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Inside a 16th-century sculptor's workshop between Palermo's Vucciria market and the Cala harbor, Gagini holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and an Opinionated About Dining recommendation for its approach to contemporary Italian cooking. Chef Mauricio Zillo draws on Piedmontese training to reframe Sicilian ingredients, producing a menu where Northern technique and Mediterranean produce operate in deliberate tension.

A Workshop Repurposed, a Kitchen Redefined
The building that houses Gagini has been in the business of transformation for five centuries. The 16th-century workshop of sculptor Antonello Gagini, once a site of stone-cutting and commission work, now operates as one of Palermo's more considered addresses in contemporary Italian cooking. The ancient walls remain, pitted and textured, and the modern interior — bright colors, deliberate design — reads as a conscious dialogue with the structure rather than an attempt to obscure it. Arriving from Via dei Cassari, positioned between the Vucciria market to the north and the Cala harbor to the south, the location places the restaurant at one of Palermo's most historically layered intersections.
That physical context matters. The Vucciria has spent decades oscillating between decline and reinvention; the Cala harbor retains its medieval outline beneath the modern port activity. A restaurant choosing to operate in that specific corridor is implicitly making a statement about where contemporary Palermo sits relative to its own past.
Northern Technique Meets Southern Produce
Contemporary Italian cooking at the serious end of the spectrum has long operated through a particular tension: the pull between regional identity and technical ambition. Some restaurants resolve that tension by doubling down on hyper-local tradition; others import external frameworks and apply them to local ingredients. Gagini's approach, under chef Mauricio Zillo, represents the second model , and in the specific context of Sicily, where ingredient quality is the baseline expectation rather than the differentiator, that choice places real pressure on the execution.
Zillo comes from Piedmont, and the menu reflects that lineage in ways that go beyond surface reference. Casoncello , the stuffed pasta format native to Lombardy and Bergamo, often associated with butter and sage in its classical form , appears here filled with herb and sheep ricotta, a reframing that uses a Northern vessel to carry a distinctly Sicilian filling. The move is indicative of the kitchen's methodology: structural choices from one tradition, ingredient sourcing from another.
That cross-regional logic extends across the menu. Nebrodi black pork, from the mountain pig breed raised in Sicily's northeastern interior and valued for its richness and fat distribution, is served three ways , a format that signals confidence in a single ingredient and enough technical range to present it across different preparations. Local bluefin tuna with clam salmoriglio pulls in another direction, the salmoriglio (a herb-oil-lemon emulsion with deep roots in Sicilian coastal cooking) used as a linking element between the tuna and the shellfish rather than as a condiment. Marinated grilled quail completes the picture of a kitchen working across land and sea without obvious hierarchy between them.
Zillo's Piedmontese background is not incidental to this. Northern Italian cooking , particularly from Piedmont , operates through restraint and technique in ways that differ structurally from the boldness and abundance that characterize much Sicilian cooking. The intersection of those two sensibilities, when it works, produces something that reads as genuinely contemporary rather than simply novel.
Where Gagini Sits in Palermo's Restaurant Tier
Palermo's serious dining scene has expanded meaningfully over the past decade, but it remains smaller and less internationally mapped than Italy's northern restaurant hubs. The Michelin presence in Sicily has grown, and the island now supports restaurants operating at the level of peers you'd find in Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico, Le Calandre in Rubano, or Osteria Francescana in Modena in terms of ambition, even if the recognition levels differ.
Gagini holds a Michelin Plate (2025), which in the Guide's current framework signals a kitchen producing food of consistent quality without yet reaching starred territory. It also carries an Opinionated About Dining recommendation for leading new European restaurants (2023), a database that weights critic consensus and repeat visits more heavily than single-jury assessments. Together, those signals place the restaurant in a meaningful middle tier: above the broad casual market, below the starred addresses, and recognized by two distinct evaluation frameworks.
In the Palermo context, its closest comparison points include Mec Restaurant, which holds a Michelin star and prices accordingly at the leading of the local range, and A' Cuncuma, a creative-format restaurant at the €€€ tier. Gagini operates in a similar creative register to A' Cuncuma while carrying additional external validation. For diners working through Palermo's contemporary dining options more broadly, our full Palermo restaurants guide maps the wider field.
The city's dining tradition also includes important reference points at other price levels. Antica Focacceria San Francesco represents the deep-rooted street food and bakery tradition that predates fine dining in Palermo by centuries, and AMMODO - La pizza di Daniele Vaccarella sits in the serious pizza tier. Archestrato di Gela represents another angle on Sicilian culinary tradition. Gagini occupies a different register from all of them.
For context across Italy's contemporary cooking scene, the restaurants that define what serious Italian kitchen technique looks like at the leading , Dal Pescatore in Runate, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Enrico Bartolini in Milan, Ristorante Berton, and Il Piastrino in Pennabilli , represent a frame against which Sicilian contemporary cooking is increasingly measured, rather than evaluated in isolation.
Planning Your Visit
Gagini is closed on Mondays. From Tuesday through Sunday, dinner service runs from 7:30 to 10 pm. Wednesday through Sunday, lunch is also available, running from 12:30 to 2 pm. The address is Via dei Cassari, 35, in the historic center. For those organizing a broader Palermo trip, our full Palermo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the wider city.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where It Fits
A compact peer set to orient you in the local landscape.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gagini | Contemporary Italian | In the vibrant heart of the city, between the Vucciria market and the Cala harbo… | This venue |
| Mec Restaurant | Sicilian | Michelin 1 Star | Sicilian, €€€€ |
| Charleston | New American, Modern Cuisine | New American, Modern Cuisine, €€€€ | |
| Antica Focacceria San Francesco | Bakery | Bakery | |
| Bye Bye Blues | Modern Italian | Modern Italian | |
| A' Cuncuma | Creative | Creative, €€€ |
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