Restaurant in Milan, Italy
La Risacca Blu
290Pearl PointsReliable seafood near Centrale, no tasting menu.

About La Risacca Blu
A Michelin Plate-recognised seafood restaurant near Milan's central station, La Risacca Blu earns two consecutive Plate awards (2024–2025) and a 4.3 Google rating for daily-fresh fish and strong raw preparations at the €€€ tier. Easy to book with a week's notice, it works well for special occasion dinners or late meals when Milan's more formal kitchens have closed.
The Verdict
If you have been to La Risacca Blu once, the second visit confirms what the first suggested: this is one of the more reliable seafood addresses in central Milan, and it does not try to be anything more than that. The daily fish display at the entrance is not theatre — it is the menu in physical form, and the kitchen's commitment to raw preparations gives it a clear identity in a city where seafood restaurants can feel like afterthoughts. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) and a Google rating of 4.3 across 479 reviews confirm the consistency. Book it for a special occasion dinner, a business meal where you want to avoid the generic, or a late dinner when most of Milan's more ambitious kitchens have already closed their pass.
The Space
La Risacca Blu sits at Via Alessandro Tadino 13, close to Milan's central railway station — a neighbourhood that tends to underperform on dining, which makes this address more useful than its postcode might suggest. The room is arranged around the fish display at the entrance: the first thing you see when you walk in is the day's catch, which sets the register for the meal. The layout reads as mid-scale, not a cramped trattoria, not a cavernous event space. For a date or a small group celebration, the environment works without demanding a dress code or a particular ritual. For a business dinner where the food needs to carry the conversation, the focus on product-forward cooking gives you something to talk about without the self-consciousness of a tasting menu format.
What the Kitchen Does
The menu is built around classic and authentic fish and seafood preparations, with raw fish dishes given the most prominent position. Dishes change with what arrives daily, so the menu is not fixed in the way a trattoria's might be. That variability is a feature if you are returning: what you ordered on a first visit may not be available on a second, which keeps the experience from feeling repetitive. The Michelin Plate, awarded for two consecutive years, signals a kitchen that meets a recognised standard of quality without reaching for the complexity of a starred operation. For seafood in Milan at the €€€ price point, that is a meaningful credential. If you want a fuller picture of Italy's seafood dining spectrum, Uliassi in Senigallia and Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone represent what the category looks like at three-star level, useful context for calibrating expectations here.
Booking and Timing
Booking difficulty is rated easy. A week's notice is typically sufficient for most sittings, though for a Friday or Saturday special occasion dinner, giving yourself ten days removes the risk. There is no evidence of a hard-to-get reservation culture here, which is part of the value proposition: you get Michelin-recognised seafood in central Milan without the booking anxiety that surrounds places like Langosteria Bistrot. For late dining specifically, La Risacca Blu's positioning near the station makes it practical for arrivals by train, a detail worth noting if you are planning a dinner that follows travel. Check current hours directly with the venue before booking a late sitting, as hours are not confirmed in our data.
Who Should Book
La Risacca Blu works well for: couples or small groups celebrating a special occasion who want product-led seafood without a tasting menu format; business diners who need a credible, focused restaurant without the formality of Milan's €€€€ tier; and travellers arriving into Centrale who want a serious dinner within walking distance of the station. Solo diners visiting Milan for seafood should also consider Antica Osteria del Mare and La Rosa dei Venti as alternatives at a comparable price level. For a broader view of what Milan's restaurant scene offers, see our full Milan restaurants guide.
Practical Details
Address: Via Alessandro Tadino 13, 20124 Milan. Price range: €€€. Cuisine: seafood, with emphasis on raw fish. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google: 4.3 from 479 reviews. Booking: easy, one week's notice typically sufficient. No confirmed dress code, hours, or phone number in current data, contact the venue directly to confirm late sittings before you plan around them. For context on Milan's wider hotel and bar options to build your evening around, see our Milan hotels guide and our Milan bars guide.
Pearl Picks Nearby
- Langosteria Bistrot, Milan's most prominent seafood address, harder to book and a step up in price
- Langosteria Cafè, a more casual entry point to the Langosteria group
- Antica Osteria del Mare, comparable price tier, worth comparing for seafood in Milan
- La Rosa dei Venti, another Milan seafood option at a similar level
- Osteria Bartolini, for a different register of seafood dining in the city
- Gambero Rosso, if your trip extends south, a reference point for Italian seafood outside the cities
- Alici Restaurant, Amalfi Coast seafood for the wider Italy trip
- Dal Pescatore in Runate, for a day trip from Milan to one of Italy's most celebrated country restaurants
- Our full Milan restaurants guide
- Our full Milan experiences guide
- Our full Milan wineries guide
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book La Risacca Blu?
A week's notice covers most sittings. For Friday or Saturday evenings, especially for a special occasion group, push that to two weeks. Booking difficulty is rated easy compared to Milan's harder-to-crack €€€ tables like Seta or Andrea Aprea, so last-minute midweek slots are often available.
Is La Risacca Blu worth the price?
At €€€, it makes sense if you want product-led seafood — daily-landed fish and a menu centred on raw preparations — without paying for a tasting menu format or a headline chef. Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen is consistent. If you want a more ambitious cooking style at a similar price point, Horto or Andrea Aprea set a different bar.
Does La Risacca Blu handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is seafood-focused throughout, so this is not a venue for guests avoiding fish or shellfish. The raw fish emphasis means the kitchen's identity is tightly product-driven. Specific allergy or dietary accommodation details are not documented, so check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a factor.
Is La Risacca Blu good for solo dining?
La Risacca Blu can work for solo diners, particularly at lunch or for a business meal near Milan Centrale. The format is à la carte rather than a counter omakase, so there is no inherent solo-dining friction. That said, the venue is most commonly cited for couples and small groups, so a solo visit at dinner on a weekend may feel slightly undersupported.
Can I eat at the bar at La Risacca Blu?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available data for La Risacca Blu. What is documented is that the restaurant greets guests with a prominent fresh-fish display — the fish counter is part of the entrance experience. check the venue's official channels to ask about counter or bar options before assuming availability.
Location
Via Alessandro Tadino, 13, 20124 Milano MI, Italy
Milan, Italy
Compare La Risacca Blu
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| La Risacca Blu | Seafood | 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 |
How La Risacca Blu stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Enrico Bartolini, Creative, €€€€
- Cracco in Galleria, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Andrea Aprea, Modern Italian, Italian Contemporary, €€€€
- Seta, Modern Italian, €€€€
- Horto, Modern Italian, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
La Risacca Blu sits in a different tier from most of Milan's fine dining conversation. Enrico Bartolini, Cracco in Galleria, Andrea Aprea, Seta, and Horto are all €€€€ operations with Michelin stars and a corresponding booking challenge. La Risacca Blu at €€€ with a Michelin Plate, not a star, is a meaningfully different proposition: less ceremony, easier to get into, and focused on a single category rather than a tasting menu progression.
For diners deciding between La Risacca Blu and Milan's starred tier: if the occasion calls for a creative, multi-course experience with full front-of-house formality, book Seta or Andrea Aprea instead. If you want product-led seafood at a lower price point without the booking difficulty, La Risacca Blu is the more practical answer. The Michelin Plate signals a kitchen that clears a quality bar, it just does not carry the same weight as a star when you are comparing experience depth.
Within the Milan seafood category specifically, Langosteria Bistrot is the direct comparison and the higher-profile address, harder to book, higher spend, stronger brand recognition. La Risacca Blu is the better choice if availability is a factor or if you want a more relaxed register. For value across the full Milan dining picture, La Risacca Blu offers the most accessible entry into Michelin-recognised seafood in the city.
Recognized By
Explore Milan
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