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Asiago, Italy

Osteria della Tana

CuisineVenetian
LocationAsiago, Italy
Michelin

Occupying the ground floor of the same red house as La Tana Gourmet, Osteria della Tana is the Michelin Plate-recognised room where Venetian tradition takes priority over innovation. Baccalà alla vicentina, tripe, and the house carbonara anchor a menu that pulls from the Veneto's larder. The €€€ pricing sits between Asiago's casual trattorias and its full tasting-menu rooms.

Osteria della Tana restaurant in Asiago, Italy
About

The Red House at Via Kaberlaba

Via Kaberlaba 19 is a single address carrying two distinct registers of Italian hospitality. The upper floor houses La Tana Gourmet, a creative fine-dining room operating at the €€€€ tier with the full apparatus of modern Italian cuisine. The ground floor is Osteria della Tana, which operates at €€€ and runs in a different direction entirely: back toward the Veneto's documented culinary traditions rather than away from them. The relationship between the two rooms is instructive. In Italian hospitality, the gourmet-and-osteria pairing is a well-established format, and when it works, each room benefits from the other's logic — the osteria grounding the fine-dining ambition in local memory, the fine-dining room lending the osteria a kitchen discipline that most casual tables can't sustain.

The physical setting matters here. A red house in the Asiago plateau carries associations that are specific to this part of northeastern Italy: mountain air, a certain deliberateness about ingredient provenance, and the expectation that a serious meal will involve the Veneto's own pantry rather than generic Italian imports. The Asiago plateau sits above 1,000 metres, which shapes the produce and the palate in equal measure. That context is what Osteria della Tana is working within.

Venetian Tradition as the Governing Logic

The Veneto has one of Italy's more precisely defined regional cuisines, built on a few preparations that have remained consistent across centuries: baccalà (salt cod), tripe, polenta, and pasta forms that predate the modern Italian standardisation project. In the Vicenza tradition specifically, baccalà alla vicentina — salt cod slow-cooked in milk with onions, anchovies, and Grana Padano , has a protected cultural status that goes beyond simple recipe preservation. The Confraternita del Bacalà alla Vicentina, the dedicated brotherhood that guards the dish's method, has been documenting the preparation since 1987. A kitchen that takes this dish seriously is making a claim about its relationship to local continuity.

Osteria della Tana's menu positions itself within that tradition. The baccalà alla vicentina appears alongside tripe, two dishes that define the Venetian osteria format at its most direct. Neither is a flashy vehicle for technical display; both require time, patience, and a respect for the ingredient's own character. That these dishes appear on a menu also carrying selections from the adjacent Michelin-starred programme suggests a kitchen that can move between registers without losing coherence in either direction.

For a broader sense of how Venetian cooking travels and transforms, the contrast is worth tracking: March in Houston applies Venetian cooking principles in a radically different context, while La Caravella on the Amalfi Coast shows how the tradition intersects with southern Italian seafood culture. What Osteria della Tana does is hold closer to source.

The House Carbonara as a Regional Case Study

Within the Osteria della Tana menu, the carbonara dell'Osteria is flagged as the one deliberate departure from strict regional orthodoxy , and the one dish that Michelin's 2025 inspectors specifically noted as highly recommended. Carbonara is a Roman preparation, not a Venetian one, which makes its presence on this menu a statement rather than an accident. The approach here is to apply top-quality regional ingredients from the Veneto to a recipe whose structure comes from elsewhere. The result is a dish that sits at the intersection of two Italian traditions rather than belonging purely to either one.

This kind of regional cross-referencing has precedent in Italian osteria culture. Italy's DOC and DOP systems protect specific ingredients rather than specific preparations, which means a kitchen can legitimately claim regional identity through sourcing even when the recipe itself migrated from another part of the peninsula. The Osteria's carbonara makes exactly this argument.

Where Osteria della Tana Sits in Asiago's Dining Hierarchy

Asiago's restaurant scene operates across a clear three-tier structure. At the entry level, Osteria Europa covers Venetian cooking at the €€ price point. At the creative fine-dining tier, both La Tana Gourmet and Stube Gourmet operate at €€€€ with modern and creative menus respectively. Osteria della Tana occupies the middle position at €€€, with a Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 confirming it as a kitchen worth attention even when the ambition is traditional rather than experimental.

The Michelin Plate designation, introduced to acknowledge restaurants serving good food outside the star system, is a relevant signal here. It indicates that the inspectors found the cooking consistently solid rather than merely adequate , a distinction that matters for a room serving dishes where execution is everything and technical innovation is deliberately absent. Baccalà alla vicentina that arrives badly cooked is not a heritage experience; it is a failure. The recognition implies the kitchen is not failing.

For reference points beyond Asiago, the Veneto's fine-dining representation in the Michelin system is anchored by Le Calandre in Rubano, one of Italy's most decorated kitchens. The distance between that programme and what Osteria della Tana is doing is considerable, but the underlying ingredient culture , the plateau produce, the regional fish preparations, the local cheesemaking tradition , connects them to the same source material. Further afield, Dal Pescatore in Runate offers another model of how traditional Italian cooking sustains itself at a serious level across generations. Italy's broader fine-dining canon, from Osteria Francescana in Modena to Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, has consistently found its most interesting arguments in the tension between tradition and departure , a tension Osteria della Tana manages by keeping the two registers in adjacent rooms rather than on the same plate.

Planning a Visit

Osteria della Tana is located at Via Kaberlaba 19 in Asiago, sharing its address with La Tana Gourmet. The €€€ price position means it will read as a serious meal by the standards of the plateau but not at the full commitment level of the tasting-menu rooms upstairs or at Stube Gourmet. Asiago is a year-round destination , summer brings the plateau's hiking season, winter its skiing infrastructure , and the traditional menu at the Osteria suits the colder months in particular, when baccalà and tripe read as appropriate to the climate rather than incidental to it. The Google rating of 4.6 across 40 reviews indicates a room with a consistent following rather than a large tourist footprint. Phone and booking details are not listed in public directories at this time; approaching via the La Tana Gourmet reservation channel is the most reliable route to confirmation.

For anyone building a broader Asiago itinerary, the EP Club guides to restaurants, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences provide the full context. Among Italy's mountain dining rooms operating in the northeastern tradition, Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico represents the creative ceiling of that broader regional category. Uliassi in Senigallia and Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone show how Italian coastal tradition performs at the starred level; Enrico Bartolini in Milan anchors the urban fine-dining comparison. Osteria della Tana's argument is quieter than any of those rooms, but it is no less deliberate.

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