Restaurant in Tavarnelle Val di Pesa, Italy
La Torre
525ptsCastle setting, serious kitchen — book ahead.

About La Torre
La Torre holds a 2024 Michelin Star inside Il Castello del Nero, a 12th-century property in Chianti Classico. Chef Di Pirro runs three distinct tasting menus — vegetarian, meat, and seafood — anchored by an on-site organic kitchen garden. At €€€€, it is one of the stronger cases for a destination dinner in Tuscany, but book six to eight weeks out in peak season.
A Michelin-starred dinner inside a 12th-century Tuscan castle: here's what you're actually paying for
At €€€€ per head, La Torre asks you to commit before you arrive — dinner service runs Tuesday through Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM only, with Sundays and Mondays dark. That narrow window, combined with a setting inside Il Castello del Nero in Tavarnelle Val di Pesa, makes this one of the harder reservations in the Chianti Classico zone. Book at least three to four weeks out; if you're travelling in peak Tuscan season (May through October), give yourself six to eight weeks. This is not a walk-in venue.
The 2024 Michelin Star is the central trust signal here, and it earns its weight. Michelin's inspectors cited chef Di Pirro's cooking as technical, creative, and consistently full of flavour — a combination that matters when you're deciding whether a €€€€ dinner in the Florentine hills is the right call versus a comparable spend in Florence or Siena. On Google, 61 reviewers have landed at 4.4 out of 5 , a solid read for a restaurant at this price point, where disappointed guests tend to be vocal.
What makes the sourcing here worth your attention
The ingredient sourcing at La Torre is the most direct answer to the question of whether the price is justified. The property maintains its own kitchen garden, cultivated organically (not yet certified, but organic in practice), growing up to ten varieties of tomato alongside fruit trees. That is not a marketing detail , it means the produce arriving on your plate has been grown metres from the kitchen, which has a measurable effect on what Di Pirro can do with vegetables, specifically in the "Evoluzione Vegetali" vegetarian menu. If you care about sourcing transparency, this is one of the few Chianti-area restaurants where the connection between garden and plate is documented rather than implied.
Wine cellar adds a second sourcing argument. The castle's location in the heart of Chianti Classico means the cellar is built around one of Italy's most precisely delineated wine zones. If Tuscan wine is part of your reason for making this trip, the combination of a kitchen-garden-driven menu and a cellar stocked with the surrounding region's leading bottles is a strong case for choosing La Torre over a fine-dining option in a city where the wine list has less geographic logic behind it.
The three menus: which one to choose
La Torre runs three distinct tasting menus: "Evoluzione Vegetali" (vegetarian, built around the kitchen garden), "La Terra" (meat-focused), and "Il Mare" (fish and seafood). This structure matters for your decision. Unlike restaurants that offer a single chef's menu with no variation, you have a meaningful choice at the point of booking. If you are travelling with a mixed group , one pescatarian, one omnivore , the menu structure accommodates that without compromise. The dessert course is noted in Michelin's write-up as a particular strength, with a range of petit fours and imaginative sweets served alongside coffee. Factor that into your pacing; this is a dinner that runs long by design.
The setting: what you see when you get there
Il Castello del Nero is a 12th-century residence, and the dining room reflects that history in its architecture. The summer terrace offers views across the Tuscan hills that are among the better dining vistas in the region , and this is a region with significant competition on that front. Arriving early enough to take in the terrace before service is the practical move; the venue's own guidance suggests a pre-dinner walk to a nearby viewpoint. That kind of setting detail matters if you are weighing La Torre against a city restaurant: you are not just paying for the food, you are paying for a complete evening in a medieval property surrounded by Chianti Classico countryside.
Practical details
Reservations: Book three to four weeks out minimum; six to eight weeks during May–October peak season. Booking is hard , plan ahead. Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 7:30 PM–9:30 PM; closed Sunday and Monday. Price tier: €€€€. Dress: Not specified in available data, but the castle setting and Michelin Star strongly suggest smart casual as the floor, with formal evening wear welcomed. Groups: Contact the restaurant directly; with three structured tasting menus, mixed dietary groups are accommodated, but seat count is not publicly listed, so assume limited availability for larger parties. Dietary restrictions: The three-menu format , vegetarian, meat, fish , provides structural flexibility, but specific allergy requirements should be communicated at the time of booking.
How La Torre fits into your Tavarnelle Val di Pesa plans
If La Torre is your anchor dinner for a stay in the area, it works leading as part of a broader itinerary. See our full Tavarnelle Val di Pesa restaurants guide for daytime options, and our full Tavarnelle Val di Pesa hotels guide if you are not staying at Il Castello del Nero itself. For evening drinks before or after dinner, check our full Tavarnelle Val di Pesa bars guide. The wine region surrounding the property is worth a day of its own , our full Tavarnelle Val di Pesa wineries guide covers the leading cellar doors nearby, and our full Tavarnelle Val di Pesa experiences guide has wider activity planning.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how La Torre positions against other €€€€ creative Italian restaurants nationally.
FAQ
Is La Torre worth the price?
- Yes, if the Michelin Star, sourced ingredients, and castle setting are factors you value together. A 2024 Star with a 4.4 Google rating across 61 reviews is consistent evidence of quality, not just reputation. The kitchen garden and three-menu structure give you more tailored value than many comparably priced tasting-menu restaurants in Tuscany, where the single-menu format leaves no room for preference.
Is the tasting menu worth it at La Torre?
- The three-menu format is a material advantage over single-menu competitors at this price point. "Evoluzione Vegetali" is the strongest case for the sourcing story , you are eating produce grown on the property. "Il Mare" is the choice if fish and seafood is your priority; Michelin's write-up specifically notes fish options as a strength. "La Terra" suits meat-focused diners. All three include the dessert course, which Michelin singled out for its imagination. At €€€€, the tasting menu is what the kitchen is designed around , ordering à la carte is not confirmed as an option.
What should I order at La Torre?
- The menu structure means your choice is which of the three paths to take rather than individual dishes. If you want the most direct expression of Di Pirro's creative cooking tied to the property's own production, "Evoluzione Vegetali" is the logical choice. "Il Mare" is the recommendation for seafood-oriented diners. The dessert course is specifically noted by Michelin as a highlight , do not skip the petit fours with coffee.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Torre?
- Dinner is the only option. La Torre operates exclusively Tuesday through Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM , there is no lunch service. If your itinerary is built around a midday meal, you will need to look elsewhere. See our Tavarnelle Val di Pesa restaurants guide for lunch alternatives in the area.
Can La Torre accommodate groups?
- The three distinct menus make mixed dietary groups structurally manageable , a table with vegetarians, fish eaters, and meat eaters each has a dedicated menu rather than workarounds. Seat count is not publicly listed. For groups of six or more, contact the restaurant directly as early as possible, particularly during peak season when availability tightens.
Does La Torre handle dietary restrictions?
- The three-menu format provides a baseline level of dietary accommodation. Specific allergies and intolerances should be communicated at the time of booking , do not leave this to the night of the meal at a Michelin-starred venue with a tasting-menu format. Phone contact details are not currently listed; reach out via the restaurant's booking channel when reserving.
Compare La Torre
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| La Torre | €€€€ | — |
| Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler | €€€€ | — |
| Dal Pescatore | €€€€ | — |
| Enoteca Pinchiorri | €€€€ | — |
| Enrico Bartolini | €€€€ | — |
| Le Calandre | €€€€ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between La Torre and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does La Torre handle dietary restrictions?
The dedicated 'Evoluzione Vegetali' menu shows the kitchen treats vegetarian dining as a first-class option, not an afterthought. For other dietary needs, communicate requirements at booking — at €€€€ and Michelin level, adaptation is standard practice, but specific accommodations are not publicly detailed for this venue.
What should I order at La Torre?
La Torre runs set tasting menus only, so there is no à la carte ordering. Choose between 'Evoluzione Vegetali' (vegetarian, anchored in the kitchen garden), 'La Terra' (meat-led), or 'Il Mare' (fish and seafood). If your table has no dietary constraints, 'Il Mare' or 'La Terra' will show the widest range of what Di Pirro's kitchen produces.
Is the tasting menu worth it at La Torre?
Yes, given the Michelin recognition and the kitchen garden sourcing, the tasting menu format suits what chef Di Pirro is doing: technical, flavour-led creative cooking that rewards the full sequence. Three menus are available — vegetarian, meat, and fish-focused — so you're not locked into one direction. The dessert course is specifically noted for its imagination, which adds weight to going the distance.
Can La Torre accommodate groups?
The venue sits inside Il Castello del Nero, which has both an indoor dining room and a summer terrace — the setting can accommodate groups, but dinner service runs only two hours (7:30–9:30 PM, Tuesday through Saturday). check the venue's official channels to confirm private dining availability; group bookings at this tier typically require advance arrangement of four to eight weeks, more during May–October peak season.
Is La Torre worth the price?
At €€€€ per head with a Michelin star awarded in 2024, La Torre justifies the spend if a structured tasting menu in a 12th-century castle setting is what you're after. The kitchen maintains an organic kitchen garden with up to 10 tomato varieties, and the sourcing is central to the value proposition. If you want à la carte flexibility or a shorter commitment, this is the wrong room — but for a single anchor dinner in the Chianti area, it makes a strong case.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Torre?
La Torre serves dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, 7:30–9:30 PM. There is no lunch service. If you want to visit on a Sunday or Monday, plan for a different venue that day.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
- Thursday
- 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
- Friday
- 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
- Saturday
- 7:30 PM-9:30 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
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