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A Michelin Plate-recognised address in Matera's upper Sassi, DA MÓ serves regional Basilicata cuisine with a contemporary sensibility. Run by a family who relocated from Venosa, the restaurant pairs tasting menus and à la carte options with a considered wine list. At the €€ price point, it represents one of the more approachable routes into serious southern Italian cooking in the city.
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- Address
- Via Bruno Buozzi, 20, 75100 Matera MT, Italy
- Phone
- +39 0835 686548
- Website
- damoristorante.it

Stone, Silence, and the Rhythm of a Meal in the Sassi
DA MÓ is a restaurant in Matera serving modern regional Basilicata cuisine. The tufa-stone streets narrow, the ambient noise of the lower city drops away, and by the time you arrive at Via Bruno Buozzi you're already operating at a different pace. That deceleration matters when you're eating at DA MÓ, because the restaurant's approach to the meal is built on a similar logic: unhurried, sequenced, and rooted in the rituals of southern Italian table culture.
The setting reinforces this. Inside, the room reads warm rather than formal, a register common to serious family-run trattorias throughout Basilicata, where the cooking is taken seriously but the atmosphere is not performed. Outside, a small terrace opens the meal to the particular quiet of this part of the Sassi, within reasonable reach of the city centre and its car parks, which matters in a city where logistics can otherwise complicate the evening.
Where DA MÓ Sits in Matera's Dining Scene
Matera's restaurant scene has broadened considerably since the city's 2019 stint as European Capital of Culture. At the upper end, Vitantonio Lombardo operates at the €€€€ tier with a Michelin star and a creative menu that draws on the region's produce while pushing well beyond it. The mid-range has become more competitive, with Baccanti at the same €€ price point offering modern cuisine, and Dimora Ulmo at €€€ anchoring cuisine from Basilicata in a more architectural register. ARTEMA and Vetera Matera complete a local Italian-focused cohort that gives Matera considerably more dining range than its size might suggest.
DA MÓ's Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 places it in a specific tier: acknowledged cooking that merits attention without the full star apparatus. In Michelin's own taxonomy, the Plate signals food prepared to a good standard, a meaningful distinction in a city where not every address at this price point earns it. For diners comparing options across the city's mid-range, that credential carries weight.
Across Italy, some of the most sustained culinary reputations are held by restaurants operating at a similar intersection of regional fidelity and careful execution, Dal Pescatore in Runate being perhaps the most cited example of a family kitchen that turned regional commitment into long-term recognition. At the other end of the ambition register, Osteria Francescana in Modena and Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence show where the Italian fine dining tier currently sits. DA MÓ operates well below those price brackets, but the family-kitchen format it represents has its own track record of earning critical attention over time, a pattern visible at Enrico Bartolini in Milan, Le Calandre in Rubano, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico, where depth of culinary identity has been built over years rather than launched fully-formed.
The Dining Ritual: Pacing and Format
Southern Italian dining has its own rhythm, and Basilicata's table culture sits at one of the more conservative ends of that spectrum. Meals here have historically been structured around produce proximity and seasonal constraint, the Agri valley, the Pollino plateau, the coastal strip at Metaponto, and a kitchen that takes that seriously tends to move through courses at a pace that reflects the weight of what's on the plate rather than the speed of a metropolitan restaurant turn.
At DA MÓ, the format gives diners a meaningful choice. Tasting menus are available for those who want to hand over the sequencing to the kitchen, which is the more instructive way to understand how this style of regional cooking builds across a meal. The à la carte option suits guests who prefer to construct their own pace or who are returning for specific dishes. Neither format is presented as more correct than the other, which is itself a kind of hospitality.
The wine list is described as interesting, which in this context should be read as engaged rather than encyclopaedic. Basilicata's wine identity is anchored in Aglianico del Vulture, one of the south's most serious red grapes, grown on volcanic soils around the extinct volcano of Monte Vulture, and a list that takes the region seriously will give Aglianico appropriate space. For a broader view of what Matera and its surrounding area offer in terms of producers, our full Matera wineries guide covers the local picture in more detail.
Family Kitchens and Regional Cooking
The family behind DA MÓ arrived from Venosa, a town in northern Basilicata that carries its own cultural weight: it was the birthplace of the Roman poet Horace, and it sits at the edge of the Aglianico del Vulture zone. That provenance is worth noting not as biographical colour but as a signal of where the kitchen's culinary reference points are formed. Regional cuisine in Basilicata is not monolithic, the cooking of the Matera tableland differs from the rougher mountain traditions further north, and a kitchen with roots in Venosa brings a particular vocabulary to the table.
Front-of-house operation, run by two members of the same family, sets a tone that is warm rather than neutral. In Basilicata and across the deeper south, this model, father cooking, family managing the room, is not a novelty but a continuity, and restaurants that have maintained it across generations, like Fahr in Künten-Sulz or Gannerhof in Innervillgraten in very different European contexts, tend to develop a consistency of hospitality that formal training programs cannot easily replicate.
Planning Your Visit
DA MÓ sits in the upper Sassi on Via Bruno Buozzi, at a point that Michelin specifically notes is accessible from the city's main car parks, a practical consideration in Matera, where the ancient city's topography can complicate arrivals for those driving in. The restaurant's Google rating of 4.6 across 74 reviews suggests consistent delivery rather than occasional peaks. The €€ pricing makes it one of the more accessible routes into regionally serious cooking in the city, and the Michelin Plate recognition gives an external benchmark against which to weight that value.
Cuisine and Credentials
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DA MÓ | Modern Regional Basilicata | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Sassi |
| Baccanti | Modern Lucanian Italian | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Sassi di Matera |
| La Lopa | Traditional Lucanian Cuisine | $$ | , | Sassi di Matera |
| Dimora Ulmo | Modern Italian Fine Dining | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Sassi |
| Vetera Matera | Modern Italian Fine Dining | $$$$ | Sassi di Matera | |
| Vitantonio Lombardo | Modern Italian Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Rione Sassi |
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Warm friendly ambience with comfortable room, soft non-intrusive music, minimal relevant furniture, and charming small outdoor space.[1]










