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Modern Italian With Regional Twists

Google: 4.7 · 788 reviews

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Ferrara, Italy

Cucina Bacilieri

CuisineModern Cuisine
Price€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Michelin

A Michelin Plate-recognised table on Via Terranuova, Cucina Bacilieri holds just a few seats and a focused modern menu rooted in Ferrara's distinct culinary heritage. Eel from the Po Delta and pasticcio ferrarese anchor a kitchen that treats regional tradition as a starting point rather than a constraint. At €€€, it occupies Ferrara's upper tier for serious, ingredient-led dining.

Cucina Bacilieri restaurant in Ferrara, Italy
About

Ferrara's Kitchen, Concentrated

Via Terranuova is the kind of quiet Ferrara address that rewards those who arrive on foot, navigating the city's cycle-lane grid rather than searching for parking. The street sits within the historic centre, close enough to the Este castle and the cathedral to feel embedded in the city's medieval fabric, yet removed from the tourist corridors that radiate outward from Piazza Trento Trieste. Walking toward Cucina Bacilieri, the scale of the operation announces itself before you enter: this is a small room. A deliberately small room. In Ferrara, where trattorias can run to dozens of covers and tour-group menus, that compression signals intent.

Small-room formats have become a meaningful category across northern Italy's secondary cities. Padua, Mantua, and Ferrara itself each support a handful of tables where the kitchen-to-cover ratio allows for more precise, chef-driven output than volume dining permits. Cucina Bacilieri occupies that tier in Ferrara, with a format that places it closer to destination-dining peers than to the Emilian trattoria tradition — even as it draws heavily on that tradition's ingredient vocabulary. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 positions it within the recognisable tier of kitchens the guide considers worth a detour without yet awarding stars.

The Weight of Emilian Culinary Identity

Ferrara's cuisine operates under a double weight of history. The city was the seat of the Este dynasty from the thirteenth through the sixteenth centuries, and the Renaissance court produced one of the most documented food cultures in European history. Bartolomeo Sabio and the Este court kitchens are cited in culinary histories as early evidence of a sophisticated, multi-course dining structure. That legacy is not merely decorative: it shapes what Ferrara cooks today consider the correct reference points for regional identity.

The Po Delta eel is the clearest example. Eel from the brackish lagoons around Comacchio, roughly forty kilometres east of the city, has been a Ferrarese staple for centuries. The fish appears cured, grilled, and marinated across the city's kitchens, and its presence on a menu functions almost as a statement of regional allegiance. At Cucina Bacilieri, the eel appears as part of a modern treatment of classic material — the same instinct that drives kitchens at Osteria Francescana in Modena and Dal Pescatore in Runate, where the regional canon is the foundation rather than the ceiling.

Pasticcio ferrarese is the other signal dish. The baked pasta preparation, historically associated with the Este court and still produced by Ferrara's specialist pastry shops for Carnevale and feast days, presents a genuine interpretive challenge for a modern kitchen. It sits at the intersection of sweet and savoury, with a shortcrust pastry shell, ragù, and a béchamel interior that resists easy modernisation without losing what makes it specific. That Cucina Bacilieri keeps it on the menu rather than retreating to safer regional references suggests a kitchen willing to argue with the tradition on its own terms.

Where It Sits in Ferrara's Dining Tier

Ferrara's restaurant scene is structurally different from Bologna's, despite the short distance between them. Bologna sustains enough visitor and business traffic to support a broader range of price points simultaneously. Ferrara's dining economy is more compressed, with a dominant trattoria culture at lower price bands and a thinner layer of serious kitchens above it.

At the lower end, Da Noemi represents the established Emilian trattoria format at a single-euro price tier, with the kind of handmade pasta and slow-braised meat that defines the region's weekday cooking. Ca' d'Frara occupies a similar Emilian register at a slightly higher price point. Moving into modern-cooking territory, Makorè and Quel Fantastico Giovedì share the Italian Contemporary and Modern Cuisine categories with Cucina Bacilieri, though at the €€ rather than €€€ price tier. That gap in price positioning reflects something real about format and ambition: Cucina Bacilieri charges more, covers fewer tables, and anchors its menu in costlier primary ingredients from the Delta and the surrounding agricultural zone.

For comparison at a national level, the kitchens that have built reputations on this kind of regional-modern synthesis include Piazza Duomo in Alba and Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, both of which treat their regional ingredient canon with the same seriousness that Cucina Bacilieri applies to the Po Delta pantry. The scale of ambition differs, but the instinct is shared. Further afield, the locavore rigour visible at Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico shows what that commitment looks like when taken to its logical conclusion, though the Alpine context differs substantially from the flatlands of the Po.

A Google Rating and What It Implies

Cucina Bacilieri carries a 4.7 Google rating across 757 reviews, which for a small-room operation in a mid-sized Italian city is a meaningful signal. High-volume restaurants accumulate reviews through sheer footfall; small tables at higher price points accumulate them through repeat visits and deliberate recommendation. A 4.7 with that volume suggests a consistent kitchen rather than a one-visit anomaly. For a room with few covers, 757 reviews also implies a reach beyond the purely local: visitors arriving specifically for the food, rather than those who happen to be in the neighbourhood.

Planning a Visit

Cucina Bacilieri is on Via Terranuova, 60, in Ferrara's historic centre, accessible by bicycle along the city's well-maintained cycle network or on foot from the central piazza in under ten minutes. At the €€€ price band with limited covers, advance reservation is strongly advisable, particularly on weekends and during Ferrara's festival calendar, which includes the Buskers Festival in late August and the Palio di Ferrara in late May. The kitchen's focus on seasonal and regional ingredients means the menu reflects the agricultural calendar of the Po Delta region, so the experience shifts across the year.

For a broader picture of eating and drinking in the city, see our full Ferrara restaurants guide, alongside our full Ferrara bars guide, our full Ferrara hotels guide, our full Ferrara wineries guide, and our full Ferrara experiences guide. If the regional-modern Italian format interests you beyond Ferrara, Enrico Bartolini in Milan and Le Calandre in Rubano represent the category at a different scale and star level. For modern cuisine operating in a European context without Italian regional roots, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai show how the format translates across geographies.

Signature Dishes
bigoli with red prawnscherry falling from the treeLa Ciliegia falling from the tree
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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Intimate
  • Elegant
  • Romantic
  • Cozy
  • Sophisticated
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Business Dinner
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Refined and intimate atmosphere with soft spotlights, elegant furnishings, and serene lighting creating a romantic and welcoming environment.

Signature Dishes
bigoli with red prawnscherry falling from the treeLa Ciliegia falling from the tree