Google: 4.6 · 444 reviews
La Chiocciola
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In the flatlands of Ferrara province, La Chiocciola pairs an inn with a kitchen that takes Emilian country cooking seriously — snails, frogs, and fish from the Adriatic coast, at prices that reflect the village setting. A Michelin Plate recognition and a 4.6 Google rating across 430 reviews confirm it as a reference point for the area's distinct wetland cuisine.
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Where the Po Delta Ends Up on the Plate
Drive east out of Ferrara into the flat, reed-threaded farmland of the Po Delta and the landscape eventually settles into the kind of quiet that makes city visitors uneasy. Quartiere di Portomaggiore sits in this zone — small, unhurried, largely bypassed by the tourist circuits that cluster around Ferrara's medieval walls or Modena's starred dining rooms. La Chiocciola operates here as both restaurant and inn, in a country village format that is less a style choice than a reflection of where this part of Emilia-Romagna actually stands. The building does not announce itself. That restraint is, in its own way, the point.
Sourced from Wetland and Sea: The Ingredient Logic
The Ferrara plain is one of the few places in northern Italy where freshwater marsh ingredients — snails, frogs, eel , remain central to a working culinary identity rather than a nostalgic footnote. This is not a region that adopted wetland cooking as a revival project; it is a region that never stopped eating this way because the ingredients were always there. The Po Delta reclamation canals, the rice paddies, and the valley floors between Ferrara and the Adriatic coast have historically produced a larder that differs markedly from what you find in Bologna or Modena, even though those cities are less than an hour away.
La Chiocciola's Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 signals that its kitchen takes this regional logic seriously. The Plate category in the Michelin system is not a star, but it is a meaningful credential: it indicates food worth a traveller's attention, prepared with consistency and care. In a village setting at the €€ price tier, that recognition places La Chiocciola in a different conversation from the starred restaurants that anchor Italy's fine dining map , Osteria Francescana in Modena, Dal Pescatore in Runate, Le Calandre in Rubano, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Enrico Bartolini in Milan , but it is a conversation about seriousness of purpose, not budget versus luxury.
The core ingredients tell you where you are geographically. Snails (lumache, as the restaurant's name directly references , chiocciola is Italian for snail) have been eaten in this part of the Po Valley since at least Roman times, prepared slowly with herbs and local wine. Frogs from the drainage channels and paddies are a Ferrarese staple that disappeared from most of Italy's urban menus in the latter half of the twentieth century but survived in village kitchens that kept buying from local suppliers. Fish, meanwhile, arrives from the Adriatic, which sits roughly 60 kilometres to the east: the same coastline that feeds kitchens at Uliassi in Senigallia and Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone, though with very different register and price point.
What makes this sourcing pattern worth attention is its coherence. A menu that moves between freshwater marsh ingredients and Adriatic fish is not mixing categories arbitrarily , it is following the actual geography of eastern Emilia-Romagna, where the Po Delta fans into the sea and where the distinction between river and coast has always been porous. Country restaurants in this area have historically used whatever the water provided, and La Chiocciola's approach reflects that continuity.
The Inn Format and What It Changes
The combination of restaurant and inn in a small village is a format with deep roots in northern Italian rural hospitality. The locanda tradition , a place to eat and sleep rather than simply to dine , shapes the pace and expectation of a meal in ways that purely urban restaurants rarely replicate. Guests staying overnight tend to eat differently: slower, more relaxed, less oriented toward the efficiency of a city dinner service. This changes what a kitchen can reasonably offer and what a diner can reasonably expect.
For the surrounding region's culinary pattern, see our full Quartiere di Portomaggiore restaurants guide. The inn offer itself is covered in our full Quartiere di Portomaggiore hotels guide.
Placing La Chiocciola in the Wider Country Cooking Category
Country cooking in Italy spans an enormous range of ambition and execution. At the leading end, restaurants like Reale in Castel di Sangro, Piazza Duomo in Alba, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico have turned rural sourcing into a framework for multi-star cooking. La Chiocciola operates at a different point on that range , closer in spirit to 21.9 in Piobesi d'Alba or Andrea Monesi at Locanda di Orta in Orta San Giulio in its grounding in a specific local tradition, without the creative reinterpretation that characterises the starred end of the category.
That is not a criticism. The Ferrarese country kitchen is valuable precisely because it has not been extensively reinterpreted. Dishes built around snails and frogs exist in a narrow band of Italian regional cooking that is genuinely difficult to encounter in a credible form outside the local context. A traveller who wants to understand what Casa Perbellini 12 Apostoli in Verona or Osteria Francescana are ultimately drawing from , the deep archive of northern Italian rural cooking , will learn more from a meal in a place like this than from a second tasting menu in a familiar city.
The 4.6 rating across 430 Google reviews is a useful signal at this end of the market. Volume matters here: 430 reviews for a village restaurant in Ferrara province represents a consistent local and regional following, not a spike of tourist attention driven by a single magazine piece.
Planning a Visit
La Chiocciola sits at Via Quartiere - Runco, 94/F in Quartiere di Portomaggiore, in the Ferrara province of Emilia-Romagna. The €€ pricing tier makes it accessible for a full meal with wine without the pre-planning that a starred kitchen requires. The inn component means overnight stays are an option, which opens the visit to a more relaxed rhythm , particularly useful if arriving from Ferrara or Bologna and wanting to spend time in the delta area without returning to a city the same evening. Booking ahead is advisable, particularly on weekends and during the warmer months when the Po Delta draws more visitors to the area.
For drinking options in the area, see our full Quartiere di Portomaggiore bars guide. For wineries in the province, our full Quartiere di Portomaggiore wineries guide covers what is available locally. Additional activities and cultural programming can be found in our full Quartiere di Portomaggiore experiences guide.
Comparison Snapshot
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Chiocciola | Country cooking | €€ | A restaurant and an inn in a small country village, it’s the right place if you’… | 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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Browse all →At a Glance
- Elegant
- Cozy
- Classic
- Intimate
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Standalone
- Extensive Wine List
Refined rustic atmosphere with well-spaced tables providing privacy and tranquility, modern clean facilities, and a hospitable traditional Italian feel.

















