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Panoramic terrace dining defines Antica Osteria Il Monte Rosso in Suna, where refined lake and sea dishes, think Risotto al Persico and Lavarello alla Griglia, meet polished service and a Piedmont-focused cellar on the shores of Lake Maggiore.
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- Address
- Via Paolo Troubetzkoy, 128, 28925 Verbania VB, Italy
- Phone
- +39 0323 506056
- Website
- osteriamonterosso.com

Lake Maggiore's Quieter Shore
The western bank of Lake Maggiore, where Verbania stretches through a series of residential districts including Suna, operates at a different register from the ferry-busy promenades of Stresa or the garden-tourist circuit of the Borromean Islands. Here, the lake is still present, the light is still extraordinary, but the audience is more local, and the restaurants that persist in these quieter stretches tend to earn their following on consistency rather than footfall. Antica Osteria Il Monte Rosso sits in this context, occupying a lakeside position in Suna's residential fabric and holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025.
The physical approach matters on this part of the lake. Via Paolo Troubetzkoy curves along the water's edge, and the osteria's Old England styling, relatively unusual for a northern Italian lakeside address, signals something about its temperament: a certain quietness, an absence of the design theatrics that characterise more aggressively contemporary openings. When weather permits, a panoramic terrace offers a small number of tables directly facing the water. Given the limited terrace capacity, arriving without a reservation carries real risk.
A Japanese Chef in the Piedmontese Kitchen
Presence of chef Salvatore Tilotta at an Italian country-cooking osteria on Lake Maggiore is not the story it might initially appear to be. Across northern Italy, a small but established cohort of Japanese-trained and Japanese-born chefs have embedded themselves in regional kitchens, bringing technical precision to traditions that reward it. The more interesting editorial question is what happens to a cuisine classified as country cooking when the practitioner brings formation from outside the tradition entirely.
Country cooking in this part of Piedmont and the Piedmont-Lombardy border zone around Lake Maggiore has its own specific character: freshwater fish from the lake, cured meats from the valleys, polenta preparations, and a gravitational pull toward the honest and the unhurried. For comparison, 21.9 in Piobesi d'Alba and Andrea Monesi at Locanda di Orta in Orta San Giulio represent country-cooking addresses in the broader subalpine northwest that sit within similar price brackets, each finding their own answer to the question of what this category means in the twenty-first century. At Monte Rosso, the answer involves both freshwater and saltwater fish specialities, a range that extends the kitchen's sourcing beyond the purely local and gives Hiramatsu room to work across different textures and preparation traditions.
The Michelin Plate is a useful calibration point. It sits below the starred tier occupied by restaurants like Dal Pescatore in Runate or Enrico Bartolini in Milan, both carrying three stars and operating at €€€€ price points. Monte Rosso's €€ pricing places it in a substantially different register, one where the Michelin Plate acts as a quality marker within the affordable regional category rather than as a consolation in a starred competition.
The Fish Question on a Lake-and-Sea Menu
Lakeside eating in northern Italy exists in a specific tension. The freshwater tradition, lavarello, agone, persico, tinca from Maggiore and the interconnected Lombard lakes, carries enormous local resonance but limited fame outside the region. Saltwater fish, sourced from the Ligurian or Adriatic coasts, offers more familiar reference points for visitors from outside the immediate area. Kitchens that work both registers are making a statement about reach: they are not restricting themselves to the narrow purist brief of the strictly lacustrine menu, but they are also not abandoning the local entirely.
At Monte Rosso, this dual focus is central to the menu's identity. It allows the kitchen to position itself as a serious fish restaurant in the broader sense while retaining the geographic character that makes eating on Lake Maggiore worthwhile in the first place. For the reader oriented toward Italy's highest-end fish cooking, Uliassi in Senigallia or Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone represent the three-star coastal benchmark. Monte Rosso operates in an entirely different price tier and with an entirely different brief, but the underlying seriousness about fish as a category is shared.
Placing Monte Rosso in the Italian Dining Map
Italy's highest-profile restaurants in 2025 remain concentrated in a different set of cities and regions. Three-star addresses like Osteria Francescana in Modena, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Le Calandre in Rubano, Piazza Duomo in Alba, Reale in Castel di Sangro, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico define the top tier and price accordingly. Equally, Casa Perbellini 12 Apostoli in Verona shows how northern Italian cities are building serious fine-dining reputations in their own right.
Monte Rosso does not compete with or aspire to that category. Its competitive set is the regional osteria with consistent quality, honest pricing, and a sense of place. In that set, a Google rating of 4.4 from 672 reviews represent a meaningful track record. The review volume in particular suggests this is not a discovery restaurant known only to a narrow local circle.
Planning Your Visit
Monte Rosso is located at Via Paolo Troubetzkoy 128, in the Suna district of Verbania, on the western shore of Lake Maggiore. The €€ price range makes it an accessible option within the regional dining budget, particularly for visitors who have already committed to higher expenditure elsewhere. Given the limited terrace seating and the restaurant's reputation, booking ahead is advisable for any visit, and securing a terrace table requires both advance reservation and a weather forecast worth trusting. The Suna district sits within the broader Verbania municipality, reachable by car or by the regional ferry network that connects the lake's western shore communities.
For visitors building a wider programme around their stay on Lake Maggiore, our full Suna restaurants guide covers the broader dining options in the area.
Comparison Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antica Osteria Il Monte RossoThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Traditional Italian Lakeside Osteria | $$ | Michelin Plate | |
| Cravero - Osteria Contemporanea | Modern Piedmontese Osteria | $$ | Michelin Plate | Caltignaga |
| La Cantina di Manuela | Italian Wine Bar | $$ | Michelin Plate | Buenos Aires - Porta Venezia - Porta Monforte |
| Un Posto a Milano | Contemporary Italian Farm-to-Table | $$ | Michelin Plate | Pta Romana |
| SottoSopra | Italian Mediterranean | $$$ | Michelin Plate | village centre |
| Olona - "Da Venanzio" dal 1922 | Traditional Italian Trattoria | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Induno Olona |
At a Glance
- Rustic
- Cozy
- Elegant
- Intimate
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Terrace
- Waterfront
- Open Kitchen
- Extensive Wine List
- Local Sourcing
- Waterfront
Intimate and welcoming with refined, rustic furnishings, candlelit in some areas, quiet upper room with open kitchen, and terrace overlooking the lake.












