Da Vittorio - St. Moritz



Da Vittorio St. Moritz carries the two-Michelin-star weight of one of Italy's most celebrated family restaurant dynasties into the Alps, translating the Brusaporto original's seafood-led Italian cooking for an Engadin winter season. Rated 91 points by La Liste in both 2025 and 2026, it sits at the upper tier of St. Moritz's small cohort of destination fine-dining rooms. Booking ahead and budget planning at the €€€€ price point are both essential.

Where the Alps Meet the Adriatic
St. Moritz operates on a compressed fine-dining calendar — the Engadin valley fills in winter, empties in shoulder season, and its handful of destination restaurants compete for a clientele that arrives with high expectations and limited nights. At that tier, the question is rarely whether service will be polished; it is whether a restaurant can justify its place against the full weight of what a traveller might do instead. Da Vittorio St. Moritz, holding two Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 91 points in both 2025 and 2026, answers that question through a specific argument: Italian seafood cooking, carried from the Lombardy original to 1,800 metres of altitude, in a room that reads as seriously as any comparable address in Switzerland.
That positioning is worth unpacking. The upper bracket of St. Moritz dining includes Ecco St. Moritz, which holds two Michelin stars through a creative European format, and a wider group of €€€€ properties including Amaru by Claudia Canessa and Beefbar Grace Hotel. Da Vittorio distinguishes itself within that set not through Alpine produce or Swiss regionalism — the moves that define a restaurant like Chasellas , but through the opposite instinct: a deliberate transplant of a coastal Italian kitchen tradition into the mountains.
A Kitchen Carried Across Generations
The broader story of Da Vittorio is one of the clearest examples of generational kitchen inheritance in Italian fine dining. The Cerea family's restaurant in Brusaporto, outside Bergamo, earned its third Michelin star decades into a lineage that began with founder Vittorio Cerea and passed through successive generations of the family. That inheritance model , recipes treated as living documents passed between hands rather than fixed museum pieces , is not simply a marketing posture. It is structurally visible in how the brand has expanded: each outpost carries the culinary DNA of the original while adapting to its specific context, with Chef Paolo Rota leading the kitchen at the St. Moritz address.
This generational transmission model sits in meaningful contrast to the dominant mode of ambitious restaurant expansion, which typically plants a marquee chef in a new city and builds a concept around individual personality. The Da Vittorio approach is closer to the logic of a French brigade house or a Japanese sushi lineage: the restaurant is the vehicle, the family tradition is the passenger, and the individual kitchen leader's role is to carry that tradition with fidelity and intelligence rather than reinterpret it into something new. In the Swiss fine-dining context, where houses like Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier are built around singular chef-proprietor identities, Da Vittorio's dynastic logic is genuinely different.
The Seafood Argument at Altitude
Italian seafood cooking at the two-Michelin-star level is a category with a small but well-defined peer set globally. The operating assumption is the same whether you are at a coastal address or an Alpine outpost: the product has to be sourced at a quality that justifies its presence on a menu priced at €€€€, and the technique has to be disciplined enough to let that product carry the conversation. Transporting that logic to St. Moritz , landlocked, altitude-affected, reliant on supply chains that coastal Italian kitchens take for granted , is a genuine operational and creative challenge.
That challenge explains why the Da Vittorio model matters as a data point in the wider discussion of Italian fine dining's international reach. Comparable conversations happen around any Italian house that has planted a serious outpost away from its home region: the question is whether the translation holds. The Opinionated About Dining ranking data offers one external answer. Da Vittorio St. Moritz sat at #153 in the Classical in Europe category in 2024, with a Highly Recommended classification the prior year , consistent recognition from a guide that weights historical context and technical classical execution. Within the Italian-at-altitude subcategory, that is a meaningful signal. For a direct comparison in the broader Italian fine-dining conversation, the ambition level is closest to addresses like Le Bernardin in New York City, which similarly argues for seafood as the central vocabulary of a multi-star kitchen.
Among St. Moritz's Italian options, the contrast with Da Adriano is instructive: that address operates in the €€€€ tier with a more accessible Italian format, while Da Vittorio occupies the starred, formally ambitious end of the same broad cuisine category.
The Room and the Season
Da Vittorio St. Moritz is addressed at Via Johannes Badrutt 11 , a location that places it inside the gravitational centre of St. Moritz's fine-dining concentration, in a resort where dining rooms operate within hotels and the physical environment is inseparable from the broader luxury context of the Engadin winter season. The seasonal rhythm of the resort means the restaurant operates within a compressed window, and that compression has a direct effect on the booking dynamic: demand among a sophisticated clientele is high relative to the available nights, and seats at the two-star level in a resort this size do not stay open long once the season opens.
The advice for first-time visitors is the same as for any of St. Moritz's top-tier addresses: treat booking as a logistical step to complete before the trip rather than after arrival. The €€€€ price point is consistent with the two-star standard across Switzerland. For context on the broader Swiss fine-dining tier, addresses like Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel, Memories in Bad Ragaz, 7132 Silver in Vals, and Colonnade in Lucerne all operate in the same pricing and recognition bracket, providing a useful reference frame for travellers calibrating their Swiss dining programme.
Where Da Vittorio Sits in the Wider Picture
The La Liste score of 91 points, held across both the 2025 and 2026 editions, is a useful stabilising signal. La Liste aggregates scores from a wide range of international guides, which means a consistent multi-year score reflects sustained performance across multiple evaluative frameworks rather than a single-cycle peak. At 91 points, Da Vittorio St. Moritz sits above the threshold that La Liste uses to define its top-tier grouping, placing it in the same recognition band as a select group of restaurants across the continent.
Italian seafood category at this level is also worth contextualising geographically. The family's Brusaporto original operates in northern Italy, inland from the coast, which means the culinary DNA was never straightforwardly coastal to begin with. The tradition of sourcing seafood and preparing it at the highest technical level, away from the water, is part of the heritage being transmitted. For travellers interested in how that tradition extends into comparable Italian fine-dining addresses across Europe, La Botte in Genk represents a parallel conversation in a different country.
For full dining context in the resort, the St. Moritz restaurants guide covers the full range from starred rooms to more casual formats. Travellers planning around the dining programme will also find relevant context in the St. Moritz hotels guide, the St. Moritz bars guide, the St. Moritz wineries guide, and the St. Moritz experiences guide.
Planning Your Visit
Da Vittorio St. Moritz operates at Via Johannes Badrutt 11, within St. Moritz's main resort concentration. The restaurant carries two Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 91 points (2026). Pricing is at the €€€€ level, consistent with the two-star standard in Switzerland. Given the resort's compressed winter season and the limited availability at this tier of dining, reservations should be secured well in advance of travel , the window between arrival and an available table at starred addresses in St. Moritz is typically short. The venue does not publish hours or booking procedures publicly through the EP Club database; checking directly or through a hotel concierge is the practical first step for confirmed travellers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the must-try dish at Da Vittorio St. Moritz?
Specific signature dishes are not listed in the current venue data, and inventing menu details at a two-Michelin-star address would be misleading. What the awards record does confirm is that the kitchen operates in the classical Italian seafood register, consistent with the Cerea family's Brusaporto original, which has sustained three Michelin stars over an extended period. The 91-point La Liste score and the Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe ranking at #153 (2024) indicate that technical classical execution, rather than experimental innovation, is the core of what this kitchen does. Ordering guided by the chef's recommendation or tasting menu structure is the standard approach at an address of this type.
What's the leading way to book Da Vittorio St. Moritz?
St. Moritz's fine-dining tier operates on a seasonal calendar, and two-star addresses in a resort of this size fill quickly once the winter season opens. Da Vittorio carries two Michelin stars and a consistent 91-point La Liste score across 2025 and 2026, which places it at the upper end of what is available in the Engadin valley. Booking directly through the restaurant or through your hotel concierge , particularly if staying at one of the resort's major properties , is the most reliable route. Treat it as part of pre-trip planning rather than an on-arrival task, especially for peak winter weeks.
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Access the Concierge