Google: 4.8 · 181 reviews
Impronta d'Acqua



A Michelin-starred restaurant on the Ligurian seafront at Cavi di Lavagna, Impronta d'Acqua runs four tasting menus across fish, meat, vegetarian, and offal traditions — all available à la carte. Chef Ivan Maniago's open kitchen anchors a minimalist room where Ligurian coastal cooking meets deliberate technique. Ranked 440th in Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Europe for 2025.
- Address
- SS 1, 2121, 16033 Cavi GE, Italy
- Phone
- +39 375 529 1077
- Website
- improntadacqua.com

A Ligurian Counterpoint
The Ligurian coast between Genoa and the Cinque Terre has long been associated with a particular culinary register: pesto, trofie, anchovies, the kind of cooking that is humble in ingredient and deeply regional in logic. Fine dining on this stretch tends to cluster around the better-known resort towns, which makes Cavi di Lavagna an instructive case. The village sits on the Via Aurelia, the old Roman coastal road, with the railway running parallel and the sea visible just beyond it. It is not, by the usual measures, a destination dining address. And yet Impronta d'Acqua, positioned directly on that road with the seafront at its threshold, holds a Michelin star and a ranking of 440th among Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Europe for 2025. The gap between setting and credential is part of what defines the experience here.
The room reads immediately as a deliberate rejection of Ligurian rustic convention. Open-plan, minimalist, contemporary in finish — it is the kind of interior that announces a kitchen with something precise to say. The open-view kitchen at the rear means the brigade is visible throughout service, a framing device that shifts the dynamic from theatre to transparency. For diners accustomed to the closed-kitchen formality of, say, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence or the grand-room scale of Enrico Bartolini in Milan, the format here feels deliberately low-register in production while high-register in execution.
Four Menus, One Kitchen
Structural decision that most clearly distinguishes Impronta d'Acqua from its Ligurian neighbours is the four-menu architecture. Most starred restaurants along the Italian Riviera offer a single tasting progression, occasionally with a shorter lunch version. Here, the kitchen maintains four parallel paths simultaneously: a fish-focused menu, a meat menu, a vegetarian menu (with a fully vegan variant), and a fourth dedicated to quinto quarto, the offal tradition that has its deepest roots in Roman and central Italian cooking rather than in Liguria at all.
That last menu is an editorial statement in its own right. The quinto quarto tradition, built around the fifth quarter of the animal — offal, tripe, sweetbreads , belongs historically to a cucina povera logic that Roman trattorie and certain Florentine kitchens have preserved, but which the Ligurian coast has never claimed with much conviction. Bringing it into a contemporary, seafront, Michelin-starred context at this price tier positions Impronta d'Acqua in a small cohort of Italian restaurants that treat offal as a serious creative category rather than a nostalgic footnote. For comparison, the offal tradition appears at the serious end of Reale in Castel di Sangro and in certain tasting formats at Osteria Francescana in Modena, but in neither case does it constitute a standalone menu.
The fish and meat menus sit closer to what this coastal location would logically produce. The database record notes a dish of pigeon breast made into a terrine with pistachios, accompanied by fried pigeon leg , a preparation that is technically specific enough to signal genuine kitchen investment in texture contrast and the curing tradition. All four menus can be ordered à la carte, which is a further structural departure: it turns the tasting format into a reference map rather than a fixed itinerary, and places decision-making authority squarely with the diner.
Liguria's Culinary Identity and Where This Kitchen Fits
Understanding Impronta d'Acqua's position requires some clarity about what Ligurian cooking actually means at its upper register. The region's cuisine is not typically associated with the kind of contemporary Italian cooking being practised at Piazza Duomo in Alba, Le Calandre in Rubano, or Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico. Those kitchens each belong to well-established regional fine-dining corridors with deep critical histories. Liguria's starred restaurants are fewer in number and less internationally tracked. The region's culinary identity remains rooted in its herb-driven, seafood-and-vegetable tradition, and the restaurants that depart from it significantly often do so without much local critical infrastructure to support the conversation.
Chef Ivan Maniago's kitchen draws primarily on fish and seafood in line with the coastal setting, but places deliberate weight on inland and vegetable-origin products as a secondary register. This reflects a broader tendency in contemporary Italian cooking to resist the tyranny of the regional mono-identity , the idea that a Ligurian restaurant must be only Ligurian in its references. It is the same logic that drives the offal menu: using the coastal address as a foundation while refusing to be confined by it. Restaurants working the same conceptual territory on the Italian coastline include Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone on the Amalfi coast and Agli Amici Rovinj in Rovinj across the Adriatic, both of which use their seafront positioning as a starting point rather than a constraint. Closer to home, Raieü, also in Cavi di Lavagna, takes a more focused seafood approach , making the two restaurants useful counterpoints within the same small village.
The Vegetarian and Vegan Menus
The vegetable-focused programming at Impronta d'Acqua deserves separate attention because it is more articulated than the default vegetarian accommodation that most Italian starred restaurants offer. The VEGE "TABLE" menu can be run in a fully vegan version, the VEGAN TABLE, and the specific dishes noted in available records indicate technical ambition: Navone cabbage with lard and honey with rice crispy, and artichoke in double cooking with spicy mayonnaise. The double-cooking technique applied to artichoke suggests a kitchen interested in texture transformation rather than simple vegetable preparation , a method more commonly associated with avant-garde Spanish cooking or the plant-focused work coming out of Nordic kitchens than with traditional Ligurian cucina. The lard-and-honey combination with cabbage reads as a deliberate sweet-fat-bitter construction, placing it in a different register from the herb-and-olive-oil logic that dominates most Ligurian vegetable cookery.
Italy's fine-dining sector has been slower than its Nordic and Iberian peers to treat the vegetarian menu as a first-tier creative format rather than a courtesy accommodation. At this restaurant, the menu structure places it on equal footing with the fish and meat options, which is still relatively unusual at the starred level. Dal Pescatore in Runate remains one of the few Italian restaurants of comparable stature where vegetable cookery carries comparable weight , though in that case through a very different, classical Italian lens.
Planning a Visit
Impronta d'Acqua is priced at the €€€ tier, which positions it below the €€€€ bracket occupied by the most established Italian starred restaurants but above the mid-market range. At this price point, combined with the Michelin star and the OAD European ranking, advance booking is advisable, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings. The restaurant is closed on Tuesdays; lunch service runs on Monday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday from 12:30 to 14:30, with dinner across all open days from 20:00 to 22:00. The address is SS 1, 2121, 16033 Cavi di Lavagna, on the Via Aurelia seafront road. The Google rating stands at 4.8 across 164 reviews, a score that reflects consistent service quality over time rather than a single spike of attention.
For visitors building a broader itinerary in the area, our full Cavi di Lavagna restaurants guide covers the local dining scene in more depth. The village's accommodation options are covered in our Cavi di Lavagna hotels guide, and for the broader local scene, bars, wineries, and experiences guides are also available.
Peer Set Snapshot
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Impronta d'Acqua | Italian Contemporary | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star | This venue |
| Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler | Italian, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Italian, Creative, €€€€ |
| Dal Pescatore | Italian, Italian Contemporary | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Italian, Italian Contemporary, €€€€ |
| Enoteca Pinchiorri | Italian - French, Italian Contemporary | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Italian - French, Italian Contemporary, €€€€ |
| Enrico Bartolini | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
| Osteria Francescana | Progressive Italian, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive Italian, Creative, €€€€ |
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