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Set inside Turin's Sondo building, a post-industrial complex housing a museum, offices, and exhibition spaces, Mammà Isola di Capri brings Mediterranean cooking rooted in Campanian flavours to an unexpected northern Italian address. Chef Raffaele Amitrano holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and a Google rating of 4.9. The kitchen's plin pasta, prepared with cacio cheese, pepper, and raw prawns, signals the cross-regional ambition at work here.
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- Address
- Corso Castelfidardo, 22 a, 10138 Torino TO, Italy
- Phone
- +39 011 024 3772
- Website
- snodotorino.com

A Southern Kitchen in a Northern Cultural Complex
Turin's dining scene has long been dominated by Piedmontese tradition, from the tajarin and vitello tonnato of neighbourhood trattorias to the modern Italian ambition of rooms like Del Cambio and Condividere. Against that backdrop, a restaurant anchoring itself in Campanian Mediterranean cooking occupies a distinct, somewhat contrarian position. Mammà Isola di Capri is a Modern Italian Mediterranean restaurant in Turin at Corso Castelfidardo, 22 a, 10138 Torino TO, Italy, with a Google rating of 4.8 and a price per person of about $80. Situated on Corso Castelfidardo within the multi-functional Sondo building, it makes that position legible the moment you enter. The space is large, decorated in a contemporary post-industrial register, with the exposed textures and open sightlines typical of repurposed industrial architecture. Around it: a museum, offices, exhibition spaces. The building functions as a cultural compound, and the restaurant draws energy from that context rather than operating in spite of it.
That physical setting shapes the experience before a single dish arrives. The Sondo building rewards early arrival; visitors who come before their reservation can move through the exhibition spaces and approach the dining room with the slightly heightened attention that comes from having already engaged with the building's other programmes. The large sharing table reinforces a communal logic that fits the cultural-complex format, placing Mammà in a tier of restaurants where the room's function is as considered as the menu's construction. Compared to the more formal codes at Cannavacciuolo Bistrot or the intimate scale of Piccolo Lord, this is a restaurant designed for a different kind of engagement.
Mediterranean Cooking Anchored in Campania
The Mediterranean category has become broad enough in Italian fine dining to risk losing definition. At its worst, it means sun-adjacent ingredients assembled without regional specificity. At its most coherent, it means a kitchen that draws on a precise coastal tradition and uses northern Italian positioning as creative pressure rather than constraint. Mammà Isola di Capri works toward the latter. Chef Raffaele Amitrano's menu is Mediterranean in frame but Campanian in instinct, drawing on the flavours and ingredients of the region south of Naples in a city that sits 800 kilometres away.
The plin pasta is the clearest signal of how that creative distance functions. Plin is a Piedmontese format, the small pinched pasta historically associated with Langhe and the Roero. Amitrano uses it as a vehicle for cacio cheese, pepper, and raw prawns: a dish that acknowledges northern form while driving the flavour logic southward. This kind of cross-regional synthesis, using local technique with imported reference points, is more disciplined than it first appears. It requires the kitchen to understand both traditions well enough to make the combination coherent rather than arbitrary. For comparison, the southern Italian inflection visible here shares some DNA with the Campanian precision at Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone, though Amitrano's context demands a different set of solutions. The approach also finds loose parallels in how Mediterranean kitchens elsewhere handle the tension between regional identity and creative latitude, as seen at La Brezza in Ascona and at Arnaud Donckele and Maxime Frédéric at Louis Vuitton in Saint-Tropez.
The Team Dynamic in a Large Room
Restaurants embedded in cultural institutions face a specific front-of-house challenge: they attract guests with heterogeneous expectations. A table arriving from the museum may have very different orientations than a table that has booked specifically for the cooking. Managing that range requires a service team with enough range to read a room accurately, calibrating the depth of explanation and the pace of a meal to guests who may or may not be primarily there to eat. The large format of Mammà's space, with its communal table and open contemporary interior, places additional demands on how the team organises the floor.
A Google rating of 4.8 from 24 reviews reflects consistent guest satisfaction. What both data points suggest is that the gap between what the kitchen promises and what guests receive is narrow, which in a large post-industrial space serving a cross-regional menu is not a given.
That consistency is partly a function of team cohesion. In kitchens that move between regional registers, the risk is that different courses signal different intentions, leaving the front-of-house without a stable story to tell. When the kitchen communicates a clear through-line, the service team can frame each dish within a broader narrative. The plin with cacio, pepper, and raw prawns works as an explanation of the restaurant's entire premise, and a floor team that can articulate that premise creates a different kind of hospitality than one simply describing ingredients.
Where Mammà Sits in Turin's Wider Dining Map
Turin's mid-to-upper tier currently runs from neighbourhood-embedded Piedmontese cooking through to the contemporary Italian ambition of rooms with serious wine programmes and tasting-menu formats. At the €€€ price point, Mammà Isola di Capri occupies a middle position in that hierarchy, sitting below the €€€€ rooms like Condividere and Del Cambio while distinguishing itself from more casual Piedmontese addresses through its Mediterranean specificity and cultural-complex setting. The comparison is not purely vertical; Mediterranean cooking in Turin occupies a different niche than it would in Naples or Palermo, and the novelty of the regional register in this city does some of the work that an additional price bracket might do elsewhere.
Planning a Visit
Mammà Isola di Capri is at Corso Castelfidardo 22a, Turin (10138). The address is within the Sondo building, which also contains a museum and exhibition spaces. Given the building's programming, arriving early enough to engage with the other spaces before dining makes practical sense. The price range is €€€, positioning this as a considered dinner rather than an everyday address. Reservations are recommended. The Google rating of 4.8 (24 reviews) indicates a kitchen operating with reasonable consistency at this tier.
What should I order at Mammà Isola di Capri?
The plin pasta with cacio cheese, pepper, and raw prawns is the dish most directly tied to the kitchen's cross-regional identity: it uses a Piedmontese pasta format to carry Campanian flavour logic, which encapsulates what Amitrano's Mediterranean menu is doing at this northern Italian address. This is the dish that most clearly explains the restaurant's culinary premise, and it is the starting point for understanding the rest of the menu's construction.
Cost and Credentials
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mammà Isola di CapriThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Aurora, Modern Italian Mediterranean | $$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| Razzo | Centro, Modern Italian with Asian Fusion | $$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| Tre Galline | $$ | Michelin Plate | Quadrilatero Romano, Traditional Piedmontese | |
| La Limonaia | San Paolo, Contemporary Italian | $$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| La Pista | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Nizza Millefonti, Modern Italian with Piedmontese Influences | |
| Consorzio | $$$ | Bib Gourmand | city center, Traditional Piedmontese Trattoria |
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