Google: 4.4 · 1,297 reviews
Piccola Piedigrotta

On Piazza XXV Aprile in central Reggio Emilia, Piccola Piedigrotta occupies the productive middle ground between neighbourhood pizza institution and ingredient-serious kitchen. Giovanni Mandara's operation is built on close sourcing relationships with local producers and a menu that rotates between traditional round pies and iron-pan cooked versions, backed by a considered selection of wines and regional beers.

A Square That Sets the Terms
Piazza XXV Aprile sits in the civic fabric of Reggio Emilia the way that most northern Italian city squares do: as a daily gathering point rather than a tourist destination. The square's character is determinedly local, which matters when assessing what a pizzeria placed here is actually trying to be. A venue on this address is not pitching to passing visitors; it is competing for the repeat custom of residents who eat pizza seriously and know the difference between a base that has fermented properly and one that has not. That pressure produces a different kind of kitchen discipline than you find in tourist-facing operations.
Piccola Piedigrotta has read that brief correctly. The address is less a backdrop than a constraint — a daily reminder that the people walking through the door know what good pizza tastes like and will not return if the standard slips. For the visitor arriving from outside Reggio Emilia, that civic accountability is its own form of quality signal.
What the Menu Is Actually Doing
Italian pizza culture has, over the past decade, split into increasingly distinct tiers. At one end sit the Neapolitan orthodoxy practitioners, working strictly within the Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana ruleset. At the other end sits a generation of ingredient-led operators who treat the pizza base as a platform for produce-driven cooking, rotating toppings according to what local suppliers have available and what combinations reward attention. Piccola Piedigrotta operates in the second category.
The kitchen works across two formats: traditional round pizzas and iron-pan cooked versions, a distinction that matters more than it might initially appear. Iron-pan pizza — known in various regional forms across Italy as pizza al tegamino or pizza in teglia , produces a thicker, crispier base with a different crumb structure than a wood-fired Neapolitan. The two formats reward different toppings, different eating rhythms, and different wine pairings. Offering both within a single menu is a deliberate programming choice, and it broadens the range considerably.
Giovanni Mandara's stated approach is built on what the venue describes as scrupulous research into local and genuine products. In the context of Reggio Emilia , a city whose food identity is inseparable from Parmigiano-Reggiano, culatello, and the broader Emilian larder , that sourcing orientation is not difficult to take seriously. The city sits at the productive heart of one of Italy's most densely credentialed food regions. Toppings that draw on that supply chain have material advantages over operations sourcing more generically.
The menu rotates, which is the structural mechanism through which the sourcing philosophy becomes visible to the customer. A fixed menu can obscure supply-chain relationships; a menu that changes forces the kitchen to justify each iteration. That discipline is more demanding than it looks from the outside.
Where It Sits in the Reggio Emilia Dining Context
Reggio Emilia's restaurant scene operates in the productive shadow of Modena, where Osteria Francescana defines one extreme of what Italian fine dining can mean. The city's own dining identity is quieter and more civic, built on trattorias and osterie that treat Emilian tradition as a starting point rather than a subject for reinvention. Into that context, a pizzeria that researches ingredients carefully and rotates its menu occupies a specific niche: serious without being formal, ingredient-led without being conceptual.
Among Reggio Emilia's dining options, the price tiers map roughly as follows: venues like Enigma Restaurant at the €€€ level sit at the upper end of the local market, while A Mangiare and Il Pozzo occupy the €€ bracket alongside more casual formats. Piccola Piedigrotta operates within that accessible tier, where value is measured not in absolute price but in the ratio of ingredient quality to spend.
For visitors spending time across Italy's northern fine-dining circuit , places like Le Calandre in Rubano, Dal Pescatore in Runate, or Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico , a lunch or dinner at a well-sourced local pizzeria provides a useful counterpoint. It is a register shift, not a compromise. The same is true if you have been moving through the Italian canon further afield, from Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence to Uliassi in Senigallia or Enrico Bartolini in Milan. Piccola Piedigrotta sits at a different point on that spectrum and does not pretend otherwise.
The wine and beer selection, described as a considered accompanying range, aligns with the kitchen's sourcing orientation. In a region that produces Lambrusco in multiple styles and houses serious Emilian producers, a pizzeria that takes its cellar seriously is not an anomaly , but it is a marker of ambition within the format.
Planning a Visit
Piccola Piedigrotta is located at Piazza XXV Aprile, 1, in central Reggio Emilia, placing it within comfortable walking distance of the city's historic core. The piazza address means it is easily combined with time spent in the centro storico, which rewards a slower pace than most visitors allow for. Reggio Emilia is a forty-minute train ride from Bologna and sits on the main Milan-Bologna high-speed rail line, making it accessible as a day or half-day addition to a broader Emilia-Romagna itinerary without significant logistical effort.
The rotating menu format means the experience on any given visit will differ from a previous one, which makes repeat visits more productive than at operations with fixed programming. No booking information is available in our current data; for current availability and reservation policy, contact the venue directly or check their most recent listings. Given the piazza location and local following, midweek visits may offer more flexibility than weekend evenings when neighbourhood demand peaks.
For a fuller picture of where Piccola Piedigrotta sits within the city's wider offer, see our full Reggio Emilia restaurants guide. The city's hospitality infrastructure , covered in our Reggio Emilia hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide , rounds out what is a compact but genuinely rewarding city to spend time in.
A Lean Comparison
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Piccola Piedigrotta | This venue | |
| Enigma Restaurant | Regional Cuisine, €€€ | €€€ |
| A Mangiare | Regional Cuisine, €€ | €€ |
| Il Pozzo | Traditional Cuisine, €€ | €€ |
Continue exploring
More in Reggio Emilia
Restaurants in Reggio Emilia
Browse all →Bars in Reggio Emilia
Browse all →Hotels in Reggio Emilia
Browse all →Wineries in Reggio Emilia
Browse all →At a Glance
- Cozy
- Rustic
- Classic
- Intimate
- Casual Hangout
- Group Dining
- Date Night
- Family
- Open Kitchen
- Beer Program
- Local Sourcing
- Farm To Table
Warm, practical lighting with wood and tile finishes; open view to baking area with iron pans and ovens; tables arranged for conversation and lingering; casual yet refined atmosphere.















