Google: 4.7 · 1,675 reviews
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Trippa on Via Giorgio Vasari occupies the unpretentious end of Milan's dining spectrum with considerable conviction. Chef Diego Rossi's Modern Milanese cooking centers on offal, seasonal produce, and the kind of trattoria discipline that earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand and back-to-back top-six finishes on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list. House signatures include Milanese risotto with grilled marrow and, of course, tripe prepared in the Roman style.

A Different Kind of Milan Dining Room
Via Giorgio Vasari sits in the Porta Romana district, a residential stretch of Milan that draws little tourist foot traffic. The room at Trippa reflects that address: tile floors, close-set tables, lighting that suggests canteen more than cathedral, and a noise level that makes conversation natural rather than competitive. This is not the Milan of Enrico Bartolini's multi-course architectural precision or the marble drama of Cracco in Galleria. It belongs to a different and arguably older tradition: the Lombard trattoria as a place of serious cooking without ceremony.
That retro register is deliberate. In a city where Andrea Aprea and Seta have pushed Modern Italian cooking toward the €€€€ tier with formal tasting menus and grand-hotel settings, Trippa prices at €€ and runs dinner service every night except Sunday, from 7:15 to 11:30 pm. The room's slight anachronism — the worn-in feel, the absence of design theatre — is the point rather than an oversight.
Where Local Ingredients and Professional Technique Converge
Trippa's editorial angle is often framed around nose-to-tail eating, but the more useful frame is the intersection of rigorous technique and hyperlocal raw material. Diego Rossi trained across some of Northern Italy's most demanding kitchens: Hotel Bauer in Venice, St Hubertus at Hotel Rosa Alpina in Alta Badia, Locanda Margon in Trento, and Le Antiche Contrade in Cuneo, where he and Juri Chiotti earned a Michelin star. That circuit gave him command of classical preparation, French-influenced stock work, and the precision timing of high-volume fine dining.
What he brought back to Milan was applied to cuts and ingredients that Italian restaurant culture had, for decades, been quietly sidelining. Offal , tripe above all, but also marrow, sweetbreads, and the less glamorous secondary proteins , requires more technique, not less, than a premium loin. Temperature control during blanching, acid balance in braising liquid, the exact moment to finish a sauce: these are skills developed in starred kitchens and deployed here on inexpensive, perishable, demanding material. The result is cooking that appears simple from the plate but is anything but from the pass.
The Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded in 2025, formally recognizes this value equation: cooking quality that places the venue in a serious peer conversation, at a price point that sets it apart from the €€€€ tier. Opinionated About Dining has ranked Trippa among the leading casual restaurants in Europe for three consecutive years, reaching #5 on the 2025 Casual Europe list after consecutive #6 finishes in 2023 and 2024. On Google, 1,565 reviews average 4.7 stars, which, at that volume, is a data point rather than a vanity metric.
The Menu's Logic: Milanese Tradition as a Living Document
The dishes Michelin flags as house specialities illustrate the broader logic of what Modern Milanese cooking looks like when it operates without apology. Milanese risotto with grilled marrow is classical technique , the long toasting of rice, the incremental ladle of stock, the mantecatura , given a secondary note of bone-fat richness that most contemporary kitchens have moved away from. Vitello tonnato, a Piedmontese preparation that Milan has thoroughly adopted, appears in its most restrained form: thin veal, a tuna-anchovy sauce that stays within its historical register rather than being deconstructed for novelty's sake.
Tripe itself , the dish that names the restaurant , connects to a tradition shared across Italian cities, from the Roman trippa alla romana to the Florentine lampredotto stands to the Milanese busecca. Rossi's handling of it sits within that lineage while drawing on the technical discipline of his fine-dining background. A 2019 book, Finché c'è Trippa…, written with photographer Marco Varoli and journalist Barbara Giglioli, documents both the ingredient's history and Rossi's specific approach to it, making his advocacy for offal a matter of public record rather than restaurant mythology.
Seasonality runs as a structural principle across the menu, not as a marketing phrase. Rossi has been explicit about using foraged produce alongside cultivated ingredients, which places Trippa in a current of Italian cooking represented at a different register by chefs like Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico and, further afield, by the sourcing discipline of places like Osteria Francescana in Modena and Dal Pescatore in Runate. The scale and price point differ enormously, but the underlying conviction about ingredient provenance is structurally similar.
Trippa in Milan's Broader Restaurant Context
Milan's restaurant scene has, for at least a decade, been split between a well-funded fine-dining tier and a growing casual layer that takes cooking seriously without theatrical service. Trippa occupies a defined position in the second tier, one that the OAD list now formally tracks and ranks. Peer comparisons shift depending on the metric: at the technique level, Trippa is in conversation with places above its price point; at the value level, it has no close equivalent among restaurants with comparable critical recognition. Frangente, also in Milan, represents a different casual-serious axis, focused on natural wine and contemporary small plates rather than trattoria classicism.
Beyond Milan, the cooking tradition Trippa represents connects to a broader Italian commitment to ingredient-led simplicity handled with professional seriousness, a tradition visible in very different forms at Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Uliassi in Senigallia, and Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone. International comparison points , the technical rigour applied to modest ingredients at Le Bernardin in New York, the respect for local sourcing at Atomix , suggest that Trippa's approach is part of a global movement, not merely a local idiosyncrasy.
Planning Your Visit
Trippa is open Monday through Saturday, 7:15 to 11:30 pm, and closed on Sunday. The address is Via Giorgio Vasari 1, in the Porta Romana neighbourhood, roughly 15 minutes by tram from the Duomo. The €€ price range places it well below the €€€€ tier that dominates Milan's award-visible fine dining.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Key Recognition | Format |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trippa | Modern Milanese | €€ | Bib Gourmand 2025; OAD Casual Europe #5 | Trattoria, dinner only |
| Andrea Aprea | Modern Italian | €€€€ | Michelin starred | Tasting menu, formal |
| Seta | Modern Italian | €€€€ | Michelin starred | Tasting menu, hotel dining |
| Frangente | Contemporary | €€–€€€ | Natural wine focus, critical recognition | Casual, à la carte |
For a fuller picture of where to eat, drink, and stay in the city, see our full Milan restaurants guide, our full Milan bars guide, our full Milan hotels guide, our full Milan wineries guide, and our full Milan experiences guide.
Cuisine and Awards Snapshot
A quick peer check to anchor this venue’s price and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trippa | Modern Milanese | Bib Gourmand | This venue |
| Enrico Bartolini | Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
| Cracco in Galleria | Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine, €€€€ |
| Andrea Aprea | Modern Italian, Italian Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Italian, Italian Contemporary, €€€€ |
| Seta | Modern Italian | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Italian, €€€€ |
| Contraste | Progressive Italian, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Progressive Italian, Modern Cuisine, €€€€ |
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Simple, informal space with mustard-yellow walls, framed photos, open kitchen, wooden tables, and retro charm; warm and welcoming without pretension.



















