Google: 4.4 · 853 reviews
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Among Cuneo's mid-range Piedmontese restaurants, Osteria della Chiocciola occupies a distinctive position: a two-floor address in the historic centre where a ground-floor wine bar feeds into a first-floor dining room hung with works by Pignatelli, Andy Warhol, and Valerio Berruti. The kitchen holds a 2024 Michelin Plate and commits to local ingredients, with fish alternatives available alongside the meat-forward Piemontese canon. Google reviewers rate it 4.4 across more than 800 responses.
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A Corner of Cuneo's Historic Centre That Earns Its Place Twice Over
Via Fossano runs quietly off the colonnaded axis of Via Roma, Cuneo's principal promenade, and it is here that Osteria della Chiocciola establishes itself with a presence that reads differently from the street and the dining room. The ground floor opens as a wine bar: colourful, conversational, the kind of room where a glass of Dolcetto d'Alba or a Roero Arneis becomes a reason to linger rather than a prelude to something else. The restaurant proper sits upstairs, where the tone shifts perceptibly. The walls carry paintings by Pignatelli, Andy Warhol, and Valerio Berruti, a combination that places contemporary Italian visual culture in easy conversation with the older culinary tradition the kitchen defends below. The two floors do not feel at odds; they feel like a considered argument about what a Piedmontese address in 2024 should be.
Cuneo's Mid-Range Piedmontese Scene and Where Chiocciola Fits
Cuneo's restaurant offer at the €€ tier is more coherent than the city's modest profile might suggest. The surrounding province produces Barolo, Barbaresco, truffles, hazelnuts, and some of Italy's most consequential cheese traditions, and local kitchens at every price point feel that supply chain acutely. Within this tier, the options diverge by emphasis: Bove's weights heavily toward meats and grills; I 5 Sensi takes a contemporary approach to the same regional pantry; Osteria Vecchio Borgo anchors itself in country cooking; and 4 Ciance holds the Piedmontese flag at a comparable price point. Trattoria Marsupino rounds out the local canon with its own reading of the regional tradition.
Osteria della Chiocciola's position within that group is defined by two things: its Michelin Plate recognition in the 2024 guide, which signals a kitchen operating with sufficient consistency to hold inspector attention, and its dual-format structure, which gives it a social function that pure restaurants in the same tier do not replicate. A 4.4 Google rating across more than 800 reviews adds another layer of evidence; at that volume, the score is a reliable signal rather than a statistical outlier.
The Kitchen's Commitments: Local Ingredients, Piedmontese Canon, and a Fish Alternative
Traditional Piedmontese cooking is not a simple category. It spans tajarin with butter and sage, vitello tonnato in its various interpretations, brasato al Barolo in the winter months, and a deep tradition of offal and slow-cooked meats that reflects the frugal origins of cucina povera in a region that became prosperous without abandoning its culinary memory. The Chiocciola kitchen works within this framework with a declared focus on local ingredients, which in the Cuneo province means produce drawn from one of the most concentrated agricultural and viticultural areas in northern Italy.
The inclusion of a fish alternative is worth noting in this context. Piedmont is landlocked, and its traditional cuisine reflects that geography almost completely. Offering fish alongside the meat-forward regional canon is a practical concession to a broader dining public, and it places the kitchen in a more inclusive position than strict regional purists would occupy. For tables with mixed preferences, this matters. For visitors specifically seeking the Piedmontese canon in its most direct expression, the regional meat dishes remain the primary point of reference.
Across the wider Italian restaurant spectrum, the Michelin Plate sits below the star tiers but above the general field, identifying kitchens where the inspectors found cooking worth returning to. Institutions like Osteria Francescana in Modena, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, and Enrico Bartolini in Milan define the starred tier at the leading of that spectrum. Closer to home, Antica Corona Reale in Cervere and Locanda Sant'Uffizio Enrico Bartolini in Cioccaro represent the Piedmontese tradition at starred level, providing a regional benchmark against which Chiocciola's Plate-level recognition makes sense. Further afield, Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico, Dal Pescatore in Runate, and Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone illustrate the range of regional Italian kitchens operating at different points on the Michelin scale.
The Art on the Walls and What It Signals About the Address
Few Piedmontese trattorie at the €€ price point make a deliberate argument through their art programme. The presence of Warhol alongside Valerio Berruti, a Cuneo-born artist with significant international recognition, and Pignatelli suggests a proprietorial point of view about what an osteria in a historic Italian centre should communicate beyond the plate. Berruti's work in particular carries local weight: his large-scale installations and drawings have been shown in contexts ranging from the 2011 Venice Biennale to permanent collections internationally, and his inclusion here is a gesture of regional pride as much as aesthetic choice. The effect in the dining room is less gallery-like than the artist roster might imply; these are paintings in a working restaurant, and they occupy their walls with the same matter-of-factness that the kitchen occupies its region.
Planning Your Visit
The address on Via Fossano, 1, positions the restaurant within easy walking distance of Cuneo's central colonnades and the main pedestrian zone around Via Roma. At the €€ price point, the Chiocciola sits comfortably within the mid-range of the local dining scene, making it accessible without requiring the kind of advance financial planning that the province's starred addresses demand. The wine bar on the ground floor functions as a natural starting point for those arriving early or wanting to assess the wine list before committing to a table upstairs; Cuneo's proximity to the Langhe and Roero means the by-the-glass offer at any serious local wine bar should cover the principal Nebbiolo, Barbera, and white wine appellations of the region without difficulty.
For those building a broader picture of the city before visiting, our full Cuneo restaurants guide maps the dining scene across formats and price points. The Cuneo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the planning picture for a stay in the province.
A Lean Comparison
Comparable venues for orientation, based on our database fields.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Osteria della Chiocciola | This venue | €€ |
| Trattoria Marsupino | Piemontese | |
| 4 Ciance | Piedmontese, €€ | €€ |
| Bove's | Meats and Grills, €€ | €€ |
| I 5 Sensi | Contemporary, €€ | €€ |
| Osteria Vecchio Borgo | Country cooking, €€ | €€ |
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- Classic
- Cozy
- Rustic
- Elegant
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Business Dinner
- Historic Building
- Wine Cellar
- Extensive Wine List
- Local Sourcing
Cozy upstairs dining room with wooden beamed ceilings, white tablecloths, and a welcoming historic atmosphere.



















