Restaurant in Adrogué, Argentina
Ti Amo
275ptsSerious Neapolitan pizza outside Buenos Aires.

About Ti Amo
Ti Amo is the contemporary Neapolitan pizza reference in Adrogué, run by sisters Carola and Victoria Santoro. The dough work and sourcing standards put it well above the casual end of the Buenos Aires metro pizza scene. Book for a weekday evening if you want the full attention of a well-run, relaxed room.
The Verdict on Ti Amo
If you have already been to Ti Amo once, the question on a return visit is not whether the quality holds — it does — but whether the Sorrento has displaced the Margherita as your order. The Santoro sisters have built one of the most consistent contemporary Neapolitan pizza destinations in Greater Buenos Aires, and Adrogué is a better food destination because of it. For anyone travelling from the capital specifically for pizza, this is the address to know. For Adrogué locals, it is the kind of place that earns repeat visits precisely because it does not overreach.
What Ti Amo Is
Carola and Victoria Santoro opened Ti Amo as a genuine tribute to Naples , not a vague nod to Italian cooking, but a specific commitment to the contemporary Neapolitan tradition. The room signals that intent immediately: team scarves, Maradona imagery, and a visual language that links Naples and Buenos Aires through the shared mythology of football. The atmosphere is comfortable rather than formal, and the feminine touch the sisters bring to the hospitality side of the operation genuinely affects how at ease guests feel.
The pizza program begins with Carola's long-standing passion for dough, which predates the restaurant itself , she spent years developing her approach in private settings before the sisters committed to a proper pizzeria. That development period shows. The crust work here reflects the kind of attention that separates a serious Neapolitan operation from the dozens of casual pizza spots across the Buenos Aires metro area. Sourcing is central to that quality: contemporary Neapolitan pizza at this level depends on flour, water, fermentation time, and topping ingredients all pulling in the same direction, and Ti Amo's reputation is built on exactly that discipline.
The Margherita remains the most requested pizza on the menu , the right test for any Neapolitan operation, since there is nowhere to hide in that combination. The Sorrento, with its citrus note from lemon, reflects the contemporary side of the menu and gives regulars a reason to order differently. Beyond the pizza, the wine selection by the glass is genuinely useful, which is not a given at this type of venue.
When to Go
For a first visit, a weekday evening gives you the leading read on the kitchen without the weekend pressure. The room fills on Fridays and Saturdays , Ti Amo has become a clear reference point for pizza in the area, and that brings crowds. If you are planning around the pizza itself rather than the social atmosphere, a quieter midweek dinner lets you pay attention to the details. The service is noted as genuinely strong, and you will get more of it when the room is not at capacity.
Seasonally, this is not a venue where the menu shifts dramatically with the calendar in the way a produce-forward restaurant might. The Neapolitan format is relatively stable, which is part of the point. Come when you want serious pizza, not when you are chasing a specific seasonal window.
How to Book
Booking is easy by Buenos Aires-area standards. Ti Amo is not an impossible reservation, though weekend evenings fill at a reasonable pace given its reputation as the area's contemporary Neapolitan reference. Walk-ins may work on slower weekday evenings, but if you are making a specific trip from Buenos Aires, book ahead to avoid the risk. The address is Diagonal Toll 1420 in Adrogué, Buenos Aires Province.
Ti Amo sits comfortably as the anchor of any Adrogué dining itinerary. Pair it with a look at our full Adrogué restaurants guide to plan around it, and check our Adrogué hotels guide if you are staying the night. For broader Buenos Aires Province options, Don Julio in Buenos Aires and Azafrán in Mendoza represent the kind of serious regional dining that rewards a longer trip. Further afield, La Bamba de Areco and Las Balsas Restaurant in Villa La Angostura are worth knowing if you are building a wider Argentina itinerary. Wine-focused travellers should note Cavas Wine Lodge and Entre Cielos in Mendoza as strong pairings with a trip that starts in Adrogué. See also Agrelo in Lujan de Cuyo, Chacras de Coria, Los Talas del Entrerriano, La Table de House of Jasmines, and Awasi Iguazu when planning the wider country. For global reference points in serious dining, Le Bernardin and Lazy Bear illustrate the level of craft and intentionality Ti Amo is operating toward in its own format and price tier. Round out your Adrogué planning with bars, wineries, and experiences guides for the area.
Quick reference: Contemporary Neapolitan pizza, Adrogué, Buenos Aires Province. Chefs: Carola and Victoria Santoro. Booking: easy, advance booking recommended for weekends.
Compare Ti Amo
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ti Amo | The sisters Carola and Vittoria Santoro have become a success story with their contemporary Neapolitan pizza. It all started from Carola's passion for dough, who began offering pizzas in private settings. Then the decision to open a real pizzeria that is a tribute to Naples, from the team scarves to images of Maradona in a comfortable environment where the feminine touch definitely makes a difference in making people feel at ease. Obviously, the most requested pizza is the Margherita followed by the Sorrento with the inevitable citrusy touch of lemon. Great service and a good selection in the glass. An absolute reference for those who love contemporary Neapolitan pizza. | — | |
| Don Julio | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Aramburu | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| 1884 Francis Mallmann | World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Mishiguene | $$$ | — | |
| Roux | $$$ | — |
How Ti Amo stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Ti Amo?
Ti Amo is a contemporary Neapolitan pizzeria run by sisters Carola and Victoria Santoro in Adrogué, south of Buenos Aires. The kitchen is built around a genuine commitment to the Neapolitan format — the Margherita and the Sorrento (finished with lemon) are the two pizzas most worth ordering on a first visit. The room has a Naples-tribute aesthetic, complete with Maradona imagery and team scarves, and the service is notably attentive. Go expecting a focused pizza menu and a decent wine-by-the-glass list, not a broad Italian trattoria.
How far ahead should I book Ti Amo?
A weekday dinner booking a day or two ahead is generally fine. Weekend evenings fill at a reasonable pace given Ti Amo's reputation as a reference point for contemporary Neapolitan pizza in the Buenos Aires province, so aim to book at least three to four days out for Friday or Saturday. It is not the kind of impossible reservation you'd face at a Buenos Aires city destination, but leaving it last-minute on a weekend is a risk.
Can Ti Amo accommodate groups?
Ti Amo's room is described as comfortable rather than large, so groups of six or more should check the venue's official channels to confirm availability and seating. For smaller groups of two to four, a standard booking is straightforward. The warm, feminine-influenced room works well socially, but large parties should not assume capacity without checking ahead.
What are alternatives to Ti Amo in Adrogué?
Adrogué does not have a deep bench of comparable pizzerias at this level, which is part of why Ti Amo carries its local reputation. If you are willing to travel into Buenos Aires city, you will find a wider field of Neapolitan-style options — but within the southern suburbs, Ti Amo is the reference the category points to. For special-occasion dining at a different register entirely, Don Julio or Mishiguene in the city represent different value propositions.
Is Ti Amo good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. The Santoro sisters built Ti Amo as a tribute to Naples — attentive service, a considered room, and wine by the glass — which gives it more occasion-appropriate weight than a standard pizzeria. It works well for a birthday or a celebratory dinner among friends who want quality food without a formal tasting-menu format. If the occasion calls for something more elaborate, you are looking at a city restaurant rather than a suburban pizzeria.
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