
Bluh Furore earned a Michelin star in 2024 with contemporary Mediterranean cooking that draws on Campania's larder and the broader creative influence of three-Michelin-starred Enrico Bartolini. Positioned inside the reopened Furore Grand Hotel on the Amalfi Coast's dramatic cliffside village, the restaurant is a serious addition to southern Italy's fine-dining circuit, with sea views that frame rather than distract from the food.
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- Address
- Via Dell'Amore, 2, 84010 Furore SA, Italy
- Phone
- +39 089 93573
- Website
- opentable.it

Where the Amalfi Coast Meets Contemporary Campanian Cooking
Bluh Furore is a Michelin-starred restaurant in Furore, Italy, serving Contemporary Mediterranean Fine Dining for about $170 per person. That balance has been shifting. The reopening of what was formerly the Furore Inn, now trading as the Furore Grand Hotel, signals the village of Furore's ambitions for a different class of visitor, one who arrives for the table as much as the terrace. Bluh Furore, the hotel's gourmet restaurant, earned a Michelin star in 2024, its first year in the guides under its current identity.
Furore itself is a village of particular geographical character: a near-vertical settlement above a gorge that opens to the sea, known locally as the "paese dipinto" for its painted facades. Dining at this altitude, with the Tyrrhenian visible from the white-scheme dining room, places you in a specific kind of southern Italian experience where geography and plate are rarely far apart. The restaurant's minimalist interior, white walls, controlled light, a design register that reads closer to northern European restraint than Amalfi baroque, creates a deliberate distance from the theatrical coastal setting outside. That contrast is part of the point.
Italy's Michelin-starred circuit has become increasingly network-driven. The lineage attached to a restaurant, who trained whom, under which banner a kitchen operates, now functions as a quality signal almost as reliable as the star itself. Bluh Furore operates under the creative umbrella of Enrico Bartolini, whose flagship Enrico Bartolini in Milan holds three Michelin stars, placing it in the same tier as Dal Pescatore in Runate, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, and Le Calandre in Rubano.
That three-star parentage carries weight in a specific way at Bluh Furore. The kitchen is led by Vincenzo Russo and works with Campanian ingredients and modern Mediterranean technique. The half-fried prawn, one of Bartolini's documented signature preparations, appears as a reference point on the menu: a technical set-piece that communicates the kitchen's ambitions without the page needing to announce them. For diners familiar with the broader network, say, those who have eaten at Osteria Francescana in Modena or Piazza Duomo in Alba, this kind of credential-backed format provides a reliable calibration point.
The more interesting editorial question about Bluh Furore is not what Bartolini brings, but what Campania itself supplies. The region's larder is one of Italy's most expressive: San Marzano tomatoes, Amalfi lemons with a pith-to-flesh ratio distinct enough to have DOP protection, coastal fish caught at narrow depth windows in the Tyrrhenian, and buffalo mozzarella produced a short drive inland toward Battipaglia and Eboli. Contemporary Mediterranean cooking, as a mode, draws on exactly this kind of hyper-local produce and reframes it through modern technique rather than replacing it with imported ingredients or global reference points.
The menu at Bluh Furore organises itself around this philosophy, with modern preparations foregrounding regional recipes and Campanian sourcing. A vegetarian tasting menu runs alongside the main format, a move that has become standard at the one-star tier across Italy, but which carries more weight in a coastal kitchen where fish and shellfish dominate the creative instinct. The presence of a fully developed vegetarian track is a genuine commitment to the format rather than an afterthought, and it positions Bluh Furore alongside the more programme-serious end of the contemporary Italian spectrum. For comparison, kitchens of similar ambition such as Uliassi in Senigallia or Reale in Castel di Sangro have built substantial reputations on the Adriatic and Apennine sides of the Italian peninsula; Bluh Furore occupies comparable creative territory on the Tyrrhenian.
Editorial angle on Vincenzo Russo is less his biography than his position in a specific professional tier. Executive chefs operating under a senior mentor's banner at newly starred addresses carry a particular set of pressures: they must maintain the lineage of signature dishes while developing their own voice, and they are evaluated by guides against the mentor's existing reputation as much as their own. The Michelin star arrived in 2024, the restaurant's first year under this configuration, which is an unusually fast recognition. For context, Italian contemporary kitchens at comparable entry points, Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone, a two-star address operating on the same coastal stretch, have taken years to build their current standing. A first-year star in this geography signals that the kitchen arrived already functional rather than still finding its register.
Bartolini creative framework, applied at Bluh Furore, provides a structural scaffold that accelerates this process. Kitchens working within named networks, as seen internationally at addresses like César in New York City or Jungsik in Seoul, which operate within clearly defined contemporary frameworks, tend to receive guide recognition faster than independent kitchens building entirely from scratch. The trade-off is that the creative ceiling is partially shared. What Russo does with Campania's ingredients, beyond the Bartolini benchmarks, will determine the restaurant's longer-term trajectory.
Amalfi Coast dining has historically concentrated around Ravello, Positano, and the town of Amalfi itself. Furore is a smaller proposition, harder to reach by road, with no beach and minimal commercial infrastructure, which means Bluh Furore's guests arrive with intention rather than by accident. This self-selecting dynamic shapes the room: a €€€€ price point at a freshly starred address with a 4.8 Google rating is not a mass-market offer. It sits in the same access tier as the region's other serious tables, and the logistics of reaching Furore by the coastal SS163 road function as an informal vetting mechanism.
For visitors assembling an Amalfi itinerary with serious dining as a priority, Hostaria Baccofurore provides a regional counterpoint within the same village: a more rooted, less formally contemporary reading of Campanian cuisine. The two restaurants together represent the range available within Furore itself, from embedded local tradition to newly credentialled contemporary.
Planning a Visit
Bluh Furore operates out of the Furore Grand Hotel at Via Dell'Amore, 2, in Furore, a village on the SS163 Amalfi Drive, roughly equidistant between Positano and Amalfi town. Access by car involves the coastal road's narrow hairpin sections; arriving by private transfer from either town is the more practical option for guests not familiar with the route. The hotel's own facilities provide an obvious base for an overnight stay, which removes the return-drive calculation entirely. Given the 2024 Michelin star and the restaurant's profile within the Bartolini network, advance booking is advisable. Reservations are essential. Price range sits at €€€€, consistent with the one-star tier on this coastline.
How It Stacks Up
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bluh FuroreThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Contemporary Mediterranean Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | |
| Hostaria Baccofurore | Regional Amalfi Coast Cuisine | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Furore |
| Le Trabe | Contemporary Mediterranean Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Capaccio Paestum |
| Al Metrò | Modern Mediterranean Seafood | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star | San Salvo Marina |
| Il Buco | Modern Italian Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Sorrento |
| Veritas | Modern Italian Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Chiaia |
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- Romantic
- Elegant
- Minimalist
- Scenic
- Sophisticated
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Panoramic View
- Hotel Restaurant
- Extensive Wine List
- Sommelier Led
- Local Sourcing
- Waterfront
Minimalist white decor with soft lighting, enchanting romantic atmosphere enhanced by stunning sea views and moonlight reflections.


















