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    Restaurant in Rome, Italy

    Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale

    380pts

    Day-trip dining that earns its price.

    Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale, Restaurant in Rome

    About Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale

    Al Madrigale holds a 2025 Michelin Plate for its sourcing-led approach to Lazio's pastoral larder: sheep's ricotta, lamb, and cacio anchored in a medieval palace in Tivoli. At €€€ with a tasting menu or four-course format, it is the strongest reason to build a full day around Tivoli rather than a standalone detour from Rome. Booking is easy; plan it around a morning at Hadrian's Villa.

    Verdict

    Al Madrigale is worth booking if you are making a day trip from Rome to Tivoli and want a meal that earns its price tag through genuine sourcing depth and regional identity. Chef Gian Marco Bianchi holds a 2025 Michelin Plate, which signals a kitchen working at a real level without the pricing pressure of a full star. At €€€, you are paying for a tasting menu or four-course format built around Lazio's pastoral larder: sheep's ricotta, lamb, cacio, local sparkling malvasia. If you want creative Roman-region cooking outside the city centre, this is a stronger choice than most in-town €€€ options. If you need to stay central in Rome, consider NUH Osteria Contemporanea or Acquolina instead.

    The Setting

    The room is the first thing that earns Al Madrigale its positioning. The restaurant occupies a medieval palace in Tivoli, and the approach via a spiral staircase deposits you into a dining room where Liberty-style cement tiles and chestnut tables do the visual work. This is not a renovated farmhouse with mismatched ceramics; it reads as a considered, composed room. The setting alone makes it a more compelling destination for food-focused travellers who want context and atmosphere alongside the plate. Tivoli, about 30 km east of Rome, is already on the itinerary of many visitors for Hadrian's Villa and Villa d'Este, so Al Madrigale fits naturally as the lunch or dinner anchor to that trip rather than a detour for its own sake.

    What the Sourcing Is Doing

    The editorial angle here matters: Al Madrigale's identity is built on what Bianchi calls new rural cuisine, and the menu reflects that with sourcing choices that are specific enough to be meaningful. The shepherd's raviolo with sheep's ricotta and lamb jus is the kitchen's argument in a single dish. Sheep's ricotta in the Lazio hill towns is a distinct product, richer and less sweet than the cow's milk versions that dominate the city. Pairing it with lamb jus rather than a butter sauce keeps the dish inside its pastoral logic rather than reaching for French technique as a finishing move. The grilled lamb with cacio e ovo, a preparation rooted in central Italian pastoral tradition where eggs and aged cheese form a sauce, is another example of sourcing being allowed to drive the plate. These are not decorative gestures toward terroir; they are menu decisions that only work if the raw material is actually sourced correctly.

    Wine pairing reinforces the same logic. A local malvasia-sangiovese blend, traditional method, aged 36 months on the lees, is a deliberate choice to keep the table inside the Lazio region rather than defaulting to better-known Italian sparkling wines. This kind of regional consistency across both the menu and the cellar is exactly what separates venues doing sourcing as an identity from venues doing it as a marketing claim. For travellers who care about this distinction — those who follow what Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler is doing in the Alps or what Dal Pescatore has built around the Po Valley, this approach will resonate. Al Madrigale is operating at a smaller scale and lower price point, but the sourcing philosophy is in the same register.

    Format and Practical Fit

    Kitchen offers a tasting menu or a four-course option. For solo diners or couples, the counter or small tables suit both formats. The four-course option is the more flexible entry point if you are combining lunch here with a full afternoon at Tivoli's archaeological sites. The tasting menu makes more sense if Al Madrigale is the primary reason for the journey rather than one stop among several. Google reviews sit at 5.0 from 14 reviews at time of writing, which is too small a sample to weight heavily, but it indicates no visible pattern of service failure or value complaints. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 is the more reliable credential.

    Booking is rated Easy. At €€€ in Tivoli rather than central Rome, demand is lower than at comparably recognised spots inside the city. Booking a week in advance should be sufficient for most dates, though weekends in peak season for Tivoli tourism (spring and early autumn) merit earlier contact. There is no published website or phone number in our database at this time, so check current booking channels via Google or direct search before travel.

    Practical Details

    DetailAl MadrigaleNUH Osteria (Rome)Enoteca La Torre (Rome)
    Price range€€€€€€€€€€
    RecognitionMichelin Plate 2025See Pearl listingMichelin Star
    FormatTasting menu / 4-courseÀ la carte / tastingTasting menu
    LocationTivoli (30 km from Rome)Central RomeRome outskirts
    Booking difficultyEasyModerateHarder
    Leading forTivoli day trip pairingCity-centre dinnerOccasion dining

    Further Reading

    If you are building a broader Rome-region itinerary, see our full Rome restaurants guide, Rome hotels guide, Rome bars guide, Rome wineries guide, and Rome experiences guide. For Italian fine dining at higher recognition levels, La Pergola remains the benchmark in Rome itself, while Osteria Francescana in Modena and Le Calandre in Rubano represent the upper tier of regional-identity cooking in Italy. For regional cuisine at a similar price point and philosophy, Gannerhof in South Tyrol and Fahr in Switzerland offer instructive comparisons in how sourcing-led kitchens at the €€€ level can anchor themselves to place. Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence and Enrico Bartolini in Milan are worth consulting if your Italy trip extends beyond Lazio.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What are alternatives to Al Madrigale in Rome? For creative regional cooking in central Rome, Il Pagliaccio and Idylio by Apreda are both at €€€€ with Michelin recognition and easier to combine with a city itinerary. Enoteca La Torre is the most direct comparison in terms of format and ambition, but sits at €€€€. If you want to stay at €€€ inside Rome, NUH Osteria Contemporanea is the most comparable option for contemporary cooking with regional roots.
    • What should a first-timer know about Al Madrigale? Plan this as part of a Tivoli day: Hadrian's Villa or Villa d'Este in the morning, lunch or dinner here. The kitchen focuses on Lazio pastoral ingredients, sheep's ricotta, lamb, cacio, so if those flavours are not your preference, this is not the right room. The Michelin Plate (2025) confirms the kitchen is working at a serious level; expect composed, technique-led cooking rather than a rustic trattoria experience despite the rural concept.
    • Is Al Madrigale good for solo dining? At a tasting menu format, solo dining is practical and common at this type of venue. The room's setting in a medieval palace with a composed dining room does not disadvantage solo guests. The four-course option gives you more control over pacing. If you are solo in Rome and do not want to travel to Tivoli, Acquolina in the city centre handles solo guests well at a similar creative level.
    • How far ahead should I book Al Madrigale? Booking is rated Easy. A week in advance covers most scenarios. For weekend visits during Tivoli's peak tourist season (April through June, September), book two weeks out to be safe. There is no published website in our current data, so use Google or direct search to find the active booking channel before your trip.
    • Is Al Madrigale worth the price? At €€€ with a 2025 Michelin Plate, yes, provided the format fits you. You are getting a kitchen with genuine sourcing depth, a distinctive setting, and a menu with regional coherence at a price point below the starred alternatives in Rome. The comparison point is not La Pergola or Il Pagliaccio; it is whether a €€€ tasting-format lunch in Tivoli delivers more value than the equivalent spend at a central Rome restaurant. For food-focused travellers already visiting Tivoli, it does.

    Compare Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale

    Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale Side-by-Side
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina RuraleRegional CuisineIn a charming medieval palace, a spiral staircase leads to an elegant dining room where Liberty-style cement tiles and chestnut tables tell stories of taste and tradition. Here comes to life the restaurant led by talented Gian Marco Bianchi, with his motto: new rural cuisine. Prepare for a culinary journey that reinvents the flavors of the land with a contemporary touch. Choose between a tasting menu or a four-course experience, where the shepherd’s raviolo with sheep’s ricotta and lamb jus captivates with its intensity, while the grilled lamb with “cacio e ovo,” a zabaglione served alongside, is pure poetry to savor. The perfect toast? A local sparkling wine: malvasia with a touch of sangiovese, traditional method aged 36 months on the lees. A sparkling start to an unforgettable experience!; Michelin Plate (2025)Easy
    Enoteca La TorreCreativeMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    Il PagliaccioContemporary Italian, CreativeMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    AromaModern CuisineMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Idylio by ApredaModern Italian, Italian ContemporaryMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    La PaltaCountry cookingMichelin 1 StarUnknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale in Rome?

    For Michelin-recognised regional cooking inside Rome, Il Pagliaccio and Idylio by Apreda are stronger options if you want to stay in the city. Enoteca La Torre offers comparable refinement with a broader wine programme. Aroma is worth considering if you want a terrace with Colosseum views alongside your tasting menu. Al Madrigale's case rests on its Tivoli setting and Bianchi's rural sourcing focus — if that context matters to you, none of the Rome alternatives replicate it.

    What should a first-timer know about Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale?

    Al Madrigale sits at Via Ponte Gregoriano, 1 in Tivoli, roughly 30km from central Rome, so factor in travel time when planning. The restaurant holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and is priced at €€€, with the menu built around Bianchi's new rural cuisine philosophy. You can choose between a tasting menu or a four-course format — first-timers with limited time are better served by the four-course option, which gives a clear read on the kitchen without the full tasting commitment.

    Is Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale good for solo dining?

    Yes — the room's intimate scale and the structured menu formats work well for solo diners. The four-course option keeps pace manageable, and the setting inside a medieval palace with Liberty-style details gives solo visitors plenty to sit with between courses. At €€€ pricing, it is a deliberate spend rather than a casual stop, so solo diners should go in with appetite for the full format.

    How far ahead should I book Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale?

    Book at least two to three weeks out, particularly if you are visiting on a weekend or combining the meal with a Tivoli day trip itinerary. The restaurant's Michelin Plate recognition and small-room format mean tables fill quickly in peak season. Contact details are not currently listed on Pearl, so check the venue directly or use a reservation platform to confirm availability.

    Is Al Madrigale | Nuova Cucina Rurale worth the price?

    At €€€, Al Madrigale is worth it if you are already heading to Tivoli and want a meal anchored in genuine regional sourcing rather than generic Italian fine dining. The Michelin Plate (2025) confirms the kitchen is operating at a credible level. If you are debating whether to make the trip from Rome purely for the meal, weigh it against Idylio by Apreda or Enoteca La Torre, which deliver comparable ambition without the 30km detour.

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