Restaurant in Licata, Italy
La Madia
1,275ptsTwo Michelin stars in a town you'll have to seek out.

About La Madia
Pino Cuttaia's two-Michelin-star La Madia is the main reason serious food travellers make the trip to Licata. With La Liste scores above 90 and a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 700 reviews, it delivers at the top tier of Sicilian progressive cooking. Book months ahead — this is near impossible to land last-minute — and plan dinner over the tight one-hour lunch window if your schedule allows.
La Madia, Licata: Verdict
Licata is not on Italy's fine-dining circuit by accident. La Madia, chef Pino Cuttaia's two-Michelin-star restaurant on Corso Filippo Re Capriata, is the reason serious food travellers make the trip to this small Sicilian port town at all. If you are weighing a detour into southwestern Sicily against other two-star options elsewhere in Italy, book La Madia — the combination of credential, cooking philosophy, and sheer improbability of location makes it worth the logistics. What it is not: a casual drop-in, an easy reservation, or a venue where you should expect the food to travel. This is a dining room experience in the truest sense, and the sooner you plan for it, the better your odds of actually sitting down.
The Experience
Picture a modest street in a quiet Sicilian town, the kind of address that gives no visual warning of what is inside. That contrast — between the low-key setting and the precision of what lands on the table , is part of what makes La Madia memorable for the right diner. Cuttaia's cooking draws on the produce and culinary memory of Sicily: ingredients sourced from the island, preparations that reflect coastal and agricultural traditions, but presented with the technical rigour you would expect from a kitchen that has held two Michelin stars continuously through 2024 and 2025. La Liste scored it 90 points in 2026 (90.5 in 2025), and Opinionated About Dining ranked it among the top 221 restaurants in Europe in 2025 , up from 340 the year before. That upward trajectory matters: the kitchen is not resting on its reputation.
For the food and travel enthusiast who seeks depth and context, the backstory here is embedded in the menu rather than in a PR narrative. Sicily's fishing culture, its Arab-Norman history, its sun-dried and preserved ingredients , these are reference points you will recognise in the cooking if you come informed. What the database does not supply, and what you should confirm directly with the restaurant, are specific menu details, current tasting menu pricing, and any seasonal changes to the format. Given the two-star standing and the venue's scale, expect €€€€ pricing , comparable to other two-star operations in Italy , and plan accordingly.
Google reviewers rate La Madia 4.8 across 677 reviews, an unusually high aggregate for a fine-dining venue of this type, where polarising experiences often drag scores down. That consistency across a large review base suggests the kitchen delivers reliably, not just on exceptional nights.
Timing: When to Go
La Madia opens for lunch and dinner most days , Monday, Wednesday through Saturday offer both a 1–2 pm lunch and an 8–10 pm dinner service. Sunday is lunch only (1–2 pm), and the restaurant is closed on Tuesdays. The lunch service is narrow at one hour, so treat it as a fixed commitment rather than a flexible slot. If you are travelling specifically for this meal, dinner on a Friday or Saturday gives you the most flexibility around the booking window and allows you to explore the town beforehand rather than arriving rushed from a drive. Avoid planning a Sunday visit if you want dinner , it simply is not offered.
Sicily's summer months bring heat and tourist pressure across the island, but Licata itself is not a mass-tourism destination, which means La Madia does not face the same walk-in pressure as a two-star in a major city. That said, booking difficulty at this level is near impossible without advance planning. Treat this like a reservation at a small-capacity tasting-menu restaurant anywhere in Europe: contact the restaurant weeks, ideally months, ahead. The lunch window in particular , a single one-hour service , will fill fast, especially on weekends.
On Takeout and Delivery
La Madia is not a venue where off-premise dining is relevant. The cooking at this level , multi-course, plated with precision, dependent on service timing and temperature , does not translate to a takeout format. If you are asking whether the food travels well, the honest answer is no, and that is not a criticism. It reflects what the kitchen is doing. Anyone researching delivery or casual collection options should look elsewhere in our full Licata restaurants guide. For a comparison in the same creative Italian tier that takes a different approach to format, L'Oste e il Sacrestano in Licata offers a different register of Sicilian cooking worth knowing about.
Know Before You Go
- Address: Corso Filippo Re Capriata, 22, 92027 Licata AG, Italy
- Price range: €€€€
- Hours: Mon, Wed–Sat: 1–2 pm and 8–10 pm | Sun: 1–2 pm only | Tue: Closed
- Booking difficulty: Near impossible , reserve weeks to months in advance
- Awards: Michelin 2 Stars (2024, 2025); La Liste 90pts (2026), 90.5pts (2025); OAD Leading Restaurants in Europe #221 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.8 / 5 (677 reviews)
- Chef: Pino Cuttaia
- Cuisine: Progressive Italian, Creative , rooted in Sicilian produce and tradition
- Dress code: Not published , at two-star level in Italy, smart casual is the floor; err toward neat
- Getting there: Licata is in southwestern Sicily (Agrigento province). The nearest airports are Palermo (approx. 2 hrs by car) and Catania Fontanarossa (approx. 1.5 hrs). No public transit connection of note , a hire car or taxi is the practical option.
- Also in Licata: Hotels | Bars | Wineries | Experiences
Compare La Madia
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| La Madia | Progressive Italian, Creative | €€€€ | Near Impossible |
| Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler | Italian, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Dal Pescatore | Italian, Italian Contemporary | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Enoteca Pinchiorri | Italian - French, Italian Contemporary | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Enrico Bartolini | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Le Calandre | Progressive Italian, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
How La Madia stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to La Madia?
Dress as you would for a serious two-Michelin-star dinner in Italy: smart, neat, and considered. The setting is a quiet street in Licata rather than a grand hotel dining room, but the food and service operate at a level that calls for effort. Overly casual clothing would feel out of place given the calibre of Pino Cuttaia's cooking.
Does La Madia handle dietary restrictions?
At two-Michelin-star level with tasting-menu format, kitchens at this tier routinely accommodate dietary requirements when notified at the time of booking. Contact La Madia directly when reserving to give the kitchen as much notice as possible — last-minute requests are harder to accommodate when dishes are built around specific Sicilian produce and technique.
Is La Madia worth the price?
At €€€€ pricing, La Madia earns its rate. Opinionated About Dining ranked it among the top 221 restaurants in Europe in 2025, and La Liste awarded it 90 points in both 2025 and 2026 — credentials that justify the spend for anyone serious about creative Italian cooking. The caveat: you're travelling to Licata in southern Sicily to eat here, so factor in the destination cost. If the trip is purely for dinner, it should be one of the primary reasons you go.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Madia?
Dinner is the stronger choice for a full tasting-menu experience — the 8–10 pm service gives the meal its proper rhythm and the kitchen its full context. Lunch runs 1–2 pm and is worth considering if you're passing through or want a shorter window; Sunday lunch is the only service offered that day, which makes it the default option if you're visiting at the weekend. For a special occasion, book dinner.
What are alternatives to La Madia in Licata?
There are no comparable fine-dining alternatives in Licata itself — La Madia is the reason to be there at that level. If you want other two-star creative Italian cooking in the south without the travel commitment to Licata, look at restaurants in Palermo or further north. La Madia's specific draw is Pino Cuttaia's distinctly Sicilian perspective, which you won't replicate elsewhere in the region at this standard.
Can I eat at the bar at La Madia?
La Madia is a tasting-menu restaurant operating two tight service windows — lunch from 1–2 pm and dinner from 8–10 pm. It is not set up for casual bar dining or walk-in counter eating. Reservations in advance are the only practical way to secure a table, particularly given its profile and limited covers.
Hours
- Monday
- 1–2 pm, 8–10 pm
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 1–2 pm, 8–10 pm
- Thursday
- 1–2 pm, 8–10 pm
- Friday
- 1–2 pm, 8–10 pm
- Saturday
- 1–2 pm, 8–10 pm
- Sunday
- 1–2 pm
Recognized By
Similar venues by awards
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