Restaurant in Milan, Italy
Creative Italian cooking in a courtyard setting.

ZELO offers modern Italian cooking in a 15th-century garden courtyard in Milan's Quadrilatero della Moda, with Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 and a 10,000-bottle wine inventory. Book dinner for the full menu; request the terrace in summer. At €€€€, it earns the price if setting and wine depth matter as much as the food.
ZELO earns its place at the leading of Milan's fine-dining shortlist for a specific type of diner: one who wants creative Italian cooking in a setting that genuinely earns a €€€€ price point. The 15th-century inner courtyard, the Michelin Plate recognition (held in both 2024 and 2025), and a wine list of 800 selections with 10,000 bottles in inventory make this a credible choice for a serious meal. Book it for a special occasion dinner, a client lunch, or as your highest-commitment restaurant night in the city. If you want a Michelin-starred room instead, look at Enrico Bartolini or Seta. But if the combination of garden setting, deep Italian wine depth, and modern cooking suits your priorities, ZELO is the right call.
ZELO sits on Via Gesù, 6/8, in Milan's Quadrilatero della Moda, one of the city's most expensive and well-trafficked neighbourhoods. The address alone signals the clientele: fashion professionals, business travellers, and visitors who want a meal that matches the quality of the surrounding zip code. What separates ZELO from many restaurants at this price level is the physical setting: the dining room opens onto the garden of a 15th-century inner courtyard, with a summer terrace that becomes one of the more atmospheric places to eat in the city when the weather cooperates. If you're visiting between late spring and early autumn, request the terrace. It changes the experience considerably.
Chef Fabrizio Borraccino leads the kitchen with a programme that sits between creative Italian and considered tradition. The menu shifts meaningfully between lunch and dinner, which is directly relevant to how you plan your visits. At lunch, some dishes give way to salads, making the midday service lighter and faster, with a pace that suits business dining or a midday break during a longer day in the city. In the evening, raw fish and seafood take a more prominent position, and the full creative range of the menu is available. If you are planning a single visit and want the complete picture of what the kitchen can do, dinner is the right session. Lunch is worth booking if you are in the area and want something at this quality level without committing to a full evening.
The Italian classics on the menu, including vitello tonnato and breaded veal, are deliberate anchors rather than concessions. They tell you this kitchen is not purely experimental: it respects the canon and uses it as a reference point. That balance is part of what makes ZELO work across different types of visits and different companion profiles. You can bring a client who wants something recognisable and a food-focused traveller who wants to see what the kitchen does at its most ambitious, and both will find something.
If you are in Milan more than once and considering returning to ZELO across visits, there is a logical progression worth following. On a first visit, dinner gives you the broadest view: the full menu is available, the evening atmosphere in the courtyard is at its leading, and the wine programme is most actively engaged. Wine Director Lorenza Panzera and Sommelier Alessandra Breda oversee a list that draws serious depth from Piedmont, Tuscany, and Trentino-Alto Adige, with Burgundy as the standout French option. The corkage fee is €65 if you bring your own, which is on the higher end but consistent with a list priced at the $$$ tier with many bottles above €100. On a second visit, try lunch: different menu composition, different pace, and a chance to compare the kitchen's register in a lighter format. A third visit, if the season allows, should be on the terrace in summer, which is a genuinely different physical experience from the interior room.
For wine-focused travellers, ZELO's 800-selection list with 10,000 bottles in inventory puts it in a category alongside some of the more serious wine programmes in northern Italy. If Italian wine depth matters to you, the Piedmont and Tuscany sections in particular reward attention. You can find comparable wine ambition at Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence at the very leading of the Italian wine restaurant spectrum, or at Dal Pescatore in Runate for a different regional perspective. Within Milan, few rooms at this price point match ZELO's inventory depth.
For more options in Milan's fine-dining range, see Cracco in Galleria, Acanto, Don Carlos, 28 Posti, and Altriménti. Our full Milan restaurants guide covers the full range of price points and formats. For planning the rest of your trip, use our Milan hotels guide, Milan bars guide, Milan wineries guide, and Milan experiences guide.
If you are building a wider Italian fine-dining itinerary, ZELO pairs well with a visit to Osteria Francescana in Modena, Piazza Duomo in Alba for Piedmontese depth, Le Calandre in Rubano, or Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico if you are heading north into Alto Adige. For a global frame of reference on modern tasting-menu cooking, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai represent what the format looks like at its most technically demanding.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZELO | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | The elegant ZELO restaurant enjoys a beautiful setting in the garden of a 15C inner courtyard, which also boasts an attractive summer terrace. The cuisine is modern in style, created by a chef who uses the best Italian ingredients to prepare creative and contemporary dishes, as well as a few Italian classic favourites such as vitello tonnato and breaded veal. Some dishes are not available at lunchtime, when they are replaced by salads, while in the evening raw fish and seafood options take centre stage.; Michelin Plate (2025); WINE: Wine Strengths: Piedmont, Tuscany, Trentino–Alto Adige, Italy, Burgundy, France Pricing: $$$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $65 Selections: 800 Inventory: 10,000 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Italian Pricing: $$$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Lunch and Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: Lorenza Panzera Sommelier: Alessandra Breda Chef: Fabrizio Borraccino General Manager: Andrea Obertello; 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 | — |
| Contraste | Progressive Italian, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how ZELO measures up.
ZELO's setting in a 15th-century inner courtyard suggests limited flexibility for large parties, and no private dining room is documented in the venue record. Groups of 4–6 are likely manageable, but for parties of 8 or more, Andrea Obertello's team at the general manager level is the right contact to check capacity before booking. If a dedicated private room is a firm requirement, Seta at Hotel Mandarin Oriental or Andrea Aprea offer more confirmed private dining infrastructure.
ZELO holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 under chef Fabrizio Borraccino, which signals consistent quality without the full star price premium. The menu shifts between lunch and dinner: daytime leans on salads and lighter plates, while evenings feature raw fish and seafood more prominently, so time your visit to the format you want. The wine list runs to 800 selections with 10,000 bottles in inventory, with particular depth in Piedmont, Tuscany, and Burgundy — worth engaging with sommelier Alessandra Breda. At €€€€ pricing, expect a two-course meal above €66 before wine.
Yes, with a clear fit: the 15th-century courtyard and summer terrace give ZELO a setting that works for milestone dinners, and the Michelin Plate provides a credibility anchor for guests you want to impress. It sits in the Quadrilatero della Moda, so the neighbourhood itself adds occasion weight. For an anniversary or birthday where the room matters as much as the food, this is one of the stronger options in Milan's €€€€ range — Seta at the Mandarin is the main competitor for the same occasion type, with a higher price ceiling.
No specific tasting menu format is documented in the venue record, so the value case rests on à la carte at €€€€ pricing. ZELO's Michelin Plate recognition and chef Fabrizio Borraccino's use of Italian ingredients in contemporary formats suggests the cooking justifies the spend for diners who want creative Italian rather than traditional. If a structured tasting menu experience is the specific goal, Contraste or Andrea Aprea — both offering defined progression menus — may be a better fit.
No bar seating is documented for ZELO in the available venue record. The restaurant's format, a courtyard and terrace setting in a fine-dining context at €€€€, points toward a sit-down table service model rather than counter or bar dining. If bar-seat flexibility is important to you, this is not the venue — Cracco in Galleria or 28 Posti offer more informal access points within Milan's restaurant range.
For a step up in formal recognition, Andrea Aprea and Seta both hold Michelin stars and operate at a similar or higher price point. Contraste is worth considering if you want a more contemporary tasting-menu format. Cracco in Galleria offers comparable prestige in a higher-profile room. If the courtyard setting is the draw at ZELO, there is no direct structural equivalent among Milan's top-tier options, making ZELO the specific choice for that format at the Michelin Plate level.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.