Restaurant in Turin, Italy
Proper Piedmontese at trattoria prices — book it.

A two-room trattoria on Via Maria Vittoria with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025, Fratelli Bruzzone is the right call for traditional Piedmontese cooking at genuinely low prices. Book ahead — the limited seats fill fast — and come ready to order across the full menu, from agnolotti to bonet. One of Turin's cleaner decisions for a special dinner without the spend.
Fratelli Bruzzone operates out of two small dining rooms on Via Maria Vittoria, and that limited footprint is the first thing to know before you plan your evening. Seats are scarce enough that booking is not optional — walk-ins are a gamble, especially on weekends. The upside of that constraint is a room that never feels like a canteen: the scale keeps the atmosphere close and the service attentive in a way that larger trattorias in central Turin rarely manage.
This is the right address for a special occasion meal if your priority is traditional Piedmontese cooking at a price that won't require a separate budget line. The single-euro-sign pricing puts Fratelli Bruzzone well below most of Turin's celebratory dining options , Del Cambio and Cannavacciuolo Bistrot operate at four price brackets higher , yet the kitchen has held a Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, which signals genuine quality, not just good value by default.
The Michelin recognition specifically calls out the breadth of the menu and the confidence of execution across Piedmont's canon: anchovies in green sauce, baked onions with bagna cauda, agnolotti, tripe, chicken, bonet, and hazelnut tart with zabaglione. That is a serious roll-call of regional dishes, and the recognition notes how difficult it is to stop ordering , which is a practical warning as much as a compliment. Come hungry and plan to pace yourself, because the menu rewards people who order across multiple courses rather than treating it as a quick dinner stop.
Siblings Martina and Gabriele Bruzzone run the kitchen together, and the Bib Gourmand citations position them among the value leaders in the city's Piedmontese category. For a comparable price point with similar regional focus, Consorzio is the closest peer , both sit at the €€ level, both draw from the same regional pantry. The question of which to book depends on format: Consorzio trends younger and louder; Fratelli Bruzzone, based on its scale and Michelin framing, reads as the quieter, more traditional option. If a relaxed conversation is part of your evening, that matters.
Hours are not confirmed in available data, but the positioning , a traditional trattoria with two small rooms in central Turin , fits the standard Italian dinner window of 7:30 to 10:00 PM. If you are looking for a late-night dining option after a concert or theatre, this is not reliably the answer; Fratelli Bruzzone's appeal is in a properly paced dinner, not a quick post-midnight supper. For later-evening flexibility in Turin, the Turin bars guide covers venues that keep kitchen hours running longer. What Fratelli Bruzzone does offer for a special evening is the combination of intimacy, regional depth, and price that makes it one of the few places in the city where you can eat very well, very specifically, without the cost becoming a talking point.
The Google rating of 4.6 across 444 reviews adds a layer of confidence here. That volume of reviews at that score, for a two-room trattoria, is harder to sustain than a single glossy opening review , it reflects repeat visits and consistent delivery over time.
Booking is easy by Turin standards , this is not a table that requires months of forward planning the way a Michelin-starred room might. That said, the limited seat count means booking ahead by at least a week for weekends is sensible. Phone and online booking details are not confirmed here; approach directly via the restaurant's address at Via Maria Vittoria 34/a. Dress is not formally prescribed, but the Bib Gourmand context and the neighbourhood suggest smart-casual is the right register , not a jacket-required room, but not a jeans-and-trainers situation either.
For those building a wider Turin itinerary, Fratelli Bruzzone pairs naturally with an aperitivo stop beforehand , Turin's Piedmontese vermouth culture makes the pre-dinner hour worth planning. Our full Turin restaurants guide covers the broader field, and Antiche Sere and Madama Piola are worth considering as alternative trattoria-style options if Fratelli Bruzzone is fully booked. For Piedmontese cooking at a higher price point outside the city, Antica Corona Reale in Cervere and Locanda Sant'Uffizio Enrico Bartolini in Cioccaro represent the regional ceiling.
Book Fratelli Bruzzone for a date or a small celebration where the point is eating well rather than being seen eating well. The Bib Gourmand, the price, the intimate scale, and the classical Piedmontese menu make it one of the cleaner decisions in this city for that brief. If you want modern Italian cooking with a bigger room and a longer wine list, look at Condividere or Casa Vicina. If traditional Piedmont at honest prices is the goal, Fratelli Bruzzone is the direct answer. Reserve ahead, order widely, and don't rush the meal.
Turin has strong competition in this category , San Tommaso 10, L'Acino, and others hold their own , but few combine the Michelin endorsement, the price point, and the intimacy of two small rooms in the same package. For broader context on where Piedmontese cooking sits nationally, it is worth knowing that the region feeds some of Italy's most decorated tables: Osteria Francescana, Dal Pescatore, and Enoteca Pinchiorri draw from the same northern Italian culinary tradition, albeit at a completely different scale and price. What Fratelli Bruzzone offers is that same seriousness of intent at a fraction of the cost. That is the reason to book.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fratelli Bruzzone | Piedmontese | € | The Bruzzone brothers deserve a round of applause for this restaurant and its extraordinary traditional Piedmontese cuisine. In just two small dining rooms (booking is recommended), guests can choose from an unforgettable array of dishes including anchovies in green sauce, baked onions with bagna cauda (an anchovy-based dip), superb agnolotti (stuffed pasta), tripe, chicken, bonet (a type of dessert) and hazelnut tart with zabaglione. With so much choice, it’s difficult to stop eating – and once you’ve left, you’ll want to return as soon as possible!; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| Condividere | Progressive, Italian Contemporary | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Del Cambio | Progressive Italian, Contemporary | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Unforgettable | Modern Italian, Innovative | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Consorzio | Piemontese, Piedmontese | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| Cannavacciuolo Bistrot | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Fratelli Bruzzone measures up.
The kitchen's identity is rooted in traditional Piedmontese cooking — tripe, anchovies, stuffed pasta, zabaglione — so this is not a venue built around dietary flexibility. Guests with serious restrictions should check the venue's official channels before booking. The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition here is specifically tied to execution of Piedmont's canon, not range of substitutions.
This is a traditional trattoria operating out of two small rooms on Via Maria Vittoria at budget-friendly prices (€ range), not a formal dining room. Neat, comfortable clothing is appropriate. There is no indication in available data of any dress requirement, and the pricing and format both point to a relaxed setting.
Bar seating is not documented in the available venue data. Given that Fratelli Bruzzone operates across two small dining rooms with booking recommended, counter or bar dining is unlikely to be a primary option. Plan to reserve a table rather than walk in and expect bar service.
Fratelli Bruzzone is a trattoria in the € price bracket, not a tasting-menu format restaurant. The Michelin guide specifically highlights the breadth of à la carte choice — anchovies in green sauce, agnolotti, tripe, bonet, hazelnut tart — as a strength. Order widely from the menu rather than expecting a set tasting structure.
For a bigger occasion with more room grandeur, Del Cambio is Turin's historic fine-dining address, though at a significantly higher price point. Consorzio offers a younger, more contemporary take on Piedmontese cooking with a strong local following. Cannavacciuolo Bistrot brings a Michelin-starred approach at bistro prices. Fratelli Bruzzone sits below all of these on price and above most on traditional authenticity, which is exactly the case for booking it.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.