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    Restaurant in Turin, Italy

    Scatto

    290Pearl Points

    Piazza San Carlo address, real Piedmontese cooking.

    Scatto, Restaurant in Turin

    About Scatto

    A Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen on Piazza San Carlo that balances traditional Piedmontese cooking with creative contemporary dishes, backed by a wine list Michelin describes as superb. At €€€ it sits below Turin's starred tier in price but not by much in quality. Book if you want serious food and a strong regional cellar without the €€€€ premium.

    Verdict

    If you are weighing up where to spend €€€ on a serious dinner in central Turin, Scatto gives you more breathing room than the city's heavier-hitting €€€€ tables while still delivering cooking that earned a Michelin Plate in 2024. It sits in a different tier from Del Cambio or Piano35 on price, but the quality gap is narrower than the price difference suggests. For a food-and-wine focused traveller who wants a genuine Piedmontese kitchen with contemporary ambition — and does not need a trophy-shelf name to justify the booking — Scatto is the better call.

    The Space

    The address puts you on Piazza San Carlo, one of the grandest baroque squares in northern Italy, but the dining room itself is reached through an inner courtyard, which creates an immediate shift in register. The baroque theatre of the piazza drops away; what you enter instead is a modern dining room with an open-view kitchen. The layout privileges transparency , you can watch the kitchen work from the room, which makes pacing feel less opaque than at more closed-off restaurants. The spatial contrast between the monumental square and the clean interior is not incidental: it sets a tone that matches the food, which balances classical Piedmontese references with a more contemporary kitchen sensibility. If the dining rooms at Opera or Andrea Larossa feel designed to signal prestige at every turn, Scatto's room is quieter about it , which some diners will prefer.

    The Food and Wine Program

    Scatto offers both à la carte and a tasting menu, which gives you genuine flexibility. The kitchen works a balance of traditional Piedmontese dishes and more creative output, and the Michelin recognition specifically calls out the quality of both. This is not a kitchen using Piedmontese ingredients as a backdrop for cooking that has no regional interest , the region is the reference point, and the creativity works around it rather than over it.

    The wine list deserves attention on its own terms. Michelin's own notes describe it as superb, which at a €€€ price point in Piedmont , one of Italy's most wine-serious regions , is worth taking seriously. Piedmont's cellar depth (Barolo, Barbaresco, Barbera, Dolcetto, Arneis) gives a committed wine program real material to work with, and a well-constructed list here can match or exceed what you'd find at more expensive addresses. For a diner who treats the wine pairing as equally important as the food, Scatto's list is a reason to book rather than an afterthought. The drinks program at comparable addresses like Magazzino 52 or Cannavacciuolo Bistrot may be solid, but few at this price tier in the city will have Scatto's combination of regional depth and formal recognition. If you are visiting Turin specifically for the wine culture and want a dinner where the cellar matches that ambition, this matters.

    For context on what a serious Piedmontese wine list can anchor, it is worth noting that the region's leading tables , from Osteria Francescana in Modena to Uliassi in Senigallia , treat the wine program as a structural element of the experience, not a supplement. Scatto's list appears to operate in that same register, at a more accessible price.

    Who Should Book

    Scatto works leading for food and wine travellers who want Piedmontese cooking with some creative range, an open kitchen to watch, and a wine list that reflects the region's depth , without paying the €€€€ premium that Turin's more decorated addresses require. It is also the right call if you want flexibility between à la carte and tasting formats; not every kitchen at this level gives you both without pushback. If you are coming to Turin to explore the wine culture as thoroughly as the food, the combination of a superb list and a Michelin-recognised kitchen at €€€ is genuinely good value. For broader Turin food planning, see our full Turin restaurants guide, and for post-dinner options check our full Turin bars guide.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Easy to book , no extended lead time required, though booking ahead is advisable for weekend evenings given the piazza location's foot traffic. Budget: €€€ , mid-to-upper range for Turin, noticeably below the city's €€€€ tier. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate given the Michelin recognition and setting; formal dress is not required but the room will not feel comfortable in sportswear. Location: Piazza San Carlo, 156 , directly on one of Turin's most central squares, accessible on foot from most city-centre hotels. For accommodation options nearby, see our full Turin hotels guide. Format: Both à la carte and tasting menu available. Google rating: 4.7 from 98 reviews.

    Turin Context

    Turin's restaurant scene has strong Piedmontese roots and a growing number of contemporary kitchens. For pure regional cooking at lower prices, Consorzio at €€ is the comparison. For Michelin-starred cooking with a larger spend, Andrea Larossa and Piano35 represent the leading end. Scatto sits between those poles , better kitchen credentials than most mid-price options, more accessible than the starred tier. If your trip extends beyond Turin, the broader Italian fine dining circuit includes Dal Pescatore in Runate, Reale in Castel di Sangro, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico for reference points on what Michelin-recognised Italian cooking looks like at different price and ambition levels. For wineries in the region, see our full Turin wineries guide, and for experiences beyond the table, our full Turin experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Scatto?

    The entrance is easy to miss — you pass through an inner courtyard off Piazza San Carlo before reaching the modern dining room with its open-view kitchen. Scatto holds a Michelin Plate (2024), which signals consistent cooking quality rather than destination-level ambition. You can go à la carte or tasting menu, so there is no obligation to commit to a full set format on a first visit.

    Can Scatto accommodate groups?

    The venue data does not confirm a private dining room, so groups larger than six should check the venue's official channels before assuming availability. The courtyard approach and open-kitchen dining room suggest a mid-size space, which can make large-group bookings harder to guarantee.

    What should I wear to Scatto?

    The setting is Piazza San Carlo — one of Turin's grandest baroque squares — and the dining room is modern rather than formal. Neat, put-together clothing is the practical call: not a jacket-required level of formality, but dressier than casual. The Michelin Plate recognition puts it in the mid-formal bracket.

    Is Scatto worth the price?

    At €€€, Scatto sits in Turin's mid-to-upper tier and is backed by a Michelin Plate (2024), which supports the pricing. For a square-by-square comparison, Consorzio offers authentic Piedmontese cooking at lower prices, while Del Cambio is the move if you want full ceremony and history. Scatto is the right call if you want creative range and a wine list to match without committing to the most formal room in the city.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Scatto?

    The tasting menu at Scatto draws from the same kitchen balance of traditional Piedmontese and more creative dishes, so the format works if you want the kitchen to sequence the meal for you. Because à la carte is also available, the tasting menu is not the only way to access the full range — so skip it if you prefer to order around specific dishes or keep the bill more controlled.

    What are alternatives to Scatto in Turin?

    Consorzio is the first alternative to consider for straightforward Piedmontese cooking at a lower price point. Del Cambio is the choice if you want historic grandeur and a more formal occasion. Condividere and Piano35 both offer contemporary formats with different room experiences — Condividere is more social and sharing-focused, Piano35 adds a high-floor city view. Scatto makes most sense when you want a balance of tradition and creativity without the ceremony of Del Cambio.

    Location

    P.za S. Carlo, 156, 10123 Torino TO, Italy

    Turin, Italy

    Compare Scatto

    Quick Value Check: Scatto
    VenuePrice
    Scatto€€€
    Condividere€€€€
    Unforgettable€€€€
    Del Cambio€€€€
    Consorzio€€
    Piano35€€€€

    What to weigh when choosing between Scatto and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    • Condividere, Progressive, Italian Contemporary, €€€€
    • Unforgettable, Modern Italian, Innovative, €€€€
    • Del Cambio, Progressive Italian, Contemporary, €€€€
    • Consorzio, Piemontese, Piedmontese, €€
    • Piano35, Italian Contemporary, €€€€

    Against Turin's €€€€ tier, Scatto's value case is clear. Del Cambio and Piano35 both carry more prestige and charge accordingly, if a trophy address or a starred name on the reservation matters to your trip, budget for those instead. But if you want Michelin-recognised cooking in a modern room with an open kitchen and a wine list that Michelin itself calls superb, Scatto delivers that at a noticeably lower price point. The gap in experience is smaller than the gap in cost.

    For pure Piedmontese tradition at the lowest price in this comparison, Consorzio at €€ is the right call. It does not try to be contemporary and does not pretend otherwise. Scatto is the better choice when you want some creative range alongside the regional anchoring, and when the wine list is a genuine priority rather than an afterthought. Condividere and Unforgettable at €€€€ lean further into innovation and will suit diners who want the kitchen to take more risks, but at a higher spend and with more booking friction.

    In practical terms: book Scatto if you are a food and wine traveller prioritising value and a serious cellar at mid-upper prices. Book Andrea Larossa if you want a starred experience and are prepared to spend more. Book Consorzio if budget is the primary filter and you want traditional Piedmontese without the contemporary framing.

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