Restaurant in Milan, Italy
Bites
290ptsGood value tasting format, book ahead.

About Bites
Bites holds consecutive Michelin Plate recognition (2024–2025) and a 4.7 Google rating at a €€€ price point — strong value for Milan's dining tier. The kitchen builds around fermentation and barbecue in a simply furnished room near Porta Venezia. Book for the tasting menu on a first visit; use the à la carte small-plate format to range more widely on your return.
Verdict: Book Bites for the Tasting Menu, Go Twice If You Like What You Find
A 4.7 Google rating across 174 reviews is a credible signal for a small Milan restaurant with no Michelin stars yet — just consecutive Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025. That combination tells you this is a kitchen doing honest, considered work at a €€€ price point rather than chasing spectacle. If you have been once and enjoyed it, the à la carte format makes Bites one of the more revisitable spots in the Porta Venezia area: small portions designed for sharing mean you can cover a lot of ground without the commitment of a fixed tasting sequence.
What Bites Is
Bites sits at Via Lambro, 11 in the 20129 district — a quieter residential stretch east of Milan's centre, away from the Navigli crowd and the fashion-week circuit. The room is simply furnished by design, which reflects the philosophy of the plate rather than a budget constraint. This is a restaurant where the food is the atmosphere, not the interior.
The cooking is international in classification, but the techniques are specific: barbecue and fermentation anchor the menu. Those are not casual inclusions. Fermentation requires time, temperature control, and a committed larder programme. Barbecue at a restaurant operating at this tier means controlled smoke, resting times, and sourcing decisions that affect the base flavour of nearly every dish. Together, they produce a flavour profile that leans savoury, deep, and often slightly acidic , the kind of food that rewards attention rather than background dining. If you are coming back after a first visit, that is worth knowing: the dishes reward a slower pace and a second look.
The portion sizing is deliberate and indicated by the name. Small plates here are not a cost-cutting measure , they are the format. Michelin's own notes on the venue confirm that the small portions make it possible to taste several dishes at a reasonable cost, which is the practical case for ordering broadly rather than narrowly. On a return visit, resist the instinct to reorder what you already know. The format is built for range.
The Wine Angle
No wine list data is available in the verified record for Bites, so specific bottle recommendations or producer names cannot be confirmed here. What can be said is that a kitchen built around fermentation and smoke presents a specific pairing challenge. Dishes with significant acidity from fermentation generally track well with wines that have their own textural presence , skin-contact whites, low-intervention reds with some grip, or sparkling options with dosage restraint. At a €€€ price point in Milan, a short but deliberate list is more likely than a deep cellar. Ask the room what they are pouring by the glass before committing to a bottle, particularly if you are ordering across several small plates where a single wine pairing is harder to sustain.
Booking and Timing
Booking is described as essential for evening service and advisable at lunch , a distinction worth taking seriously. Evening walk-ins at a small, simply furnished restaurant with Michelin recognition and a 4.7 rating are a low-probability outcome. Lunch is more forgiving, but calling ahead removes the risk entirely. No online booking link is confirmed in the venue data, so direct contact via the restaurant is the route to follow. Booking difficulty is rated Easy by Pearl standards, meaning you are not competing with a six-week waitlist , but that does not mean showing up unannounced at 8pm on a Friday is a sensible plan.
No current hours are available in the verified record. Confirm directly before visiting, particularly around Italian public holidays or the August closure period common to Milan restaurants.
Who Should Book Bites
Bites works well for a pair who want to eat interestingly at €€€ rather than committing to a €€€€ tasting menu at one of Milan's Michelin-starred rooms. It is also a reasonable choice for a small group of three or four who can split the à la carte broadly , the small-plate format distributes well across a table. For a formal special occasion where the room itself needs to carry weight, look elsewhere: the simply furnished interior sets expectations clearly. For a dinner where the food is the point and the setting is secondary, this is a sound choice at its price tier.
For other international fine-dining reference points using similar technique-driven approaches, TRB - Temple Restaurant Beijing and Marcel von Winckelmann in Passau offer useful comparisons in the international category. Within Italy, the technique-led kitchens at Osteria Francescana in Modena, Uliassi in Senigallia, and Reale in Castel di Sangro show what fermentation and precision cooking look like at a starred level, if Bites has opened your appetite for that register. For regional Italian depth, Dal Pescatore in Runate and Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone are worth the drive from Milan. Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico is the northern Italian benchmark for produce-led cooking at altitude.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how Bites sits against Milan's €€€€ tier.
Practical Details
| Detail | Bites | Horto | Verso Capitaneo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€€ | €€€€ | €€€ |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2025) | Star | Plate |
| Format | Tasting + à la carte | Tasting menu | Creative tasting |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Easy |
| Room style | Simple, unfussy | Design-forward | Intimate |
| Leading for | Exploratory eating, pairs | Occasion dining | Creative curiosity |
For a broader look at where to eat, drink, and stay in the city, see our full Milan restaurants guide, our full Milan hotels guide, our full Milan bars guide, our full Milan wineries guide, and our full Milan experiences guide.
FAQ
- What should I wear to Bites? The room is simply furnished with no stated dress code in the verified record. A smart-casual approach fits the context , neither jeans-and-trainers casual nor suit formal. Milan generally expects a degree of presentability even at relaxed restaurant formats, so dress as if you are going out rather than staying in.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Bites? Yes, as a starting point. The tasting menu gives you the kitchen's argument in sequence, which is useful on a first visit. On a return, the à la carte format is arguably more interesting: Michelin's own note confirms the small portions are designed to let you range across dishes at reasonable cost, which is a better use of the format once you know the cooking style.
- How far ahead should I book Bites? Booking is rated Easy by Pearl standards, so you are not dealing with a weeks-long waitlist. That said, evening tables require advance booking per the venue's own policy. A few days ahead should be sufficient in most cases, but call before you plan rather than after you arrive. Lunch is more forgiving but still worth confirming.
- Can Bites accommodate groups? No confirmed capacity data is available. The simply furnished room and small-restaurant description suggest this is not a venue built for large parties. Groups of two to four should be manageable; larger groups should call ahead and ask directly rather than assume.
- Is Bites good for a special occasion? It depends on what you need the occasion to feel like. If the food is the centrepiece and a simple, unfussy room suits you, yes , the Michelin Plate recognition and 4.7 rating support the quality case. If the room itself needs to signal occasion (high design, theatrical service, grand setting), look instead at Seta or Andrea Aprea, which operate at €€€€ with settings built for that purpose.
- Is Bites worth the price? At €€€ with Michelin Plate recognition and a 4.7 Google score across 174 reviews, the value case is strong relative to Milan's €€€€ tier. You are not paying for a grand room or a celebrity kitchen , you are paying for considered technique at a price that does not require a special-occasion budget. That makes it one of the more rational choices in its category.
- What are alternatives to Bites in Milan? For more formal technique-led cooking at a higher price point, Enrico Bartolini and Cracco in Galleria both operate at €€€€ with Michelin stars. For creative cooking at a comparable intimacy level, Verso Capitaneo is worth considering. Horto sits at €€€€ with a starred kitchen if you want to step up from the Bites price tier for a special occasion.
- What should I order at Bites? No specific confirmed dish names are available in the verified record. The format guide is clear though: order broadly. The small portions are designed for range, and the kitchen's focus on barbecue and fermentation means the most interesting dishes likely involve both techniques. Ask the room what is reading well that week before anchoring to a single choice.
Compare Bites
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bites | International | The cuisine at this tiny, simply furnished restaurant includes barbecued dishes and fermented ingredients, all of which feature on a tasting menu. Guests can also choose à la carte: the small portions (as the restaurant name suggests) make it possible to taste several dishes at a reasonable cost. Booking is essential in the evening and also advisable at lunchtime.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Enrico Bartolini | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Cracco in Galleria | Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Andrea Aprea | Modern Italian, Italian Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Seta | Modern Italian | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Horto | Modern Italian, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Bites measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Bites?
Bites is simply furnished — the room signals a relaxed, unfussy approach to dining. A neat casual outfit is appropriate; there is no evidence of a formal dress requirement. Think comfortable rather than polished, which fits the neighbourhood east of Milan's centre.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Bites?
Yes, especially given the €€€ price range. The tasting menu covers barbecued dishes and fermented ingredients, and the small-portion format means you can eat across several flavour directions without the financial commitment of a €€€€ Michelin-starred room. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) confirm the kitchen is consistent.
How far ahead should I book Bites?
Book at least a week out for evenings — booking is described as essential for dinner service. Lunch is more accessible but still advisable to reserve in advance given the small size of the restaurant. Same-day lunch walk-ins may work, but it is a risk not worth taking.
Can Bites accommodate groups?
The restaurant is described as tiny and simply furnished, which suggests limited capacity. Groups of more than four should check the venue's official channels before assuming availability. For larger groups, a bigger Milan restaurant with a private dining room would be a safer choice.
Is Bites good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key special occasion — a birthday dinner for two or a celebratory lunch where the focus is on interesting food rather than formal surroundings. If you need a grand dining room or a starred kitchen as the occasion's backdrop, Seta or Andrea Aprea would be a better fit at a higher price point.
Is Bites worth the price?
Yes. At €€€, Bites sits in a sweet spot: more ambitious and consistent than a casual trattoria, but without the €€€€ commitment of Milan's starred restaurants. The small-portion tasting format means you get range for the money, and the Michelin Plate recognition across two consecutive years supports the kitchen's reliability.
What are alternatives to Bites in Milan?
For a step up in formality and price, Seta and Andrea Aprea offer Michelin-starred tasting menus at €€€€. Horto is worth considering if you want a creative, produce-led format in Milan at a comparable level of ambition. Cracco in Galleria and Enrico Bartolini are higher-commitment, higher-cost options for readers who want the full starred experience.
Recognized By
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