Restaurant in Milan, Italy
Milan's serious Sichuan at budget prices.

Le Nove Scodelle is Milan's most focused Sichuan address, earning a Michelin Plate in 2025 for spice-forward, regionally specific Chinese cooking at an accessible € price point. With a 4.3 rating across nearly 1,900 Google reviews and an easy booking window, it is the right call if you want something genuinely different from Milan's Italian fine-dining circuit without the reservation difficulty or the bill.
Picture this: you're in Milan's Viale Monza quarter, a neighbourhood that doesn't make the glossy city guides, and you're sitting down to a bowl of Sichuan food that Michelin's inspectors thought worth flagging with a Plate in 2025. Le Nove Scodelle is the kind of place that rewards knowing about it. If you want spice-forward, regionally specific Chinese cooking at a price point (€) that leaves money for a Negroni elsewhere, book here. If you want a white-tablecloth occasion dinner, look at Enrico Bartolini instead. But for what it actually is — a focused, affordable, Michelin-recognised Sichuan restaurant in a city where ethnic cuisine is finally getting serious — Le Nove Scodelle is worth your attention.
Italy's relationship with Chinese food has changed. For years, the default was the catch-all, please-everyone Chinese restaurant found on every high street. Michelin's own note on Le Nove Scodelle acknowledges the shift directly: ethnic cuisine is becoming more specialised across Italy, and this restaurant is part of that move. Le Nove Scodelle commits specifically to the Sichuan province in south-west China , a cuisine defined by its use of Sichuan peppercorn, fermented bean pastes, dried chillies, and the numbing-heat combination locals call mala. That specificity matters. You are not coming here for a generalised pan-Asian menu; you are coming for a focused regional Chinese cooking tradition that has its own identity and logic.
The Michelin Plate awarded in 2025 is a meaningful signal. A Plate does not carry the cultural weight of a Star, but it tells you Michelin's inspectors ate here, found the food worth recommending, and described the cooking as "exciting and original cuisine full of spicy flavours." That's a useful quality floor. For context on how seriously Michelin takes Chinese cooking internationally, compare Le Nove Scodelle with peers like Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin (two Stars for Chinese-influenced cooking) or Mister Jiu's in San Francisco (a Star for Chinese-American cuisine). Le Nove Scodelle is earlier in that arc , but the trajectory is credible.
Within Milan's Chinese restaurant scene, the competition includes Bon Wei and Gong. Bon Wei has a longer track record in the city and leans toward a broader Cantonese and Shanghainese menu. Gong skews more upscale in its presentation. Le Nove Scodelle's advantage is its regional specificity: if Sichuan heat and spice is what you're after, this is the more committed address. Ba Restaurant rounds out the higher-end end of Milan's Chinese dining options for those who want a more formal room.
The Viale Monza address , on the north-east edge of the city centre , keeps this restaurant away from tourist circuits. That is part of its character. The neighbourhood is working Milan rather than fashion-week Milan, and the room's energy reflects that. Expect a lively, occupied dining room rather than a hushed special-occasion setting. The ambient noise level runs toward animated: this is a place where families, regulars, and people who know what they're ordering create a specific kind of busy-restaurant atmosphere. If you need a quiet room for a business conversation, this is not your leading option in Milan. If you want a genuinely engaging dinner with high energy, it works well.
At the € price point, Le Nove Scodelle is a natural candidate for off-premise eating, and Sichuan food has structural advantages here compared with delicate cuisines. Dishes built around braised meats, chilli oils, and slow-cooked proteins tend to travel better than, say, a soufflé or a composed fine-dining plate. The mala flavour profile , the fat-soluble spice compounds in Sichuan peppercorn and chilli oil , typically holds across a delivery window better than acid-bright or foam-based dishes. That said, specific delivery packaging, platforms, and policies for Le Nove Scodelle are not confirmed in our data. The practical recommendation: if you are in Milan and want Sichuan food that Michelin has flagged as worth eating, check current delivery availability directly. The food logic supports it; the operational details need direct confirmation.
For a special occasion where delivery is the format , a home dinner, a hotel room, a group gathering , the € price point means you can order generously without anxiety. A spread of multiple dishes across a group is very achievable at this price tier. That is a meaningful advantage over Milan's higher-end Italian options if you are looking for a group meal with genuine culinary interest rather than just convenience food.
Le Nove Scodelle sits at the easy end of the booking difficulty scale. You are not competing with a 30-day release window or a 9 AM refresh. The price point (€) and Viale Monza location keep demand accessible compared with Milan's Michelin-starred Italian fine-dining circuit. That said, a 4.3 rating across 1,861 Google reviews confirms a consistent local following , this is not an empty room. Book a few days ahead for weekends to be safe, but walk-in attempts on weekday evenings are likely feasible.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty | Michelin Recognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Le Nove Scodelle | Sichuan Chinese | € | Easy | Plate 2025 |
| Bon Wei | Chinese | €€ | Moderate | Not listed |
| Gong | Chinese | €€€ | Moderate | Not listed |
| Enrico Bartolini | Creative Italian | €€€€ | Hard | 3 Stars |
| Cracco in Galleria | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Hard | 1 Star |
Book Le Nove Scodelle if you want Sichuan cooking with a Michelin quality signal at an accessible price in Milan. It suits a casual special occasion, a group dinner where everyone wants something genuinely different from Milan's default Italian circuit, or a solo dinner if you're curious about where the city's ethnic restaurant scene is heading. It is a poor fit if you need a formal room, a quiet atmosphere, or a venue with a broad wine programme. For a full picture of where Le Nove Scodelle sits within the city, see our full Milan restaurants guide. For hotels nearby, our Milan hotels guide covers options across price tiers. If you want to compare Milan's bar scene before or after dinner, our Milan bars guide is useful. And for those building a broader Italy itinerary, Pearl also covers Osteria Francescana in Modena, Dal Pescatore in Runate, Uliassi in Senigallia, Reale in Castel di Sangro, Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico. Planning beyond restaurants? Our Milan wineries guide and our Milan experiences guide cover the rest.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Le Nove Scodelle | Now available everywhere in Italy, ethnic cuisine is gradually becoming more specialised, as is the case in this restaurant serving specialities from the province of Szechuan in south-west China. Exciting and original cuisine full of spicy flavours.; Michelin Plate (2025); Now available everywhere in Italy, ethnic cuisine is gradually becoming more specialised, as is the case in this restaurant serving specialities from the province of Szechuan in south-west China. Exciting and original cuisine full of spicy flavours. | € | — |
| Enrico Bartolini | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Cracco in Galleria | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Andrea Aprea | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Seta | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Horto | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
The venue database does not confirm a bar or counter seating arrangement at Le Nove Scodelle. At the € price point and Sichuan format, this is most likely a table-service restaurant rather than a bar-dining setup. check the venue's official channels before planning a bar-seat visit.
Le Nove Scodelle sits at the accessible end of the booking difficulty scale — you are not chasing a 30-day release window. A few days' notice is generally sufficient for weekday visits; aim for a week ahead on weekends. At the € price point with a Michelin Plate, it draws a steady local crowd, so booking ahead is still worth doing.
Specific tasting menu details are not confirmed in the available venue data. What is confirmed is a Michelin Plate (2025) recognition for Sichuan specialities from south-west China at a € price point, which signals strong value across the menu. If a tasting format is available, it is likely one of the more affordable Michelin-recognised options in Milan.
Private room or large-group capacity is not confirmed in the venue data. For a Sichuan restaurant at the € price range on Viale Monza, smaller groups of 4–6 are a reasonable fit; for larger parties, call ahead to confirm table configuration before booking.
For Sichuan cooking at a comparable price in Milan, Le Nove Scodelle is the only Michelin-recognised option in the city's Chinese category, which makes direct like-for-like comparison difficult. If you want a step up in formality and budget, Milan's broader Michelin scene includes Italian fine-dining options, but none replicate the Sichuan format at this price. Le Nove Scodelle is the practical choice if spicy regional Chinese cuisine is specifically what you want.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.