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Puteaux, France

IMperfetto

Executive ChefTonino Cogliano - Simone Lombardi
LocationPuteaux, France
50 Top Pizza

A few kilometres west of central Paris, IMperfetto brings Neapolitan pizza craft to Puteaux with professional polish and a warm southern Italian welcome. Tonino Cogliano's dough work and Simone Lombardi's front-of-house discipline place this in a different register from the city's casual pizza circuit. The Italian wine list, espresso programme, and fried specialities make a full evening of it worth the short trip.

IMperfetto restaurant in Puteaux, France
About

Neapolitan Craft in the Western Suburbs

Puteaux sits on the western edge of the Paris metropolitan area, separated from the 16th arrondissement by the Seine and from La Défense by a few blocks of broad boulevard. It is not a neighbourhood that draws food-focused visitors on reputation alone, which is precisely why the quality operating out of 14 Boulevard Richard Wallace tends to land as a surprise. The setting is modern, the room professional, and the experience positioned well above what the postcode might lead a first-time visitor to expect.

The broader context matters here. Pizza in the Paris region has undergone a genuine recalibration over the past decade. Where the category was once dominated by mid-range, high-volume operations running thin, forgettable crusts, a smaller tier of Neapolitan-focused addresses has established itself on dough quality, sourcing discipline, and the kind of hospitality literacy that serious Italian restaurants take as a given. IMperfetto belongs to that second tier. The room carries the warmth of a Neapolitan welcome without tipping into theatre, and the staff manage the balance between professional service and genuine ease with visible competence.

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The Kitchen and the Counter

Neapolitan pizza, as a culinary tradition, is built on a short list of variables: flour blend, hydration, fermentation time, oven temperature, and ingredient provenance. There is very little room to disguise weak sourcing or rushed process. The dough at IMperfetto is described as notably soft, a marker of proper long fermentation and high-quality flour rather than quick-rise technique. That textural result is the clearest signal of where the kitchen's priorities lie.

Tonino Cogliano handles the pizza programme. The name Cogliano signals Campanian roots, and the Neapolitan tradition he works within is one of the most codified in Italian food culture, governed by the Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana's specifications on everything from water content to leopard char. Operating that tradition credibly outside Naples, and specifically in a French suburb, requires both technical fluency and the confidence to resist localising the product into something more universally palatable. The evidence here suggests that resistance holds.

Beyond the core pizza offering, the kitchen runs focaccias and fried items. The montanara, a fried-then-oven-finished pizza variant that originated in Naples as street food, is described as dry and well-executed, which is the correct result: a poorly made montanara is greasy and heavy; done properly, the double cooking drives off excess oil and produces a lighter finish than the method implies. That level of technical consideration across the fried programme points to a kitchen that treats the full menu seriously, not just the marquee item.

The Front of House as Part of the Offer

Simone Lombardi runs the dining room, and the pairing of a technically focused pizza chef with an experienced front-of-house lead is a structural choice that higher-end Italian restaurants in Naples and Milan have long understood to matter. In the Paris context, where Italian restaurants have often prioritised kitchen credentials over service depth, that front-of-house investment registers clearly. The staff are described as professional and warm, a combination that is less common than it sounds: service at this level can skew cold and transactional, or tip into casual informality that loses precision. The balance here appears well-calibrated.

Drinks: Italian Anchors and Local Range

The drinks programme at IMperfetto reflects a dual approach common among the better Italian-focused addresses in France: Italian wines and beers as the spine, with local and international options broadening the range for guests who want them. The Italian wine selection is described as excellent, covering a category that spans from volcanic Campanian whites through to structured southern reds. For a Neapolitan-focused kitchen, the wine alignment makes sense: Fiano di Avellino and Greco di Tufo carry the acidity and minerality that work against the richness of fried dough; Aglianico from Taurasi sits comfortably alongside aged mozzarella and cured meats.

The espresso programme is noted specifically, and that specificity is worth taking seriously. In a city where Italian-operated espresso bars remain fewer than the size of the Italian community might suggest, finding a machine calibrated correctly and a shot pulled with attention is not guaranteed, even at restaurants marketing themselves as Italian. IMperfetto's espresso is flagged as not taken for granted, which in context reads as a signal that it is done properly.

Tiramisu closes the meal with the same logic: it is a dish that appears on nearly every Parisian Italian menu but varies enormously in execution. When it is made with the right savoiardi, the correct coffee-to-mascarpone ratio, and fresh eggs, it reads as a serious thing; when it is made from shortcuts, it reads as filler. At IMperfetto, the tiramisu is specifically noted alongside the espresso as a combination worth seeking out.

Getting There and Planning Your Visit

Puteaux connects to central Paris via the RER A at La Défense-Grande Arche, placing the address within direct reach of the 1st, 8th, and surrounding arrondissements. The neighbourhood is also accessible from the T2 tram line. For visitors already exploring the western suburbs, or based near La Défense for business, IMperfetto sits in a usable position without requiring significant detour. The character of the area is residential and commercial rather than tourist-heavy, which means the dining room operates for a local and professional crowd rather than passing foot traffic. Reservations are advisable, particularly on weekend evenings, though precise booking policy details are leading confirmed directly with the venue.

For visitors planning a broader Paris-region dining itinerary that moves across registers and price points, the contrast between IMperfetto and the three-Michelin-star tier operating in central Paris is instructive. Addresses like Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen in Paris or the multi-starred regional houses such as Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern represent French haute cuisine in its most ambitious, resource-intensive form. IMperfetto operates in a completely different category, one defined by craft specificity, ingredient provenance, and regional Italian tradition rather than tasting menu architecture. Both have value in a well-planned itinerary; neither substitutes for the other.

Other reference points across France worth considering include Bras in Laguiole, Paul Bocuse - L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille, Assiette Champenoise in Reims, Au Crocodile in Strasbourg, and Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse. For international reference, Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City illustrate how different craft traditions travel and establish credibility in major international markets, the same dynamic IMperfetto demonstrates on a more local scale in the Paris suburbs.

For more on what the area offers beyond this address, see our full Puteaux restaurants guide, our full Puteaux hotels guide, our full Puteaux bars guide, our full Puteaux wineries guide, and our full Puteaux experiences guide.

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