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Padstow, United Kingdom

Caffè Rojano

CuisineMediterranean Cuisine
LocationPadstow, United Kingdom
Michelin

Paul Ainsworth's Caffè Rojano brings a lively Italian brasserie sensibility to Padstow's Mill Square, earning consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025. Well-executed pizzas and pastas anchor a menu that extends to Mediterranean-inflected Cornish produce, with the glass-enclosed terrace drawing crowds through summer. At ££ pricing, it sits at the accessible end of Padstow's Ainsworth portfolio and holds a 4.6 Google rating across more than 1,400 reviews.

Caffè Rojano restaurant in Padstow, United Kingdom
About

Mill Square in Summer

On a clear afternoon in Padstow, the glass-enclosed terrace at Caffè Rojano catches the kind of light that makes a Negroni look more persuasive than it already is. Mill Square is a short walk from the harbour, which means the room fills with the particular mood of people who have already eaten crab sandwiches, walked a coastal path, and decided the day deserves a second act. It is not a quiet room. The hum of contented holidaymakers is part of the offering here, and the space is designed to hold that energy rather than dampen it.

That atmosphere is not accidental. Across Cornwall and Devon, the coastal brasserie format has become a reliable container for a specific kind of holiday dining: unfussy enough to walk in from the beach, considered enough to feel like a choice rather than a fallback. Caffè Rojano sits at the more curated end of that category, carrying the weight of Paul Ainsworth's broader Padstow presence and two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) as a signal of consistent kitchen execution.

Where Ainsworth's Padstow Portfolio Fits

Understanding Caffè Rojano requires understanding the tier it occupies within Padstow's dining structure. Paul Ainsworth, alongside Rick Stein, has shaped what the town expects from a restaurant meal over the past decade and a half. Paul Ainsworth at No.6 sits at the leading of that portfolio: a Michelin-starred Modern Cuisine address at ££££ pricing, built around a more formal tasting experience. Caffè Rojano operates at ££, which in Padstow's context places it alongside Prawn on the Lawn and Rick Stein's Café in the accessible mid-range, rather than with The Seafood Restaurant at £££.

That positioning matters because it clarifies what you are walking into. This is not the venue for a long, composed tasting menu. It is the venue for a well-made pizza, a pasta that has been thought about rather than assembled, and a room full of people who are enjoying themselves. The Michelin Plate, awarded for good cooking rather than star-level ambition, is an accurate calibration of that promise.

The Olive Oil Thread Through a Mediterranean Menu

Mediterranean cooking at its most legible is built on a small number of base ingredients used with discipline: good olive oil, ripe tomatoes, aromatics, and the restraint to let them work. The kitchen at Caffè Rojano applies that logic to a menu that pivots between Italian brasserie standards and Cornwall's own larder. Pizzas and pastas form the structural core, executed to a standard that reflects the investment Ainsworth's operation puts into its less formal addresses.

Where the menu becomes more interesting is in the dishes that bridge Italian technique with local produce. Cornish cod with a pancetta and chorizo Tuscan bean stew is the clearest example: the legume base, enriched with cured pork and fat, is a recognisably central Italian approach, applied to fish landed close by. Olive oil, whether in the finish of the bean stew or the base of a pasta sauce, is the connective tissue that makes these crossover dishes cohere. The Mediterranean canon has always been elastic enough to absorb regional ingredients without losing its character, and that elasticity is what gives a menu like this its logic.

For dessert, the signature 'Whoopsy Splunker' has earned enough word-of-mouth among returning visitors to warrant mention. The name is deliberately theatrical, which fits the room's general disposition toward enjoyment over ceremony.

For readers interested in how Mediterranean cooking operates at higher price points and more formal registers, La Brezza in Ascona and Arnaud Donckele and Maxime Frédéric at Louis Vuitton in Saint-Tropez represent the upper tier of the same culinary tradition.

Padstow as a Dining Destination

Padstow's reputation as a food town rests on a relatively small geographic footprint, which means the concentration of considered restaurants is higher than you would expect for a harbour village of its size. The Stein and Ainsworth operations account for much of that density, but the town supports independent voices too. A 4.6 Google rating across 1,422 reviews at Caffè Rojano reflects consistent delivery over a high volume of covers, which is a more demanding test than it appears in a seasonal coastal market where kitchens absorb large swings in customer numbers.

For visitors building a longer stay around Padstow's food and drink offering, the full picture is available in our Padstow restaurants guide, with further coverage in our Padstow hotels guide, our Padstow bars guide, our Padstow wineries guide, and our Padstow experiences guide.

Padstow also sits within a wider Southwest England dining circuit that includes Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and connects to a broader set of destination restaurants across England: CORE by Clare Smyth in London, The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and Hide and Fox in Saltwood.

Planning Your Visit

Caffè Rojano is at 9 Mill Square, Padstow PL28 8AE. At ££ pricing, a meal here represents accessible spending within Padstow's range of options, and the volume of Google reviews suggests it handles walk-in traffic as well as booked tables. The glass-enclosed terrace is the most atmospheric option during summer months; in winter the interior carries the room. Given the seasonal nature of Padstow's visitor economy, peak summer evenings will fill quickly, and booking ahead is the sensible approach if you have a specific time in mind.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I bring kids to Caffè Rojano?
Yes. At ££ pricing in a lively Padstow brasserie, Caffè Rojano is a direct family option.
What's the vibe at Caffè Rojano?
If you are arriving in Padstow expecting the composed formality of a Michelin-starred room, Caffè Rojano is not that. If, however, you want a room with genuine buzz, well-executed Italian brasserie food at accessible prices, and two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions as a baseline quality signal, then this is the right register. The glass-enclosed terrace in summer adds a particular ease to the experience that suits the coastal holiday context.
What do regulars order at Caffè Rojano?
The pizza and pasta are the kitchen's core output and the most consistent point of reference across the venue's reviews. Among the Mediterranean-inflected dishes, the Cornish cod with pancetta and chorizo Tuscan bean stew represents the intersection of local produce and Italian technique that the menu is built around. For dessert, the signature 'Whoopsy Splunker' has developed enough of a following to be the obvious choice, and the Michelin Plate recognition across two consecutive years suggests the kitchen earns that loyalty with consistent execution.

In Context: Similar Options

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