Restaurant in Forte dei Marmi, Italy
Sciabola
250ptsSeafood-led hotel dining done with real care.

About Sciabola
Sciabola at the St. Mauritius hotel is Forte dei Marmi's most accessible €€€€ seafood restaurant, with chef Alessandro Ferrarini delivering technically grounded Mediterranean cooking — anchovy butter ravioli and sea bass among the verified signatures. More intimate than Lux Lucis, easier to book than Lorenzo, and available both à la carte and as a tasting menu. Book for a quiet, quality-first dinner.
Sciabola, Forte dei Marmi: The Verdict
If you are choosing between the hotel dining rooms on the Versilian coast, Sciabola at the St. Mauritius is the more composed, locally-rooted option compared to the showier creative formats at Lux Lucis or La Magnolia. Chef Alessandro Ferrarini keeps the focus on seafood with clear technique and local sourcing, offering both tasting menus and à la carte — a flexibility that most comparable hotel restaurants in the area do not provide. Book it for a dinner when you want substance without spectacle.
What to Expect
Sciabola operates inside the St. Mauritius hotel on Via XX Settembre, one of the quieter addresses in central Forte dei Marmi. The kitchen's identity is grounded in Mediterranean seafood: the verified signature preparations include anchovy butter ravioli with bread and raisins, and a sea bass cooked Mediterranean-style with cherry tomatoes, olives, and capers. Both dishes reflect a preference for balance over provocation — local ingredients handled with enough confidence to stay interesting without reaching for novelty. For returning guests, the à la carte format means you can build around those anchors without committing to a full tasting sequence.
Land-based dishes are on the menu, so non-seafood diners are not left stranded, but the kitchen's clearest strengths lie in the sea. If your table includes someone who does not eat fish, Sciabola will manage fine , it just will not be the optimal fit. For a group where seafood is the shared priority, it is a more coherent choice than Bistrot, which leans more casual, or Lorenzo, which carries greater institutional weight but is harder to access on short notice.
The Drinks Program
No specific cocktail menu or cellar details are confirmed in the available data for Sciabola. What the record does indicate is an experienced maître leading service with a young, attentive team , which in Italian hotel dining typically means a well-managed wine service oriented around regional and national producers rather than a standalone bar program. If a strong cocktail offer is your priority for the evening, Forte dei Marmi has dedicated bar venues worth considering; see our full Forte dei Marmi bars guide for options. At Sciabola, drinks are most likely playing a supporting role to the food, which is the right priority given the kitchen's quality.
Leading Time to Go
Forte dei Marmi is a seasonal resort town, and Sciabola operates within that rhythm. The summer months , June through August , bring the highest demand across every restaurant in the area, including the €€€€ tier. If you are visiting in high season, booking a week or more ahead is sensible. Shoulder season (May or September) gives you better availability and a quieter room. Midweek dinners are easier to secure than Friday or Saturday throughout the season. For a special occasion in summer, do not assume last-minute tables will materialise at a hotel restaurant of this standing.
Booking & Practical Details
Sciabola sits at the €€€€ price tier, consistent with the leading end of Forte dei Marmi dining. Booking is rated Easy relative to the local competitive set, which puts it in a more accessible position than Lorenzo (which draws consistent demand from regulars and tourists alike) or the higher-profile creative venues. The address is Via XX Settembre, 28, within the St. Mauritius hotel. No booking phone or direct website is confirmed in the current data , contact through the hotel's front desk is the most reliable route. See also our full Forte dei Marmi restaurants guide and our full Forte dei Marmi hotels guide for broader context on the area.
Sciabola in Context
For seafood cooking at a comparable technical level elsewhere in Italy, Uliassi in Senigallia and Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone represent the benchmark for coastal Italian seafood at the highest tier. Within Forte dei Marmi, Sciabola positions as the most approachable of the hotel restaurant options without sacrificing the quality of ingredients or technique. Explore further with our Forte dei Marmi wineries guide and experiences guide for the full picture of the destination.
How It Compares
Compare Sciabola
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Sciabola | — | |
| Lorenzo | €€€€ | — |
| Lux Lucis | €€€€ | — |
| La Magnolia | €€€€ | — |
| Bistrot | €€€€ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Sciabola good for a special occasion?
Yes, it fits the brief. Sciabola operates inside the St. Mauritius hotel with an experienced maître leading a polished front-of-house team, and chef Alessandro Ferrarini's kitchen offers both tasting menus and à la carte — giving you the structure of a celebratory meal without locking everyone into the same format. At the €€€€ price tier, you are paying for that occasion-ready setup, and it delivers on that expectation.
Can I eat at the bar at Sciabola?
The venue data does not confirm a standalone bar-dining option at Sciabola. As a hotel restaurant at the St. Mauritius, the service model is table-led, coordinated by a maître with a dedicated floor team. If casual counter seating is important to you, clarify directly with the hotel before booking.
What are alternatives to Sciabola in Forte dei Marmi?
Lorenzo is the reference point for high-end Forte dei Marmi dining and draws a longer track record. Lux Lucis offers a more design-forward setting with panoramic views. La Magnolia and Bistrot cover different price points and atmospheres within the town. Sciabola sits closer to Lorenzo in formality but with a tighter local-seafood focus.
What should a first-timer know about Sciabola?
The kitchen's identity is built around seafood using local and seasonal ingredients, with the option to go tasting menu or à la carte — a flexibility not every restaurant at this level offers. It is a hotel restaurant, so the room has that measured, unhurried tone. Booking is rated Easy relative to local competition, but summer demand in Forte dei Marmi means you should not leave it last-minute.
Is Sciabola good for solo dining?
The à la carte format makes it more solo-friendly than a mandatory tasting menu would. A hotel restaurant with a professional, structured service team also tends to be more comfortable for single diners than a loud beachside trattoria. That said, confirm table availability for one when booking, as some hotel dining rooms deprioritise solo covers in peak season.
What should I order at Sciabola?
Chef Alessandro Ferrarini's kitchen leads with seafood: the anchovy butter ravioli with bread and raisins and the Mediterranean-style sea bass with cherry tomatoes, olives, and capers are specifically noted in the available record. Both point to a cooking style that balances local ingredients with some textural and flavour contrast rather than playing it safe. If you are not a seafood eater, land-based options are on the menu, but this kitchen is clearly oriented toward the sea.
How far ahead should I book Sciabola?
Booking is rated Easy relative to Forte dei Marmi's competitive dining set, but Forte dei Marmi is a high-season resort town where July and August fill hotel restaurants quickly. Aim for at least two weeks ahead in summer; shoulder season visitors have more flexibility. Contact the St. Mauritius hotel directly to reserve, as no standalone booking link is confirmed.
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