Restaurant in Bristol, United Kingdom
Marmo
475ptsMichelin-recognised Italian at everyday prices.

About Marmo
Marmo holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmands (2024–2025) and prices at ££, making it Bristol's clearest value case for a special occasion dinner. Chef Priscilla Przygocki runs a concise Italian menu in a converted Victorian building on Baldwin Street — confident cooking, a serious by-the-glass wine list, and an atmosphere that works for dates and celebrations without requiring formal dress.
Verdict
Marmo is the kind of Bib Gourmand that makes the award feel meaningful. Chef Priscilla Przygocki runs a concise Italian menu out of a converted Victorian insurance building on Baldwin Street, and the combination of serious cooking, a genuinely interesting wine list, and prices that stay at the ££ mark makes this one of Bristol's most compelling dinner bookings. If you are after a special occasion meal that does not require you to spend at Michelin-starred rates, book here before you consider anything else in the city.
The Experience
The former Guardian Assurance Building gives Marmo something most restaurant fit-outs cannot manufacture: real atmosphere. High ceilings, parquet flooring, and panelled walls produce a room that feels both settled and alive — the kind of ambient warmth that relaxes a table within minutes of sitting down. The energy skews convivial rather than hushed. Shared tables and window perches define the seating, which means solo diners and couples slot in naturally alongside groups. On Friday and Saturday evenings, an apero bar opens for nibbles and drinks before and after dinner, which makes Marmo a more flexible option for those who want to anchor a night around it rather than just passing through for a meal.
For a special occasion, this room rewards the choice. It is not a white-tablecloth setting — the informality is real, not affected , but the service is described as confident and personable, which is the register that actually makes a celebration feel right. Stiff formality rarely does.
The Menu and Its Logic
Marmo's menu is a single-section document: appetisers progress to mains without a rigid tasting menu structure, but the sequencing has the logic of one. The kitchen takes Italian cooking as its foundation and works from there, with restraint treated as a method rather than a limitation. The philosophy of less-is-more is not a marketing line here; the dishes are built around ingredient quality and flavour clarity rather than plate complexity.
The awards data tells you what to expect: two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmands (2024 and 2025) signal cooking that is consistent, value-oriented, and technically sound. The Bib Gourmand specifically recognises good food at moderate prices, which aligns precisely with Marmo's positioning.
Dishes from the public record give a useful picture of how the kitchen thinks. A single fried gnocco filled with cheese and topped with lardo is exactly the kind of opener that signals confidence , one thing, done with precision, delivering disproportionate impact. A roasted artichoke, radicchio, and clementine combination with hazelnut butter underneath shows the kitchen's willingness to let a dish look informal while the flavours do the structural work. Pasta , hand-rolled strozzapreti with wild boar ragu , delivers on the osteria promise: familiar format, ingredient-led execution. On the meat side, properly hung venison haunch in a light stock with celeriac purée and pickled quince represents the kind of sourcing-led cooking that separates a serious kitchen from a competent one. For dessert, a rectangular brick of milky chocolate mousse topped with cocoa-powdered Chantilly has earned the description of a must-order.
This is not a tasting menu venue in the formal sense, but the progression from light and sharp (lardo gnocco, artichoke) to rich and substantial (venison, pasta) to sweet and restrained (chocolate mousse) has the architecture of one. The sequencing earns your attention across the whole meal rather than delivering it in isolated dishes.
The Wine
The wine list at Marmo is worth taking seriously. Wines by the glass are selected to push the diner toward combinations they might not otherwise try , Jean-Philippe Fichet's Bourgogne Aligoté alongside the artichoke, a half-fermented fizzing Garnacha alongside venison , and the pairings are evidently thought through rather than defaulted. The full bottle list is described as impressive, though prices on the bottle list sit at a higher register than the food pricing, which is worth knowing before you commit. If you are working to a budget, the by-the-glass list is the smarter route and clearly the one the kitchen has designed around.
Booking and Practicalities
Marmo is rated at ££, making it one of the more affordable ways to eat at Bib Gourmand level in the South West. Booking difficulty is assessed as easy, which means you do not need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for, say, Bulrush or Wilsons. That said, Friday and Saturday evenings fill predictably , the apero bar adds footfall on those nights , so booking ahead for weekend visits remains advisable. The address is 31 Baldwin St, Bristol BS1 1RG, positioned in the restaurant quarter a short distance from one of the river crossings. Google reviews sit at 4.6 across 335 ratings, which is a meaningful sample at that score. Dress code information is not published; the informal shared-table setup suggests smart-casual is the practical baseline.
For groups, the shared-table format and informal room will suit smaller parties better than large ones. If you are planning a celebration dinner for two or four, this works well. Larger groups should check capacity and seating arrangements directly with the venue before booking.
Quick reference: Bib Gourmand (2024, 2025) | ££ | 31 Baldwin St, Bristol BS1 1RG | Google 4.6 (335 reviews) | Easy to book | Apero bar Fri–Sat evenings.
Pearl's Take
Marmo sits in a category of its own in Bristol: Michelin-recognised Italian cooking at prices that do not require a special budget. The room delivers on atmosphere without manufacturing it, the menu sequence rewards eating through the whole card rather than cherry-picking, and the wine program adds a layer that most ££ restaurants do not attempt. For a date, a relaxed celebration, or a first serious dinner in Bristol, this is the booking to make. For wider context on eating and staying in the city, see our full Bristol restaurants guide, our full Bristol hotels guide, and our full Bristol bars guide.
Compare Marmo
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marmo | The former Guardian Assurance Building makes a charming spot for a restaurant, thanks to its characterful interiors with high ceilings, parquet flooring and panelled walls. The rustic look is a perfect fit for this osteria-cum-wine-bar, where the concise menu of classic Italian dishes adheres to the old adage that 'less is more' – straightforward options like hand-rolled strozzapreti with wild boar ragu deliver bags of flavour with just a few ingredients. If you needed more reasons to visit, the service is confident and personable, and it all comes with an appealing price tag.; Enveloped in the restaurant quarter of Baldwin Street, a few metres from one of the river crossings, Marmo has been making waves with cooking that takes Italy as its base, but glides into effortless orbit from there. Shared tables and window perches are the drill, and the menu is a single-section document that begins with appetisers and progresses to mains without the joins showing. To start, we were wildly enthused by a single fried gnocco filled with cheese and topped with a melting diaphanous film of lardo – a salty, fatty treat. Good sourcing of local raw materials is the foundation stone, producing dishes that major on flavour impact rather than twee presentation. A heap of roasted artichoke, radicchio and clementine looked a bit of a jumble, but at the bottom was a slick of delightful hazelnut butter that unified the lot. Meat delivered superlative, properly hung venison haunch in a light stock with celeriac purée and pickled quince in a harmonious support act, while the must-have dessert is a rectangular brick of milky chocolate mousse topped with just-set, cocoa-powdered Chantilly. Wines by the glass prompt the diner to try out some interesting combinations. Jean-Philippe Fichet's Bourgogne Aligoté made short work of the theoretically tricky artichoke, while the half-fermented fizzing Garnacha at which we baulked initially had its buff tannic muscle flexed by the venison. The full bottle list is impressive, though prices may sit a little uneasily with the hearty informality of the place. On Friday and Saturday evenings, Marmo's new apero bar is open for nibbles and pre-/post-prandial libations.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | ££ | — |
| Bulrush | Michelin 1 Star | ££££ | — |
| Blaise Inn | ££ | — | |
| Little Hollows Pasta | ££ | — | |
| Root | ££ | — | |
| Wilsons | £££ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Marmo and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Marmo accommodate groups?
Marmo uses shared tables and window perches rather than large private dining configurations, so it suits small groups better than large parties. Pairs and groups of three or four fit the format well. For a group of six or more, the layout may be limiting — Root or Bulrush offer formats that handle larger bookings more comfortably.
What are alternatives to Marmo in Bristol?
For similar Michelin-level value at ££, Wilsons is the closest comparison — producer-led cooking with the same informality. Root covers similar price territory with a vegetable-forward menu if Italian isn't the priority. Little Hollows Pasta is the direct alternative for Italian specifically, with a tighter pasta-focused format. Bulrush and Blaise Inn sit at a higher price point and a more formal register.
What should I order at Marmo?
The menu changes, but the logic stays consistent: the kitchen builds dishes around a few well-sourced ingredients rather than elaborate construction. The fried gnocco with cheese and lardo has drawn specific editorial praise, as has the milky chocolate mousse dessert described in Michelin coverage as a must-have. Ask about the glass wine pairings — the programme is chosen to push you toward combinations you wouldn't pick yourself.
What should a first-timer know about Marmo?
Marmo operates as an osteria and wine bar at 31 Baldwin Street, a short walk from the city centre river crossings. The menu is a single-section document without a formal tasting menu structure, so you order freely. On Friday and Saturday evenings the apero bar is open for nibbles before or after the main sitting. At ££ with a Bib Gourmand from Michelin in both 2024 and 2025, it delivers more than the price suggests.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Marmo?
Marmo does not run a tasting menu format. The menu is a short, single-section à la carte where appetisers progress naturally to mains. That format suits diners who want to eat at their own pace rather than commit to a set sequence — it's one of the more relaxed ways to eat at Bib Gourmand level in Bristol.
Is Marmo worth the price?
At ££ with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025, Marmo is straightforwardly good value by any measure. Chef Priscilla Przygocki's cooking prioritises flavour impact over presentation, and the room — a converted Victorian insurance building with high ceilings and parquet floors — gives the price point more atmosphere than it has any right to expect. For Michelin-tracked Italian cooking in Bristol, there is nothing cheaper that compares.
Recognized By
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