating area, but neither arrangement points to casual bar dining.
Badalucco is a small inland village with no comparable chef-driven alternative on the same level. The nearest reference points for similar modern Ligurian cooking would be along the coast near San Remo, roughly 20 kilometres away. If you miss Umami, you are not replacing it locally — plan your visit around the restaurant, not the other way around.
At €€ with a Michelin Plate in 2025, Umami delivers serious chef-driven cooking at a price point that is hard to argue against for the format. A tasting menu at this tier in a rural Ligurian village is substantially cheaper than equivalent recognition-level restaurants on the coast or in major Italian cities. If you are within reach of the Argentina valley, the value case is clear.
Yes, with a caveat on setting expectations: this is a converted kindergarten in a quiet inland village, not a polished urban fine-dining room. The summer terrace on the Argentina river makes it a genuinely atmospheric choice for a two-person celebration. The tasting menu format and Michelin Plate recognition give it enough substance to justify a special-occasion booking, particularly for diners who value cooking over ceremony.
At €€ pricing with the option to order individual dishes from the menu à la carte style, the tasting menu at Umami is the lowest-risk format in this category — you are not locked into a single price or pace. The chef's background in well-regarded restaurants and the 2025 Michelin Plate recognition suggest the kitchen has the range to make the full menu worthwhile. For a first visit, go with the tasting menu.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.