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Traditional Tuscan Trattoria

Google: 4.1 · 464 reviews

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Anghiari, Italy

Da Alighiero

CuisineTuscan
Executive ChefCiro Verdi
Price
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseQuiet
CapacitySmall
Michelin

Behind a wooden door on Via Giuseppe Garibaldi, Da Alighiero serves the kind of Tuscan cooking that Anghiari's medieval streets seem built to contain: bringoli pasta with meat ragù, tripe in spicy red sauce, pan-fried liver with sage. At the single-euro price tier, this is neighbourhood trattoria cooking done with conviction, overseen by chef Silvia and host Gianni, who steers the wine choices with evident enthusiasm.

Da Alighiero restaurant in Anghiari, Italy
About

Behind the Wooden Door

Anghiari is the kind of Tuscan hill town where the streets themselves impose a certain pace. The medieval centre, perched above the Tiber valley in the Valtiberina, is compact enough to walk entirely in under twenty minutes, yet dense with the architectural residue of centuries. It is also a town that takes its trattoria culture seriously, where the most instructive meals tend to arrive without ceremony behind unmarked or near-invisible doors. Da Alighiero fits that pattern precisely. The entrance on Via Giuseppe Garibaldi offers little away: a wooden door with glass panes and curtains, the kind of facade that rewards those who already know and turns away those who do not look closely enough.

Step inside and the interior confirms its own logic. A brick-vaulted ceiling, old cupboards, bottles arranged with the comfortable disorder of a place that actually uses its cellar, art on the walls. The room reads less as designed ambience and more as accumulated character. Tuscan trattoria interiors of this type have a distinct grammar: materials that predate the current owners, objects that suggest continuity rather than concept. Da Alighiero sits in that tradition without self-consciousness. For context on how Tuscan dining operates across its different registers, from this kind of neighbourhood trattoria up through Michelin-recognised houses, see our full Anghiari restaurants guide.

The Cooking at Da Alighiero

The menu here is anchored in the Tuscan canon as practised in this specific corner of the region. Arezzo province, of which Anghiari forms a part, has its own culinary inflections within the broader Tuscan frame: an emphasis on offal, on egg-based fresh pasta, on the kind of meat cookery that predates any interest in restraint or lightness. Chef Silvia works within that tradition rather than against it.

The dish that most directly signals the kitchen's orientation is bringoli, an elongated local egg pasta that belongs to the Valtiberina and appears rarely outside it. Served with a meat ragù or, when the season allows, with mushrooms, it is the kind of pasta that carries genuine regional specificity, the sort of thing that separates a kitchen rooted in its geography from one cooking a generalised idea of Tuscany. Alongside it, the offal dishes tell a similarly direct story: tripe in a spicy red sauce and pan-fried liver with sage and white wine. Liver cooked this way, quickly in a pan with fat and aromatics, requires both good sourcing and confidence in timing. It is not a forgiving dish, and kitchens that do it well tend to do it because they have cooked it many times.

Price tier, marked at the single-euro level, places Da Alighiero firmly in the neighbourhood trattoria bracket. This is not a restaurant positioning itself against the Michelin-starred Tuscan houses like Caino in Montemerano or L'Asinello in Castelnuovo Berardenga, both of which operate in a different tier of ambition and pricing. The comparison set here is the honest local trattoria, judged on whether the cooking is true to its ingredients and tradition, not on whether it innovates. By those measures, the 4.1 rating across 433 Google reviews represents a meaningful signal: the volume rules out a merely enthusiastic local following, and the consistency suggests a kitchen that does not vary dramatically by visit.

Host, Wine, and the Room's Character

In Tuscan trattoria culture, the figure of the host carries weight that is sometimes underestimated. At Da Alighiero, Gianni operates in the classic mode: present, opinionated about wine, and capable of steering a table toward what the kitchen is doing well on a given evening. That function matters at the single-euro price point, where the wine list is likely structured around regional bottles rather than prestige labels, and where a host who knows the cellar can genuinely improve the experience. The bottles-everywhere aesthetic of the room is not incidental decor; it signals that wine is taken seriously here as a part of the meal rather than an afterthought.

For those exploring the broader drinking culture of the area, our full Anghiari bars guide and our full Anghiari wineries guide cover what is available beyond the restaurant context. The Valtiberina is not among Tuscany's headline wine zones, but proximity to both the Sansepolcro area and the broader Arezzo province means access to bottles that rarely travel far from where they are made.

Anghiari in Context

The town's name derives from the Battle of Anghiari, fought in 1440, which Leonardo da Vinci famously attempted to document in a mural commission that was never completed and is now lost. That particular episode aside, Anghiari functions in the contemporary travel context as a less-trafficked alternative to better-known Tuscan hill towns. It receives fewer visitors than Montepulciano or Cortona, which means its restaurants and trattorias operate primarily for a local and regional audience rather than a tourist one. That dynamic tends to keep cooking honest: a kitchen in Anghiari that loses the confidence of its local clientele has few replacement customers to absorb the loss.

Da Alighiero's position in that context explains something about how it operates. The format is not designed for passing trade; it rewards those who approach it with some knowledge of what to order and some patience with a room that has its own rhythms. Italy's trattoria tradition at its most functional operates exactly this way, and understanding that tradition is the most useful frame for the experience here, not comparisons to the starred restaurants at the other end of the Italian dining spectrum, from Osteria Francescana in Modena to Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Le Calandre in Rubano, Dal Pescatore in Runate, Piazza Duomo in Alba, Reale in Castel di Sangro, Uliassi in Senigallia, Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone, Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico, Enrico Bartolini in Milan, or Casa Perbellini 12 Apostoli in Verona. These are different propositions entirely, operating in a different register of cost, ambition, and format.

Planning Your Visit

Da Alighiero is located at Via Giuseppe Garibaldi, 8, in the historic centre of Anghiari. Given the size constraints typical of medieval-centre trattorias, booking ahead is advisable, particularly for weekend visits or during the summer months when the town attracts more visitors. Hours and booking contacts are not published online in a consistent format, so arriving in person or making contact locally is the most reliable approach. Those staying in the area will find hotel and accommodation options in our full Anghiari hotels guide, and a broader orientation to what the town offers is available through our full Anghiari experiences guide.

Signature Dishes
bringoli pastatripe in spicy red saucegnocchi stuffed with porcini
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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Rustic
  • Cozy
  • Intimate
  • Classic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Historic Building
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Warm authentic atmosphere with brick-vaulted ceilings, old cupboards, wall art, and wine bottles everywhere.

Signature Dishes
bringoli pastatripe in spicy red saucegnocchi stuffed with porcini