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Authentic Southern Italian

Google: 4.3 · 681 reviews

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Madrid, Spain

La Piperna

CuisineItalian
Executive ChefNello da Biase
Price≈$40
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
Opinionated About Dining

Among the small cluster of Italian restaurants earning serious critical attention in Madrid, La Piperna in Tetuán has climbed steadily through the Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe rankings, reaching #524 in 2025. Chef Nello da Biase runs a kitchen rooted in regional Italian tradition rather than crowd-pleasing adaptation, with service running through a split lunch-and-dinner format six days a week.

La Piperna restaurant in Madrid, Spain
About

Italian Cooking in a City That Rarely Gets It Right

Madrid's relationship with Italian food is complicated. The city has no shortage of pasta-and-pizza operations calibrated to local palates, but genuinely regional Italian cooking, the kind that draws a hard line between Roman cacio e pepe and a Neapolitan ragù, or that treats a Milanese risotto as something architecturally distinct from a Venetian one, remains rare. That scarcity makes the handful of kitchens operating at a more serious level worth tracking carefully. La Piperna, on Calle de la Infanta Mercedes in Tetuán, is one of them.

The restaurant sits outside the neighbourhoods that absorb most of Madrid's international dining traffic. Tetuán sits north of Chamberí, away from the circuits that feed Gioia or Manifesto 13, and well outside the gravity of the three- and two-Michelin-star operations like DiverXO and Coque that define Madrid's leading creative tier. That distance is part of its character. Diners arrive because they are looking specifically for La Piperna, not because they wandered past it.

Reading the Regional Tradition

Italian regional cooking is among the most codified in Europe. Each tradition carries its own logic: Roman cucina povera built on offal and cured pork, Neapolitan technique centred on wood-fire and dough fermentation, the butter-and-stock foundations of northern Milanese and Piemontese cooking, the seafood-led restraint of Ligurian kitchens. These are not interchangeable, and the leading Italian restaurants outside Italy tend to commit to a specific lineage rather than pulling from all of them simultaneously.

Chef Nello da Biase's presence at La Piperna is the credential that frames the kitchen's approach. Without confirmed dish-level specifics from the current menu, the precise regional identity of the cooking is something to read on arrival. What the Opinionated About Dining rankings confirm is that the kitchen is operating at a level that earns sustained critical attention, climbing from a Recommended listing in 2023 to #649 in 2024 and #524 in 2025 within the Casual Europe category. That is a consistent upward trajectory in a guide that weights culinary seriousness heavily across its European peer set.

For a useful point of comparison, Italian kitchens operating abroad in other major Asian cities demonstrate how much depth the tradition carries when executed with discipline. 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto both show how Italian culinary grammar can hold its structure across contexts. La Piperna occupies a different tier, casual rather than formal, but the question it answers is similar: whether a kitchen committed to a specific tradition can maintain that commitment in a city that often rewards compromise.

The Tetuán Setting

Approaching La Piperna along Calle de la Infanta Mercedes, the neighbourhood context is residential Madrid rather than the polished commercial corridors of Salamanca or Malasaña. The street runs through a district that has historically served local communities rather than visitors, which gives the restaurant a different social register than many of its Italian peers in the city. This is a place embedded in its neighbourhood rather than positioned for the tourist or expense-account circuit.

That embeddedness tends to produce a particular kind of room. The energy in restaurants like this comes from regulars who have made the place part of their week, who know the format and the kitchen's rhythms, and who treat the dining room as a standing appointment rather than an occasion. Whether that describes La Piperna specifically is something the 647 Google reviews, averaging 4.4 out of 5, support as a reasonable inference. That volume of responses, with a rating holding that high, points to consistent repeat custom rather than a single wave of attention.

Among Madrid's other Italian options, Ozio Gastronómico approaches the category from a different angle. La Piperna's positioning in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe list places it in a peer set defined by food-first operations rather than room or service theatre.

Format and Timing

The operating format at La Piperna reflects a traditional Italian restaurant rhythm rather than a Madrid one. The kitchen runs a split service, open for lunch from 1:30 to 5 pm and for dinner from 8:30 pm to midnight Tuesday through Friday, with Saturday dinner running to 12:30 am and Sunday lunch extended to 5:30 pm. Monday is closed. This is a schedule that prioritises proper meal services over all-day covers, and the late closing on Friday and Saturday nights fits a kitchen confident in its dinner programme.

The Sunday lunch hours are worth noting for planning purposes. A 5:30 pm close gives more time than the weekday lunch window, and Sunday remains one of the better moments to visit Italian kitchens that take the midday meal as seriously as the evening one. For visitors building a weekend itinerary around Madrid's broader dining scene, the city's full restaurant options are mapped in our full Madrid restaurants guide, alongside our full Madrid bars guide, our full Madrid hotels guide, our full Madrid wineries guide, and our full Madrid experiences guide.

For those extending a trip to explore Spain's broader fine dining scene, restaurants at the formal end of the Spanish spectrum, including Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, sit in a different category but give context for where serious restaurant culture sits across the country.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: C. de la Infanta Mercedes, 98, Tetuán, 28020 Madrid, Spain
  • Neighbourhood: Tetuán, north of Chamberí
  • Tuesday to Friday: Lunch 1:30–5 pm / Dinner 8:30 pm–12 am
  • Saturday: Lunch 1:30–5 pm / Dinner 8:30 pm–12:30 am
  • Sunday: Lunch 1:30–5:30 pm
  • Monday: Closed
  • Chef: Nello da Biase
  • Critical recognition: Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe #524 (2025)
  • Google rating: 4.4 from 647 reviews
  • Booking: Contact the restaurant directly for reservations
Signature Dishes
spaghetti with sea urchintortellinifregola with squid inkNeapolitan ragu paccheri
Frequently asked questions

A Minimal Peer Set

A compact comparison to help you place this venue among nearby peers.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Classic
  • Intimate
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Family
  • Group Dining
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Cozy and welcoming with a genuine Italian atmosphere, natural lighting, and an informal yet gastronomic vibe.

Signature Dishes
spaghetti with sea urchintortellinifregola with squid inkNeapolitan ragu paccheri