Restaurant in Turin, Italy
Piedmont tasting menus with genuine creative range.

A Michelin-starred tasting-menu restaurant in Turin with a clear culinary argument: Piedmontese tradition as the foundation, with the range to move beyond it. At €€€€, it's the most complete formal dining option in the city for first-timers. Book two to three weeks out for weekend evenings; the surprise menu is the format to request.
If you're deciding between Andrea Larossa and Opera for your one serious dinner in Turin, Andrea Larossa is the stronger call for anyone who wants Piedmontese cooking treated with technical rigour rather than theatrical flair. This is a tasting-menu restaurant where the kitchen has a clear point of view: the region's ingredients and traditions are the foundation, but the menu doesn't stop there. That dual range — from regionally grounded to Italy-wide and beyond , gives first-timers more to work with than restaurants that plant a flag and don't move.
Andrea Larossa operates from a large dining room on Via Sabaudia in the residential southern edge of Turin, a neighbourhood that signals intent: this is a destination restaurant, not one you stumble into. The room is described in Michelin's notes as the setting for service that is friendly, courteous, and professional , which, at the €€€€ price point, is exactly what's warranted and not always delivered elsewhere at this tier in the city.
The menu structure is designed to accommodate different types of diners. There are at least three tasting directions: one that stays close to Piedmont's culinary identity (with some reinterpretation), one that ranges more freely across Italian and international influence, and a surprise menu for guests who want to hand the decision entirely to the kitchen. For a first visit, the surprise menu is worth considering if you're comfortable with the format , it's how kitchens at this level tend to show their leading work, without the constraint of expectation.
The kitchen's fluency across both a disciplined regional style and a more creative register is the technical argument for booking here over comparably priced alternatives. Most €€€€ restaurants in Turin commit to one register and execute it well. Andrea Larossa's ability to hold both without the menus feeling incoherent is the distinguishing quality Michelin's inspectors have consistently noted across multiple cycles. That kind of range is genuinely harder to pull off than it sounds , it requires a kitchen that understands the tradition deeply enough to know when and how far to depart from it.
Restaurant holds a Michelin star, which at this price tier is the clearest available trust signal. Among Italian contemporary restaurants in northern Italy, that credential sits in a competitive set that includes Enrico Bartolini in Milan and Le Calandre in Rubano, though those are different formats and different cities. Within Turin itself, it places Andrea Larossa alongside Cannavacciuolo Bistrot and Piano35 at the leading of the formal dining tier.
Service runs Thursday through Sunday evenings from 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM, with Saturday and Sunday lunch sittings from 11:30 AM to 1:00 PM. Monday and Tuesday are closed. Wednesday evenings are open. That's a deliberately tight operating schedule , five dinner services per week plus two lunches , which means the room does not have surplus capacity to absorb late bookings. For weekend evenings, booking two to three weeks ahead is the sensible minimum. The Saturday or Sunday lunch sitting is likely the most accessible slot for shorter booking windows, and it's worth considering if you want the full tasting experience without a late finish. Booking is rated Easy, which means availability exists if you plan ahead, but don't assume you can secure a weekend dinner table on a few days' notice.
No phone number is listed publicly, so the most reliable booking route is through the restaurant's own reservation system. If you're building a Turin itinerary around this dinner, check Pearl's Turin hotels guide for accommodation nearby, and use the full Turin restaurants guide to plan the rest of your meals. Turin's bar scene and aperitivo culture pair well with a later dinner start , Pearl's Turin bars guide covers the leading pre-dinner options in the city.
Andrea Larossa works leading for diners who want a formal tasting-menu experience with genuine culinary range, not just technical polish applied to one narrow tradition. If your priority is strict Piedmontese authenticity at lower cost, Consorzio at €€ delivers that more efficiently. If you want something more experimental in format, Scatto or Magazzino 52 are worth considering. But if you're a first-timer in Turin looking for one dinner that covers the range of what serious Italian contemporary cooking can do in this region, Andrea Larossa is the most complete answer in its price tier.
Solo diners are accommodated in a large dining room format, which means you won't be at a counter , factor that into your decision if counter seating is your preference for solo visits. Groups can be handled given the room size, though specific private dining arrangements should be confirmed at the time of booking.
For broader context on northern Italy's leading tables, Osteria Francescana in Modena, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Dal Pescatore in Runate, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico represent the wider field Andrea Larossa sits within. Among Italian Contemporary specialists outside Italy, Agli Amici in Rovinj and L'Olivo in Anacapri offer useful comparisons for the style. Turin's own experiences guide and wineries guide round out the trip if you're spending more than one day in the city.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Andrea Larossa | Chef Andrea Larossa, a real connoisseur of the ingredients and tradition of Piedmont but equally at ease with more creative cuisine, is at the helm at this restaurant, where a large dining room is the setting for friendly, courteous and professional service. The tasting menus reflect the spirit of the chef’s cuisine, from the more regionally focused (albeit partly reinterpreted) option to a more imaginative menu which combines influences from all over Italy and even further afield. There’s a surprise menu for guests who prefer to rely on choices made by the chef himself.; Chef Andrea Larossa, a real connoisseur of the ingredients and tradition of Piedmont but equally at ease with more creative cuisine, is at the helm at this restaurant, where a large dining room is the setting for friendly, courteous and professional service. The tasting menus reflect the spirit of the chef’s cuisine, from the more regionally focused (albeit partly reinterpreted) option to a more imaginative menu which combines influences from all over Italy and even further afield. There’s a surprise menu for guests who prefer to rely on choices made by the chef himself.; Chef Andrea Larossa, a real connoisseur of the ingredients and tradition of Piedmont but equally at ease with more creative cuisine, is at the helm at this restaurant, where a large dining room is the setting for friendly, courteous and professional service. The tasting menus reflect the spirit of the chef’s cuisine, from the more regionally focused (albeit partly reinterpreted) option to a more imaginative menu which combines influences from all over Italy and even further afield. There’s a surprise menu for guests who prefer to rely on choices made by the chef himself. | €€€€ | — |
| Condividere | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Del Cambio | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Unforgettable | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Consorzio | €€ | — | |
| Cannavacciuolo Bistrot | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
Comparing your options in Turin for this tier.
Yes, at the €€€€ price point, Andrea Larossa delivers range that most Turin tasting menus don't: a regionally focused Piedmont option, a more wide-ranging Italian menu, and a chef's surprise format. The value case depends on which menu you choose — the surprise menu is the strongest argument for the price, since it commits you fully to the kitchen's judgment. If you want à la carte flexibility, this isn't the right room.
Andrea Larossa runs a tasting-menu-only format across a large dining room on Via Sabaudia in southern Turin. Service is described as friendly and professional rather than stiff or ceremonial, which makes the formal format more accessible. Come with a clear idea of which menu format suits you — Piedmont-focused, broader Italian, or full chef's surprise — because that choice shapes the whole evening.
Book at least two to three weeks ahead for weekend sittings; the Saturday and Sunday lunch slots (11:30 AM to 1:00 PM) are the only midday options and tend to fill quickly. Thursday and Friday evenings are more accessible, but the kitchen runs a tight window — 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM — so late requests on short notice are a risk. Monday and Tuesday are closed entirely.
For Piedmontese tradition with a more historic setting, Del Cambio is the comparison point. Consorzio is a better fit if you want regional cooking without the tasting-menu commitment. Cannavacciuolo Bistrot offers a celebrity-chef alternative with more name recognition. Condividere takes a sharing-format approach that suits groups better than Andrea Larossa's structured menus.
It works for solo diners, but the large dining room format is less intimate than a counter-style restaurant. The chef's surprise menu is the best solo choice — it removes the decision overhead and lets the kitchen take over. At €€€€, solo dining here is a deliberate spend, not a casual option.
The large dining room suggests capacity for groups, but the tasting-menu format means everyone at the table commits to the same structure. Groups with mixed dietary needs or short attention spans for long set menus should clarify logistics before booking. For larger celebratory groups who want more flexibility, Condividere's sharing format is a more practical fit.
There is no documented bar-dining option at Andrea Larossa. The restaurant operates as a formal dining room with a set tasting-menu format, so counter or bar seating is not part of the experience here. If bar-adjacent or casual dining matters to you, Consorzio is a more suitable Turin alternative.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.