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    Restaurant in Montemerano, Italy

    Caino

    1,205Pearl Points

    Two stars deep in Maremma. Book early.

    Caino, Restaurant in Montemerano

    About Caino

    Caino holds two Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 90 points, making it the most serious food and wine destination in the Maremma. Chef Valeria Piccini's classical Tuscan cooking draws directly from the surrounding territory, backed by a well-stocked regional wine cellar managed by her son Andrea. Book 6–8 weeks out minimum — this is not an easy table to secure.

    Verdict

    Caino is the most compelling case for a detour into the Maremma that two Michelin stars can make. If you are planning a serious food and wine trip through Tuscany, this is where to anchor it. Valeria Piccini's cooking is deeply rooted in the territory around Montemerano, technically precise, and substantiated by one of the most thoughtfully assembled regional wine programs in southern Tuscany. Book it before you plan anything else around it, because securing a table here is genuinely difficult.

    About Caino

    Montemerano is a medieval hill village in the Maremma Toscana, a part of Tuscany that most wine and food travelers know by reputation but rarely reach. That relative inaccessibility is part of what makes Caino function the way it does: the restaurant draws an informed, committed audience rather than a passing tourist crowd, and the experience reflects that seriousness. The dining room atmosphere is calm and considered — measured energy, not silence, but a room where conversation is the point rather than background noise. You are not competing with the sound system or a packed bar. The room has the feel of somewhere that has been doing this for a long time and sees no reason to change.

    The kitchen works from the surrounding territory with deliberate specificity. The estate produces its own olive oil and some wines, and a kitchen garden supplies seasonal produce directly. This is not window dressing: the sourcing shapes the menu in ways you can taste. Piccini's approach is to find the leading available material from the Maremma and apply technique that clarifies rather than complicates. The lamb ravioli and the pigeon stuffed with mashed potatoes and its entrails, cited in the La Liste commentary, are examples of that logic — regional ingredients treated with classical precision. For seafood, the restaurant incorporates fresh fish with the same seasonal discipline, pairing langoustines or amberjack with ingredients like asparagus and almonds or cardoncelli mushrooms and lovage. The commitment to seasonal alignment is consistent throughout.

    In summer, the terrace becomes Il Giardino di Caino, a bistro format where the cooking draws more directly on family traditions , a lighter, more informal register than the main dining room, but sourced from the same territory. If your visit falls between June and August, the terrace adds a choice that most two-star restaurants do not offer.

    The Wine Program

    The wine operation at Caino is overseen by Andrea, Piccini's son, and the cellar is described by La Liste as well-stocked. For a restaurant at this level in the Maremma, that matters considerably. The region produces some of Italy's most serious red wines , Morellino di Scansano, Montecucco Sangiovese, and the IGT bottlings from estates like Sassicaia and Ornellaia are all Maremma or near-Maremma territory. A strong cellar here means depth in wines that pair directly with the food's weight and character: the lamb dishes demand something with structure, the fish preparations reward whites and lighter reds, and a well-managed program should cover both.

    The estate's own wine production adds a dimension that few restaurants at this price point can offer: bottles with a direct provenance connection to the same land that supplies the kitchen's ingredients. If terroir coherence is important to you as a diner , the idea that the wine and the food come from the same place , Caino makes that argument more convincingly than most. For wine-focused travelers planning a Tuscan itinerary that already includes stops in Chianti or Montalcino, the Maremma angle here is genuinely additive rather than repetitive. See our full Montemerano wineries guide for context on what the region produces.

    Awards & Recognition

    Caino holds two Michelin stars (2024, 2025), a La Liste score of 90 points (2026) and 90.5 points (2025), and ranks #279 in the Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe list (2025). The OAD ranking places it within a clearly defined peer group of classical European restaurants , not avant-garde or experimental, but technically accomplished and ingredient-driven. The Google rating of 4.5 across 372 reviews is consistent with that positioning: broadly admired, occasionally polarising to diners expecting innovation over tradition. If you are coming specifically for progressive or conceptual cuisine, you are in the wrong room. If you want classical Tuscan cooking at its most rigorous, the credentials are solid.

    For broader context on where Caino sits in the Italian two-star conversation, consider that restaurants like Uliassi in Senigallia, Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone, and Reale in Castel di Sangro operate in a similar tier of serious Italian regional cooking. Caino's distinguishing factor is its territorial specificity: the Maremma is the whole point, and the restaurant commits to it completely.

    Within Tuscany, if you are building an itinerary, L'Asinello in Castelnuovo Berardenga and La Sala dei Grapoli in Poggio alle Mura are worth considering as regional companions at different price points. See our full Montemerano restaurants guide for the broader local picture.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Near impossible without significant advance planning , book a minimum of 6–8 weeks out for weekend dates; weekday evenings (Thursday or Friday) offer the leading availability window. Hours: Thursday–Friday 7:30–9:30 pm; Saturday–Sunday 12:30–2:30 pm and 7:30–9:30 pm; closed Tuesday–Wednesday. Budget: €€€€ , expect a full dinner with wine to sit in the range typical of two-star Italian dining. Dress: Smart casual at minimum; the seriousness of the room warrants effort. Rooms: Caino has guest rooms upstairs, which removes the logistics problem of getting back to a larger town after dinner , a practical advantage given the village's remote location. Getting there: Montemerano is most easily reached by car; it is not served by direct rail. For accommodation context, see our full Montemerano hotels guide. For other local options, our Montemerano bars guide and experiences guide cover the surrounding area.

    FAQs

    • How far ahead should I book Caino? Plan for 6–8 weeks minimum on weekends; Thursday and Friday evenings are your leading shot at shorter notice. Given the two-star status and limited seating in a small village venue, this is not a walk-in proposition under any realistic circumstances.
    • What should I wear to Caino? Smart casual is the floor , this is a €€€€ two-Michelin-star restaurant in a serious dining room. Jeans are possible if polished; a shirt or blouse is expected. Formal is never wrong here.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Caino? There is no bar-dining option documented for the main restaurant. In summer, Il Giardino di Caino on the terrace operates as a bistro with a more relaxed format, which may suit those wanting a less structured experience.
    • Is Caino worth the price? At the €€€€ tier, yes , for the right traveler. The combination of two Michelin stars, a strong regional wine program, and cooking that is genuinely specific to the Maremma makes this more than a credentials exercise. If classical Tuscan cuisine at peak execution is what you are after, the price is justified. If you want experimental or contemporary Italian, spend the same money at Le Calandre or Osteria Francescana instead.
    • What are alternatives to Caino in Montemerano? Montemerano is a small village; Caino is the destination restaurant here. If you are considering the broader Maremma or Tuscany region, L'Asinello in Castelnuovo Berardenga offers Tuscan cooking at a different register, and La Sala dei Grapoli in Poggio alle Mura is a wine-estate dining option worth comparing. Neither is a direct substitute for Caino's depth.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Caino? Lunch on Saturday or Sunday gives you the full kitchen in daylight, which suits the terrace option in summer and pairs well with a slower afternoon in the village. Dinner is more atmospheric if the room is your priority. For wine-focused visitors, lunch allows a longer afternoon to explore Maremma producers. Either service delivers the full menu; the choice is logistical.
    • Is Caino good for a special occasion? Yes, and the on-site rooms make it particularly suited to an overnight occasion rather than a single meal. The combination of two-star cooking, a serious wine cellar managed by the Piccini family, and a medieval Tuscan village setting makes this a strong choice for a significant dinner , anniversary, milestone, or a deliberate food-and-wine trip anchor. Book the rooms if they are available: leaving after dinner without a drive is a meaningful upgrade to the experience.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Caino?

    6 to 8 weeks minimum for weekend dates; Thursday and Friday evenings may open up slightly closer to the date. Caino operates limited hours — closed Tuesday and Wednesday entirely — so available slots are fewer than at comparable two-star restaurants. Book the moment your travel dates are fixed.

    What should I wear to Caino?

    Caino is a formal two-Michelin-star restaurant in a medieval Tuscan village, so err toward jacket-and-trousers for men and equivalent for women. The setting is intimate rather than grand-hotel stiff, but the price range (€€€€) and dining format warrant dressing up. Avoid casual resort wear.

    Can I eat at the bar at Caino?

    There is no bar dining format documented for Caino. The dining room is the main format, with the garden terrace bistro Il Giardino di Caino operating in summer as a more relaxed alternative. If you want a lower-commitment option, the summer terrace is the closer equivalent to a casual seat.

    Is Caino worth the price?

    Yes, if you are specifically coming for Valeria Piccini's Maremma-rooted cooking and the two-star experience justifies a detour rather than a passing visit. La Liste scores it 90 points (2026) and Opinionated About Dining places it #279 in Classical Europe (2025), which is strong peer validation for the €€€€ price point. If you want comparable two-star value without the remote drive, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence is the urban alternative — but the regional specificity here is exactly the point.

    What are alternatives to Caino in Montemerano?

    There are no other two-star restaurants in Montemerano itself — the village is small and Caino is the reason most visitors make the trip. For Tuscan fine dining alternatives, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence operates at three-star level. For comparable regional Italian cooking at two-star depth, Dal Pescatore in Lombardy is the closest structural peer.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Caino?

    Lunch is available Saturday and Sunday (12:30–2:30 pm) and is the easier booking for most visitors combining a weekend drive through Maremma. Dinner runs Thursday through Sunday (7:30–9:30 pm). In summer, Il Giardino di Caino on the terrace offers a bistro-style lunch format rooted in family traditions — a lighter entry point than the full dining room experience.

    Is Caino good for a special occasion?

    Caino is well-suited for a special occasion if the occasion calls for a destination restaurant rather than a city-centre table. Two Michelin stars, an estate-grown wine and olive oil program, and rooms upstairs make it a full overnight experience. The remote Maremma setting means the journey is part of the occasion — which works in your favour if that is what you want, and against you if logistics are a constraint.

    Location

    Via della Chiesa, 4, 58014 Montemerano GR, Italy

    Montemerano, Italy

    Compare Caino

    Worth the Price? Caino vs. Peers
    VenuePriceValue
    Caino€€€€
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler€€€€
    Dal Pescatore€€€€
    Enoteca Pinchiorri€€€€
    Enrico Bartolini€€€€
    Le Calandre€€€€

    A quick look at how Caino measures up.

    Also Consider

    At the €€€€ tier, Caino sits in a specific lane: classical Italian regional cooking with deep territorial roots, not experimental or avant-garde cuisine. If that is what you are after, it outperforms most of its Italian peers on coherence between kitchen and cellar. Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence has one of Italy's most formidable wine cellars and operates at a comparable price point, but the cooking leans Italian-French and the room is more formal; for pure Tuscan territorial identity, Caino is the stronger argument. Dal Pescatore in Runate is a closer structural comparison — a family-run, multi-generational Italian restaurant with serious classical credentials — but it is northern Italian in character, and the two experiences do not overlap much beyond the price tier.

    Le Calandre in Rubano and Enrico Bartolini in Milan both operate at €€€€ with a more progressive and creative approach to Italian cooking. If you want technical ambition and contemporary plating alongside the price tag, either of those is a better fit than Caino. Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico is the most philosophically adjacent — locally rooted, ingredient-driven, deeply regional — but it operates in the Dolomites and the cuisines are entirely different in character.

    For the food and wine traveler specifically: Caino's value proposition is clearest if you are already routing through Tuscany and want a restaurant that integrates with Maremma wine exploration. It is harder to justify as a standalone destination trip from outside Italy compared to a three-star like Osteria Francescana or Piazza Duomo in Alba, which carry greater international pull. Within its category — classical, territorial, two-star Italian — it is among the most consistent options available.

    Hours

    Monday
    7:30–9:30 pm
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    Closed
    Thursday
    7:30–9:30 pm
    Friday
    7:30–9:30 pm
    Saturday
    12:30–2:30 pm, 7:30–9:30 pm
    Sunday
    12:30–2:30 pm, 7:30–9:30 pm

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