Restaurant in Bastelicaccia, France
Auberge du Prunelli
210ptsThe island's larder, cooked simply, priced fairly.

About Auberge du Prunelli
A Michelin Plate family auberge in Bastelicaccia that has been cooking since 1860, Auberge du Prunelli delivers valley charcuterie, garden vegetables, orchard desserts, and over 200 Corsican wines at a €€ price point that makes it the strongest value meal in the area. Book the terrace in warm weather and ask for a wine recommendation. Easy to get a table; you will need a car.
The Verdict
If you are travelling through Corsica and want one meal that captures the island's larder in a single sitting, Auberge du Prunelli in Bastelicaccia is the booking to make. Holding a Michelin Plate in 2025 and rated 4.8 from over 1,270 Google reviews, this family-run auberge delivers a deeply local experience at a €€ price point that is hard to argue with. The catch, if there is one, is timing: the terrace overlooking the Prunelli valley is the place to be, and in fine weather it fills quickly. Book ahead, ask specifically for terrace seating, and go at lunch when the light through the surrounding greenery is at its leading.
Portrait
Auberge du Prunelli has been welcoming travellers since 1860, when the building served as a coaching inn on the road through the valley. That is over 160 years of hospitality in a single structure, which gives it a continuity that most restaurants in this price tier cannot claim. The Orlandazzi family took over in 1997, and the current generation of sons now runs the kitchen and the floor. For the food-and-wine enthusiast looking for depth rather than theatre, that lineage matters: the cooking here has not been reinvented for a trend cycle. It has been refined slowly, the way long-simmered dishes are.
The kitchen draws its ingredients from a tight radius. Charcuterie, cheeses, and honey come from the valley. Vegetables are grown in the restaurant's own garden. Fruit tarts are made from produce harvested in the orchard on-site. This is not farm-to-table as a marketing position; it is how this family has always cooked. For a traveller who has already eaten their way through the tourist-facing restaurants of Ajaccio, 15 minutes up the road, the contrast is immediate. The produce here smells of where it came from — herbs, woodsmoke, and ripe fruit from an actual garden rather than a wholesaler's catalogue. Those sensory details are grounded in what the kitchen is genuinely doing, and they show in the plate.
The wine list deserves its own paragraph. Over 200 Corsican wines is not a token regional gesture; it is one of the more thorough island-focused cellars you will find at this price range anywhere in France. Corsican wine remains underappreciated by the wider market, which means the list here functions as a proper education for anyone arriving with curiosity. The island produces Nielluccio, Sciacarellu, and Vermentino in styles that range from lean and mineral to dense and structured, and a cellar of 200 labels gives you genuine range across those varieties. If the drinks program is your reason to visit, this list alone justifies the trip. For comparison, building a Corsican wine list of this depth at a casual auberge price point is something that larger destination restaurants on the island — charging considerably more per head , often do not bother to do.
Format is country cooking in the most direct sense: slow-cooked dishes, house-made charcuterie, garden vegetables, orchard fruit. There are no tasting menus and no amuse-bouches. The simplicity is the point. At €€, you are getting honest Corsican food in a room that has been serving it for generations, with a wine list that would not embarrass a room charging twice as much. For the travelling explorer who wants to eat where locals eat rather than where tourists are sent, Auberge du Prunelli is the more interesting choice than most of what Ajaccio's harbour-front offers.
Booking is direct. There is no allocation system, no months-long waitlist. This is a well-loved family restaurant with a large terrace in a valley outside a mid-sized Corsican town. Call or arrive with reasonable timing, and you will get a table. The difficulty is not access; it is getting there without a car. Bastelicaccia is not walkable from Ajaccio, so factor transport into your planning. If you are already mobile on the island, this is an easy addition to any itinerary anchored in the south.
For context within the wider French auberge tradition, Auberge du Prunelli sits in good company. The classic French countryside inn format, from Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern to Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse, rewards travellers willing to leave the city. At the €€ end of that spectrum, the Orlandazzi family is doing something genuinely worthwhile: keeping a 160-year-old coaching inn focused on its valley, its garden, and its island's wines rather than chasing the next Michelin star. The Plate recognition in 2025 reflects that consistency. Other country-cooking practitioners worth comparing at the accessible end of the register include 21.9 in Piobesi d'Alba and Andrea Monesi - Locanda di Orta in Orta San Giulio, both of which share Auberge du Prunelli's instinct for place-driven simplicity over complexity. If that register appeals to you, this family's auberge belongs on your shortlist for Corsica.
See our full Bastelicaccia restaurants guide, Bastelicaccia bars guide, Bastelicaccia wineries guide, Bastelicaccia hotels guide, and Bastelicaccia experiences guide for planning the rest of your trip.
Ratings at a Glance
- Michelin recognition: Plate (2025)
- Google rating: 4.8 from 1,270+ reviews
- Price tier: €€
- Booking difficulty: Easy
Practical Details
Auberge du Prunelli is located at D55bis, 20129 Bastelicaccia, France , approximately 15 minutes by car from Ajaccio. You will need a vehicle to get here; there is no practical public transport link. The terrace overlooking the Prunelli valley is the main draw in warm weather, so if you are visiting between late spring and early autumn, ask for that seating when you book. Hours and a direct booking contact are not listed on our current record; check local search or the address directly to confirm current service times before making the trip.
FAQ
What should I order at Auberge du Prunelli?
- Start with the house charcuterie and local cheeses , these are made from valley-sourced ingredients and are the strongest argument for eating here rather than in Ajaccio.
- The slow-simmered dishes are the kitchen's signature format; order whichever is on that day rather than anything that sounds grilled or quick.
- Finish with a fruit tart made from the orchard: this is one of the few desserts you can order knowing exactly where the fruit came from.
- Ask the floor staff to guide you through the Corsican wine list. With over 200 labels, the list rewards a recommendation rather than a solo browse.
Can I eat at the bar at Auberge du Prunelli?
- There is no confirmed bar seating in our current venue data. This is a traditional country auberge format, so the expectation is table dining rather than a bar counter.
- If you want to drink your way through the Corsican wine list without committing to a full meal, call ahead and ask whether they can accommodate a drinks-only visit or a shorter order at the terrace. For dedicated bar programming in the area, see our Bastelicaccia bars guide.
Does Auberge du Prunelli handle dietary restrictions?
- No dietary restriction policy is listed in our current data. The menu is built around Corsican charcuterie, cheese, garden vegetables, and orchard fruit, which means meat and dairy are central to the cooking format.
- Vegetarians will find options in the garden produce and cheese elements, but the kitchen is not set up as a dietary-flexible operation in the way a city restaurant might be.
- Contact the restaurant directly before visiting if restrictions are a concern. Phone and website details are not available in our current record; use the address to find current contact information.
Is Auberge du Prunelli worth the price?
- At €€, yes , this is one of the stronger value propositions in Corsican country dining. A Michelin Plate, a 4.8 Google rating from over 1,270 reviews, house-made charcuterie, garden vegetables, orchard desserts, and a 200-label Corsican wine list at this price tier is a genuine overdelivery relative to what the price signals.
- The comparison that matters: you will pay considerably more for a lesser wine list and less interesting produce at many of the harbour-front restaurants in Ajaccio. The 15-minute drive to Bastelicaccia is worth it.
Is Auberge du Prunelli good for a special occasion?
- Yes, particularly if the occasion suits an informal, deeply local setting rather than a formal dining room. The family history of the auberge going back to 1860, the terrace in the valley, and a wine list that rewards exploration all make this a strong choice for a meaningful meal.
- It is not the right call if you need white-tablecloth service or a tasting menu format. For that profile in France, venues like Les Prés d'Eugénie in Eugénie-les-Bains or Bras in Laguiole are better matched. But for a celebration that is about place, produce, and Corsican wine rather than ceremony, Auberge du Prunelli delivers.
Further Reading
For other French country auberge experiences worth comparing, see Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Auberge du Vieux Puits in Fontjoncouse, and Georges Blanc in Vonnas. For destination dining at the higher end of the French register, Arpège in Paris, Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Troisgros in Ouches, Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or, and La Table du Castellet in Le Castellet are all worth knowing.
Compare Auberge du Prunelli
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auberge du Prunelli | Country cooking | Michelin Plate (2025); A cosy, inviting atmosphere reigns in this restaurant that first welcomed guests in 1860 in its former life as a coaching inn. It's been a family affair since 1997, when father André Orlandazzi bought the place – today his sons have taken over the reins. Charcuterie, cheeses and honey from the valley, vegetables from the garden, simple dishes simmered for hours on the stove, tarts made with fruit from the orchard, over 200 Corsican wines... Timeless! In fine weather, you might like to take advantage of the large terrace surrounded by greenery overlooking the Prunelli. | Easy | — |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Bastelicaccia for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Auberge du Prunelli?
Focus on the produce the kitchen grows or sources locally: charcuterie and cheeses from the valley, vegetables from the garden, and fruit tarts made with orchard fruit. The Michelin Plate recognition is built on dishes simmered low and slow, so lean into whatever is slow-cooked that day. With over 200 Corsican wines on the list, ask the floor for a valley pairing rather than defaulting to something you already know.
Can I eat at the bar at Auberge du Prunelli?
Bar seating is not confirmed in available venue data, so plan around the dining room or the large terrace. The terrace is the stronger call in fine weather — it overlooks the Prunelli valley and is surrounded by greenery, which sets the tone for the meal better than an indoor seat would.
Does Auberge du Prunelli handle dietary restrictions?
The kitchen is rooted in a specific Corsican larder — charcuterie, cheese, garden vegetables, orchard fruit — so options for guests avoiding meat or dairy are narrower than at a menu-driven city restaurant. The garden-sourced vegetables and fruit-based desserts give some flexibility, but check the venue's official channels before booking if you have firm dietary requirements, as hours and contact details are not publicly listed.
Is Auberge du Prunelli worth the price?
At €€ pricing with a Michelin Plate, yes. You are getting ingredients sourced from the surrounding valley and orchard, a wine list of over 200 Corsican labels, and a family-run kitchen that has been refining the same approach since 1997. That combination at this price point is difficult to find anywhere on the island, let alone 15 minutes from Ajaccio.
Is Auberge du Prunelli good for a special occasion?
It works well for a low-key celebration where the food is the point rather than the setting's formality. The auberge has been running since 1860, the family has owned it since 1997, and the Michelin Plate gives it credibility without the stiffness of a starred room. If you want a grander occasion with full table service theatrics, you will find that better in Ajaccio proper, but for an intimate, produce-driven meal on a terrace overlooking the valley, this is the right call.
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