Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Mosciano Sant'Angelo, Italy

    Borgo Spoltino

    350pts

    Honest Abruzzese cooking, exceptional value.

    Borgo Spoltino, Restaurant in Mosciano Sant'Angelo

    About Borgo Spoltino

    A Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 farmhouse restaurant in Mosciano Sant'Angelo, Borgo Spoltino delivers traditional Abruzzese cooking from a kitchen garden-supplied kitchen at prices that stay firmly accessible. The regional wine list and hilltop setting with sea-and-mountain views make it a deliberate-trip destination for food and wine travellers passing through Abruzzo.

    Verdict

    Book Borgo Spoltino if you want to eat Abruzzese food the way it was meant to be eaten: in a 19th-century farmhouse, surrounded by olive groves, with vegetables pulled from the kitchen garden and a wine list anchored in the region. The Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 tells you something useful here — this is a kitchen that earns recognition not by spending big on theatre, but by cooking with precision at a price point that stays firmly in the single-euro tier. For a food and wine traveller coming through Abruzzo, it is one of the stronger cases in the province for sitting down, ordering the local stuff, and staying a while.

    Portrait

    There is a particular kind of quiet that settles over a hilltop farmhouse in central Italy on a slow afternoon — the kind where the sound is mostly wind and distant agriculture, and the view is mountains in one direction and the Adriatic shimmer in another. That is the ambient register at Borgo Spoltino. It is not a lively room in the urban sense; the energy here is unhurried, the mood grounded by the age of the building and the weight of its surroundings. If you arrive expecting the buzz of a city trattoria, you will need to recalibrate. If you arrive expecting to eat well in a place that feels genuinely rooted in where it stands, you will not be disappointed.

    Chef Fabio Cardilio runs a kitchen that takes its cues from the land outside the window. Most of the vegetables come from Borgo Spoltino's own kitchen garden , a detail worth taking seriously, because it shapes the character of the cooking across seasons. Right now, the menu reflects what late-season Abruzzo produces: earthy, direct, ingredient-forward food that does not reach for modern technique to justify itself. This is traditional Abruzzese cooking, and it is the right lens through which to read the menu. The restaurant's own documentation references sweet pizza among the traditional specialities , alternating layers of sponge cake soaked in Kermes liqueur, pudding and custard, topped with cream and almond slivers. That description alone signals the kitchen's orientation: this is a place that preserves recipes, not one that deconstructs them.

    The Drinks Program

    The wine list at Borgo Spoltino is where the explorer instinct pays off. Abruzzo is one of Italy's more underrated wine regions, and a list that leads with regional labels alongside a wider Italian selection is genuinely useful for anyone trying to eat and drink with coherent geography. Montepulciano d'Abruzzo and Trebbiano d'Abruzzo are the obvious reference points , the former a structured red with real depth when the producer is serious, the latter a white that can surprise with its texture and mineral length. Drinking them here, with food cooked from the same soil, is a more considered pairing than anything a city wine bar can offer you. The list also reaches beyond the region, which means you are not locked in if the local selections do not match what you are eating. For a single-euro-tier restaurant in a rural setting, the breadth of the list is a meaningful advantage. There is no cocktail program noted in the available data, and this is not a bar-destination venue , the drinks story here is wine and regional context, not mixology. If a full bar program is a priority for your evening, this is not the right address; if regional wine is the draw, it is one of the more honest places in the province to drink it.

    With a Google rating of 4.6 across 860 reviews, Borgo Spoltino has a track record that holds up under volume. That number of reviews for a rural Abruzzese restaurant suggests a consistent pull from visitors making deliberate trips, not just passing traffic. The Bib Gourmand confirms the kitchen's quality ceiling is real, and the price range means you can eat here without the mental arithmetic that accompanies a tasting-menu evening. For a food-focused traveller, the value calculation is simple: Michelin-recognised cooking, regional wine, a farmhouse setting, at prices that leave room for a second bottle.

    Practical Details

    Borgo Spoltino is in Mosciano Sant'Angelo, in the Teramo province of Abruzzo. The setting is rural, so arriving by car is the practical approach. Booking is rated easy , this is not a venue where you need to plan weeks ahead, but calling or booking ahead is still the sensible move for a rural restaurant with a finite number of covers. Hours and online booking details are not confirmed in the available data, so contact the restaurant directly to confirm current service times and reservation availability. The price range sits at the single-euro tier, making it one of the more accessible entry points into Michelin-recognised cooking in the region. Dress code information is not confirmed, but the farmhouse setting and traditional cuisine point toward relaxed, smart-casual at most.

    For more options in the area, see our full Mosciano Sant'Angelo restaurants guide. You can also explore hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in Mosciano Sant'Angelo through Pearl.

    If Abruzzese cuisine is your focus, two nearby venues worth comparing are Bacucco d'Oro in Mutignano and Casa D'Angelo in Fara Filiorum Petri. For broader Abruzzo-adjacent ambition, Reale in Castel di Sangro operates at a different price tier and register entirely. Adriatic coastal cooking of a different style is available at Uliassi in Senigallia.

    Quick reference: Bib Gourmand 2024 | € price range | easy to book | Mosciano Sant'Angelo, Teramo | contact venue directly for hours and reservations.

    FAQs

    • How far ahead should I book Borgo Spoltino? Booking difficulty is rated easy, so you do not need weeks of lead time. That said, a rural farmhouse restaurant has limited covers, and turning up without a reservation is a risk not worth taking. A few days ahead is generally sufficient, but call directly to confirm , hours are not publicly listed, so confirming your date and service time in the same call is efficient.
    • Is Borgo Spoltino worth the price? At the single-euro price tier with a Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024, the value case is direct. The Bib Gourmand specifically recognises quality cooking at accessible prices , it is not a consolation award, it is a deliberate category. You are getting regionally grounded food, kitchen-garden produce, and a considered wine list at prices that compare favourably with ordinary trattorias. For what the kitchen delivers, yes, it is worth it.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Borgo Spoltino? There is no confirmed bar seating or cocktail program in the available data. This is a traditional farmhouse restaurant, not a bar-dining venue. The drinks focus is wine, particularly regional Abruzzese labels. If bar seating or a cocktail menu is important to your visit, check our Mosciano Sant'Angelo bars guide for alternatives.
    • What are alternatives to Borgo Spoltino in Mosciano Sant'Angelo? For Abruzzese cuisine at a comparable price point, Bacucco d'Oro in nearby Mutignano and Casa D'Angelo in Fara Filiorum Petri are the closest regional peers. If you want to move up the quality and price ladder significantly, Reale in Castel di Sangro is the region's flagship fine-dining address. See the full Mosciano Sant'Angelo restaurants guide for a broader view.
    • What should a first-timer know about Borgo Spoltino? Three things: arrive by car, because this is a rural farmhouse without urban transport access. Call ahead to confirm hours, since they are not publicly listed. And order with the region in mind , the kitchen's strengths are traditional Abruzzese recipes and kitchen-garden produce, not fusion or tasting-menu ambition. The sweet pizza (Kermes liqueur sponge, custard, cream, almonds) is documented as a house speciality and worth saving room for.
    • Is Borgo Spoltino good for a special occasion? Yes, if the occasion suits the setting. The farmhouse atmosphere, olive grove views, and unhurried pace make it a strong choice for a relaxed celebratory dinner with someone who appreciates place and regional food over formal service theatre. It is not a white-tablecloth special-occasion venue in the traditional sense , there is no confirmed private dining or ceremony infrastructure , but the combination of Michelin recognition, setting, and price point makes it a credible choice for a meaningful meal without the pressure of a tasting-menu evening.

    Compare Borgo Spoltino

    Value at a Glance: Borgo Spoltino
    VenuePriceValue
    Borgo Spoltino
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler€€€€
    Dal Pescatore€€€€
    Enoteca Pinchiorri€€€€
    Enrico Bartolini€€€€
    Le Calandre€€€€

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

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Borgo Spoltino?

    Book at least one to two weeks ahead, especially for weekends. Borgo Spoltino's Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition draws visitors from beyond Teramo province, and the farmhouse setting means table count is limited. Phone or email booking is the practical route since no online reservation system is listed publicly.

    Is Borgo Spoltino worth the price?

    At the € price range, this is one of the more straightforward value cases in the Michelin guide. Bib Gourmand status is specifically awarded for good cooking at a reasonable price, and Borgo Spoltino holds that recognition for 2024. If you want traditional Abruzzese food grown partly on-site and served in a 19th-century farmhouse, the value is clear.

    Can I eat at the bar at Borgo Spoltino?

    Bar seating arrangements are not documented in available venue data. Given the rural farmhouse format, Borgo Spoltino is set up as a sit-down restaurant rather than a bar-first space. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating options before visiting.

    What are alternatives to Borgo Spoltino in Mosciano Sant'Angelo?

    There are no other Michelin-recognised venues documented in Mosciano Sant'Angelo itself. For a step up in formality within Abruzzo, you would need to look further afield in the Teramo or Pescara provinces. Borgo Spoltino is the reference point for traditional Abruzzese cooking at this price level in the area.

    What should a first-timer know about Borgo Spoltino?

    The restaurant is in a rural 19th-century farmhouse outside Mosciano Sant'Angelo, so a car is essential — this is not a walkable location from a town centre. The kitchen leans into regional Abruzzese tradition, with vegetables from the restaurant's own garden and dishes like sweet pizza made with Kermes liqueur. Come expecting honest, place-specific cooking, not a contemporary tasting menu format.

    Is Borgo Spoltino good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. The setting — hilltop farmhouse, olive groves, views of sea and mountains — is genuinely atmospheric for a celebratory lunch or dinner. The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition gives it credibility without the high-price pressure of a starred venue. It works well for a relaxed, food-focused occasion rather than a formal milestone dinner with tableside theatre.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Borgo Spoltino on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.