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On Dundas West, Viaggio holds a Michelin Plate for Italian cooking that declines to stay in its lane. Smoked pastrami pizzas, tagliolini in charred dashi butter, and a tiramisu finished with espresso maple syrup place it firmly in a category of its own within the neighbourhood's casual dining tier. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 across 651 reviews, a number that reflects repeat loyalty rather than passing curiosity.
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- Address
- 1727 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON M6K 1V4, Canada
- Phone
- +1 416-519-8165
- Website
- viaggiorestaurant.ca

Viaggio is a modern Italian restaurant in Toronto at 1727 Dundas St W, with a 2024 Michelin Plate and a $$ price tier. At the western stretch near Dufferin, the street settles into something slightly quieter than the Ossington strip to the east, and it is in this register that Viaggio occupies a historic building whose dining room reads as genuinely considered rather than designed-for-Instagram. Strung garden lights on the deck signal the mood before you sit down: neighbourhood ease, not performance.
What Dundas West Expects from an Italian Kitchen
Italian restaurants in Toronto exist across an unusually wide range. At the high end, kitchens like DaNico and Osteria Giulia operate in the fine-dining register, drawing destination diners from across the city. Further along the spectrum, casual neighbourhood trattorias play it safe with red-sauce standards and crowd-pleasing boards. The middle tier, where Viaggio sits at a $$ price point, is where the interesting tension lives: whether to meet neighbourhood expectations with familiar comfort or push the kitchen somewhere more considered. The 2024 Michelin Plate signals that the inspectors found an answer worth recognising in that tension.
That same tension shows up across Toronto's Italian dining scene. Venues like Gia and Ardo have each carved out distinct positions within the category, the former leaning into a modern, produce-led approach, the latter drawing on Sicilian specificity. What separates Viaggio from both is the directness of its cross-cultural instincts: this is a kitchen that reaches for smoked pastrami and sauerkraut as pizza toppings without framing it as a concept. It reads as a natural extension of a west-end neighbourhood where the food supply chain is genuinely international and the clientele eats widely.
The Menu Logic
Italian kitchens that succeed in neighbourhoods like Dundas West tend to earn loyalty through a specific kind of confidence: the willingness to own decisions that could easily have gone the other way. The safe version of Viaggio's menu exists in dozens of Toronto zip codes. What the Michelin assessment recognises here is a kitchen that chose not to make it. Tagliolini tossed with charred octopus in smoked dashi butter is a dish that collapses if either the technique or the ratio is off; the fact that it works tells you something about the consistency of execution behind what looks, on the surface, like casual neighbourhood cooking.
The dessert program is where the kitchen's instincts come through most clearly. The signature tiramisu, finished with espresso maple syrup and whipped mascarpone, draws on a structure that is part soufflé, part pancake. It is a well-documented talking point among the venue's 702 Google reviewers, who have kept the rating at 4.6, and the Michelin recognition specifically flags the desserts as a reason to visit. That kind of granularity in an inspector's note is unusual at the Plate level and suggests the pastry program carries real weight.
In context, the dessert instinct here connects to a broader pattern in Toronto's mid-tier Italian dining: the category has learned that the dessert course, long treated as an afterthought in neighbourhood trattorias, is increasingly where kitchens differentiate themselves. Bar Vendetta, nearby, has built part of its identity around an refined aperitivo and sweets culture. Viaggio arrives at a similar conclusion from a different direction.
Where This Fits in Toronto's Michelin Map
Toronto's Michelin guide, active since 2022, has been most visible at the starred level, where venues like Alo and Sushi Masaki Saito sit at the top of a concentrated fine-dining tier. The Plate designation, one level below Bib Gourmand, marks restaurants where quality is present and deliberate but the format remains accessible. In a city where the gap between fine dining and casual eating can feel disproportionately wide, the Plate tier does useful work: it flags kitchens operating with ambition inside a format that doesn't require a special occasion to justify the reservation.
Viaggio's position in this tier matters for how the neighbourhood reads. Dundas West has historically been underrepresented in formal recognition relative to King West or Ossington, where the density of press-covered openings is higher. A Michelin Plate on this stretch is both a recognition of the kitchen and a small correction to that imbalance.
For comparative context beyond Toronto, Italian kitchens operating at the intersection of tradition and creative license appear in very different registers globally. 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong represents the starred, destination end of that spectrum. cenci in Kyoto takes Italian structure into a Japanese culinary context altogether. Viaggio is neither of these things: it is a neighbourhood restaurant operating at the level of focused, accessible creativity, which is a different and arguably harder brief.
Planning the Visit
Dundas West at this stretch is accessible by the 505 Dundas streetcar, which runs along the corridor from the downtown core. The neighbourhood is walkable from Dufferin Street and connects naturally to the Roncesvalles and Little Portugal precincts to the west and south respectively. The outdoor deck makes the venue particularly worth timing to the warmer months, when the garden lights create a setting that is harder to replicate inside. Spring through early autumn is the window when the full experience of the space is available.
Canada's broader restaurant scene at the serious end is covered through venues including Tanière³ in Québec City, AnnaLena in Vancouver, Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal, Narval in Rimouski, The Pine in Creemore, and Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 1727 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON M6K 1V4
- Price range: $$ (mid-range)
- Recognition: Michelin Plate (2024)
- Google rating: 4.6 / 5 (651 reviews)
- Cuisine: Italian, with cross-cultural references throughout the menu
- Setting: Historic building with an indoor dining room and an outdoor deck with garden lighting
- Leading timing: Spring to early autumn for full use of the outdoor deck
- Getting there: 505 Dundas streetcar; walkable from Dufferin Street
Nearby-ish Comparables
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|
| ViaggioThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Italian | $$ |
| Alo | Contemporary | $$$$ |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ |
| Aburi Hana | Kaiseki, Japanese | $$$$ |
| Don Alfonso 1890 | Contemporary Italian, Italian | $$$$ |
| Edulis | Canadian, Mediterranean Cuisine | $$$$ |
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