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The gourmet restaurant at Il San Corrado di Noto sits in the rural hinterland of Sicily's Baroque south, where executive chef Martin Lazarov applies a creative lens to the island's produce with a pronounced emphasis on vegetables. Holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, Principe di Belludia occupies the upper tier of Val di Noto dining and draws guests willing to combine serious cooking with a resort setting.

Where Rural Sicily Meets the Creative Kitchen
The road to Principe di Belludia runs through the dry scrubland and carob groves of Sicily's south-eastern interior, where the land between Noto and the coast carries the kind of agricultural density that has defined Sicilian cooking for centuries. Arriving at Il San Corrado di Noto, the resort that houses the restaurant, the setting registers before the menu does: a converted rural estate, open sky, the stillness of a landscape that has been growing capers, almonds, tomatoes, and wild herbs since the Arab agricultural reforms of the ninth century. This is the context in which the cooking at Principe di Belludia should be read.
Sicilian cuisine occupies a specific and layered position within Italian gastronomy. It is not a regional offshoot of central Italian traditions but a distinct culinary archive, one shaped by Greek colonists, Arab traders, Norman rulers, and Spanish viceroys in sequence. The vegetable-centric strand of that archive is particularly deep: the island's agro-industrial history produced sophisticated preparations for aubergine, courgette, fennel, and citrus long before northern Italian kitchens gave them serious attention. A creative restaurant in this territory that foregrounds vegetables is not simply following a contemporary fine-dining trend. It is, whether consciously or not, working within one of the most historically grounded vegetable traditions in the Mediterranean.
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Executive chef Martin Lazarov works within that tradition while applying a creative-cooking format to it. The Michelin Plate, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, signals cooking that the guide's inspectors consider worthy of attention without yet placing it in the starred tier. In Michelin's own framing, a Plate denotes good cooking, and for a restaurant operating inside a resort hotel in a rural Sicilian location, sustained recognition across consecutive years points to consistent delivery rather than a one-season performance.
The menu's declared emphasis on vegetables aligns Principe di Belludia with a direction that several of Italy's more considered creative kitchens have moved toward. At Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico, the Alpine sourcing ethos has made plant-forward cooking central to a three-Michelin-star program. Further south, Osteria Francescana in Modena has long demonstrated that ingredient-specific focus can generate cooking of international standing. Principe di Belludia operates at a different scale and with a different mandate, but the structural approach, using a geographically specific larder as the creative raw material, belongs to the same Italian fine-dining conversation.
The price bracket (€€€€) places it at the leading end of the Noto dining market. Guests eating here are paying for resort context as much as for the plate, which is not a criticism. The combination of cooking at this level with an estate setting, two swimming pools, and the silence of the Sicilian hinterland is a particular kind of proposition, one that the local dining scene cannot replicate outside of a property like this.
Noto and Its Dining Context
Noto's dining scene has developed substantially over the past decade, driven partly by the town's UNESCO status (the entire late-Baroque city is a protected site) and partly by a broader interest in south-eastern Sicilian produce among Italian and international visitors. The town's stone-built centre, rebuilt after the 1693 earthquake in a coordinated Baroque style, has become a reference point for food-focused travellers in a way it was not twenty years ago.
Within that scene, the creative fine-dining category is occupied by a small number of addresses. Crocifisso and Orti di Villadorata represent the alternative options for formal, produce-driven cooking in and around Noto, though each operates from a different premise and in a different physical setting. Principe di Belludia's rural resort location gives it a distinct frame: the drive out of Noto is part of the experience, separating the meal from the town's tourist infrastructure in a way that affects how the evening reads.
For visitors interested in the broader context, the area's food culture extends well beyond the restaurant tier. Our full Noto restaurants guide covers the range from casual Baroque-town trattorie to estate dining. The Noto wineries guide is worth consulting before any visit to the south-east, given that the Nero d'Avola grape reaches its most site-specific expressions in this corner of Sicily. The Noto hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide round out the picture for anyone building a longer stay.
Sicilian Creative Cooking in a Wider Italian Frame
Italy's creative restaurant tier is geographically diverse, but its centre of gravity has historically sat in the north. Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Enrico Bartolini in Milan, Dal Pescatore in Runate, Le Calandre in Rubano, and Piazza Duomo in Alba all operate from northern or central Italian bases. The south, and Sicily specifically, has a more modest footprint in formal fine dining, which makes the presence of a creative, Michelin-recognised restaurant in the Val di Noto worth noting as a sign of the region's trajectory. Internationally, the creative format reaches beyond Italian borders: Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen in Paris and JAN in Munich illustrate how the same broad creative-cooking framework plays out in very different city contexts. In Noto, the frame is a Baroque hill town and its agricultural hinterland, which gives the cooking at Principe di Belludia a territorial specificity that neither of those urban addresses can claim.
The restaurants that most closely parallel its structural position are those operating within estate or rural resort settings where the property's identity and the restaurant's identity are mutually reinforcing, such as Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone and Uliassi in Senigallia. Both sit in coastal or semi-rural Italian locations where the setting is inseparable from how the food is received.
Planning a Visit
Principe di Belludia sits on the SP64 rural road outside Noto, within the Il San Corrado di Noto resort. The address (Antica., SP64, 96017 Noto SR) is not in the town centre; arriving by car is the practical approach, and the drive adds to the sense of remove that defines the venue's character. The restaurant carries a €€€€ price point, placing it at the higher end of what the Noto area offers in formal dining, and reservations are advisable given that the resort's gourmet restaurant does not operate on the volume logic of a town-centre address. The Google review score of 4.6 across 191 reviews suggests a consistent guest experience at this price level. Phone and website details are not currently listed in our database; the resort's front-of-house contact route is the starting point for booking enquiries.
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Category Peers
A compact peer snapshot based on similar venues we track.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Principe di Belludia | Creative | The Principe di Belludia is the gourmet restaurant at the Il San Corrado di Noto… | This venue |
| Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler | Italian, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Italian, Creative, €€€€ |
| Dal Pescatore | Italian, Italian Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star | Italian, Italian Contemporary, €€€€ |
| Enoteca Pinchiorri | Italian - French, Italian Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star | Italian - French, Italian Contemporary, €€€€ |
| Enrico Bartolini | Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
| Osteria Francescana | Progressive Italian, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive Italian, Creative, €€€€ |
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