Restaurant in Zurich, Switzerland
Serious Italian cooking, two formats, one decision.

ORSINI delivers Michelin-recognised contemporary Italian cooking inside the Mandarin Oriental Savoy, with consultant backing from two-star Milan chef Antonio Guida. The set lunch is the sharper value play; the evening tasting menu is where the kitchen's seasonal range shows fully. At €€€€, this is one of Zurich's most credible cases for Italian fine dining done seriously.
ORSINI is one of the strongest cases for contemporary Italian fine dining in Zurich, and it earns that position through technical cooking that holds up under scrutiny rather than hotel-restaurant convenience. Backed by Michelin recognition and the consulting eye of Antonio Guida — whose Milan restaurant Seta carries two Michelin stars — this is a serious kitchen operating inside the Mandarin Oriental Savoy. Book it for a special dinner, or come at lunch when the set menu format gives you a more accessible entry point into the same kitchen.
The Mandarin Oriental Savoy building dates to 1838, and ORSINI enters through a separate door on Waaggasse rather than the main hotel lobby. That distinction matters: the restaurant reads as its own address, with a sophisticated interior that carries formal weight without tipping into stuffiness. The room is designed to be a counterpoint to the cuisine , composed and elegant, providing structure for cooking that moves in more expressive directions. For a solo diner or a couple, the intimacy of the dining room works in your favour. For larger groups, the formality sets a useful tone for a business dinner or a celebration where the room is doing part of the work for you.
The spatial experience here is more contained than somewhere like The Restaurant at the Dolder Grand, which commands grander proportions. ORSINI's scale encourages focus on the plate, which is exactly where this kitchen wants your attention.
Chef Dario Moresco leads the kitchen day-to-day, with Antonio Guida , of Michelin-level pedigree comparable to Switzerland's leading tables , serving as consultant. The result is contemporary Italian cooking that uses contrast as a tool without losing coherence. Dishes arrive technically precise and noticeably light, which in the context of a long tasting menu matters considerably.
The Michelin description references a spaghetti dish built into a small tower: mussel and white wine coulis, herb sauce, shredded crab meat, and finger lime pearls adding citrus brightness. It is a dish that illustrates the kitchen's register clearly , classical Italian technique reframed with modern plating logic, where the acid note cuts through richness rather than decoration. That dish is drawn from Michelin's published notes and represents the kitchen's documented approach; specific menu items rotate, and what you encounter will depend on when you visit.
For food and travel enthusiasts who follow Italian contemporary cooking across Europe, ORSINI sits in an interesting position. It is not Zurich doing a rough approximation of Italian fine dining; it draws directly on the Milan fine dining tradition through Guida's involvement. Comparable restaurants elsewhere in this register include L'Olivo in Anacapri and Agli Amici in Rovinj , ORSINI competes at that level.
The menu structure at ORSINI shifts between lunch and dinner formats, and the seasonal rotation of dishes means timing your visit has real implications for what you eat. Lunch runs Tuesday through Friday with a set menu format alongside à la carte options , a tighter, more defined proposition that suits a business lunch or a first visit where you want to get a read on the kitchen without committing to an extended tasting. The evening tasting menu is the full expression of the kitchen's current direction, and this is where seasonal ingredients are given the most room to move.
Visiting in autumn or spring typically means Italian fine dining kitchens are working with their most interesting seasonal produce , white truffle from Alba arrives in autumn, and the transition to spring vegetables gives lighter, more acidic dishes greater prominence. Given ORSINI's established Italian sourcing connections through the Guida relationship, these seasonal windows are worth factoring into your booking decision. Saturday dinner-only and the Monday and Sunday closure mean your window for a weekday lunch is Tuesday through Friday, and for dinner, Tuesday through Saturday.
If you are planning a Zurich itinerary around eating well, cross-reference ORSINI against other Michelin-recognised tables in the wider Swiss region: Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau, Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel, and Memories in Bad Ragaz all operate in comparable territory and are worth a day trip if your schedule allows.
ORSINI holds a Google rating of 4.6 from 298 reviews, which for a hotel fine dining restaurant in a competitive city like Zurich indicates consistent delivery rather than occasional brilliance. Michelin has documented the kitchen in detail, noting the balance of creative expression and lightness in the cooking , a meaningful endorsement at the €€€€ price point. The consultant relationship with Antonio Guida of two-Michelin-star Seta in Milan provides an additional credibility signal that is unusual for a hotel restaurant at this level.
Zurich's fine dining scene also includes IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada, The Counter, and Widder for different registers of experience. For Italian-specific alternatives, Eden Kitchen & Bar occupies a more casual position in the same city. See our full Zurich restaurants guide for broader context, or explore Zurich hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences if you are building a full itinerary.
ORSINI sits inside the Mandarin Oriental Savoy at Waaggasse 7, 8001 Zürich, entered via the separate Waaggasse entrance. Lunch service runs Tuesday through Friday, 12:00–1:30 PM. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday, 6:30–8:30 PM. The restaurant is closed on Mondays and Sundays. Price range is €€€€. Booking is direct relative to Zurich's most in-demand tables , reserve one to two weeks ahead for weekday lunch, and two to three weeks ahead for weekend dinner to be comfortable.
Waaggasse 7, 8001 Zürich , Tue–Fri lunch and dinner, Sat dinner only , €€€€ , book 1–3 weeks ahead.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| ORSINI | Italian Contemporary | €€€€ | Easy |
| IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada | Sharing | €€€€ | Unknown |
| KLE | Vegan | €€€ | Unknown |
| Kronenhalle | Swiss, Traditional Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown |
| The Restaurant | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| EquiTable | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Zurich for this tier.
Lunch is the stronger value case: the set menu format gives you access to Dario Moresco's cooking at a lower commitment than the evening tasting menu, and service runs Tuesday to Friday 12–1:30 PM. If you want the full expression of the kitchen — and Antonio Guida's consulting influence shapes that — dinner is the more structured showcase, but lunch is the practical pick for first-timers at a €€€€ price point.
ORSINI sits inside the Mandarin Oriental Savoy, a hotel dating to 1838 with a formal, elegantly appointed interior. That context sets the expectation: dress as you would for a Michelin-recognised table in a five-star hotel — jacket recommended for men at dinner, polished casual at minimum for lunch. Turning up in trainers will feel out of place.
Book at least two to three weeks out for dinner, more if you are targeting a Friday. Lunch windows are narrow — 12–1:30 PM Tuesday to Friday only — which makes those sittings fill quickly despite feeling less formal. Saturday is dinner only, and the restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday, so your booking window is tighter than it appears.
It is a reasonable solo option at lunch, where the set menu format and shorter service window suit a single diner without pressure. Evening tasting menus at a €€€€ price point are a larger solo commitment, and the hotel fine dining setting skews toward couples and small groups. KLE or EquiTable may feel more relaxed for a solo dinner at a comparable level in Zurich.
Yes, with a clear fit profile: couples and small groups marking a milestone in a formal, hotel fine dining setting. The separate Waaggasse entrance gives ORSINI its own identity apart from the hotel lobby, which helps. The combination of Dario Moresco's day-to-day cooking and Antonio Guida's consulting pedigree means the kitchen has genuine credentials behind the occasion, not just the address.
At €€€€, ORSINI is priced in line with Zurich's top hotel restaurant tier, and its Michelin recognition confirms the cooking justifies that bracket. The lunch set menu offers the most direct value-for-quality calculation. If you want contemporary Italian at this level without the hotel context, IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada is the main alternative worth comparing before you commit.
For contemporary fine dining with a different format, IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada runs a sharing-style menu and carries strong local recognition. KLE is worth considering if you want a less hotel-anchored setting at a similar price point. Kronenhalle is the right call if you prefer a Zurich institution with a classic rather than contemporary kitchen. The Restaurant at the Dolder Grand sits in the same luxury hotel tier if you want a direct comparison.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.