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    Restaurant in Scorzè, Italy

    San Martino

    650pts

    Generational fish cooking. Book dinner, not lunch.

    San Martino, Restaurant in Scorzè

    About San Martino

    San Martino has held a Michelin star across multiple generations of the Colleoni family and sits at €€€ — a tier below the region's most expensive destination restaurants while delivering comparable service depth. The fish-led menu draws from a private kitchen garden, and the summer wine cellar table is worth requesting at booking. Dinner only, Wednesday to Saturday.

    A Michelin-starred table in Scorzè that has held its star across generations — and still earns it

    San Martino carries a 4.7 Google rating from 291 reviews, which is a useful signal for a restaurant in a town most diners drive through rather than to. The more telling number is the one that does not appear in any rating: the decades this address has held a Michelin star, cycling through at least three generations of the Colleoni family without losing the recognition. That kind of continuity is rare in Italian fine dining, and it is the first thing to weigh when you are deciding whether to make the trip to Scorzè.

    What the room tells you before the food arrives

    The dining room is contemporary in feel, not the faded grandeur you sometimes find at long-running family restaurants in the Veneto. A modern fireplace anchors the space and makes it a genuinely comfortable choice for dinner on a cold evening from October through to March. If you are visiting in summer, ask specifically about the wine cellar table: seating down there is available only in the warmer months and gives you a materially different spatial experience from the main room. It is the kind of detail worth knowing before you call, not after you arrive.

    The room is designed for the kind of dinner that lasts two and a half to three hours. This is not a place for a quick meal between other obligations. If you have been before and sat in the main dining room, the cellar booking is the logical next step — a different register of the same kitchen.

    How the menu is built

    Kitchen's identity is rooted in fish. The "plateau royal" has become a reference point for regulars, and the menu moves from there through dishes that balance classical technique with more current thinking introduced by successive generations. Tortello pasta with sea snails delivers clean, direct flavour. Scallops, served in season with mixed mushrooms and a peach compote, show the kitchen's instinct for pairing structure with restraint. Pigeon cooked two ways appears as a signal that this is not a fish-only room, even if seafood drives the menu's narrative arc.

    Vegetable garden behind the restaurant is not a marketing detail , it is the operational logic that keeps the seasonal dishes honest. What is grown there shapes what appears on the plate, which means the menu shifts across the year in ways worth factoring into when you visit. A November dinner and a June dinner are not the same meal.

    Wine list is extensive, covering both Italian and international labels with a tilt toward French producers and a selection of vintage bottles available by the glass. For a restaurant at this price point in the Veneto, that by-the-glass programme for older vintages is more generous than the norm. If wine is a priority for your visit, it is worth asking what is open when you book.

    The front-of-house matters here

    Michelin awards text makes specific mention of the front-of-house operation, which is unusual. Paolo Colleoni is named as someone whose knowledge and fluency with the room shapes the experience in a way that is separate from the kitchen's output. At a €€€ price point, that kind of service calibration is part of what you are paying for. If you are someone for whom service friction ruins an otherwise good meal, this is the right kind of room to be in.

    Know Before You Go

    DetailWhat to know
    Price range€€€ , fine dining price point, below the €€€€ tier of venues like Dal Pescatore or Osteria Francescana
    HoursDinner only: Wednesday to Friday 7:30 PM–10 PM, Saturday 7:30 PM–midnight. Closed Sunday, Monday, Tuesday.
    Booking difficultyEasy , no months-long wait, but call ahead for the wine cellar table in summer
    Leading forSpecial occasion dinners, returning diners who want to try the cellar room, couples, small groups
    Wine cellar seatingSummer only , request when booking, not on arrival
    Lunch optionNot available , dinner service only across all open days
    LocationPiazza Cesare Cappelletto, 1, Scorzè VE , town-centre square, easier to reach by car than by transit

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how San Martino sits relative to Italy's €€€€ tier.

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    Compare San Martino

    San Martino in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    San MartinoMichela offers guests a friendly welcome at this restaurant, where chef Raffaele creates intensely flavoured recipes enhanced by the use of vegetables fresh from the garden. Unmissable dishes include a delicious tortello pasta with sea snails which is full of fresh and decisive flavours, and lightly seared scallops served (in season) with mixed mushrooms and a delicate peach compote, as well as pigeon cooked in two different ways. The wine list features an extensive selection of Italian and international options, including a choice of some vintage labels. The dining room here is contemporary in style, with a beautiful modern fireplace adding warmth on cold winter evenings. Book a table in the wine cellar (only available in summer!) for a unique dining experience.; San Martino is a classic and elegant grand restaurant with timeless appeal, which makes your dining experience here truly memorable. The restaurant boasts two important characters: Paolo Colleoni who, with his extensive knowledge and skills, is the perfect front-of-house host, welcoming guests with joy and enthusiasm and always finding exactly the right words; and, at the helm in the kitchen, Stefano Locatelli, a chef who is equally at ease with the restaurant’s historic dishes (the restaurant has held a Michelin star for decades) and more modern creations. Although fish continues to take centre stage (starting with the legendary “plateau royal”), meat dishes also feature on the menu, and there is also a superb cheese trolley. There are plenty of French options on the wine list, with some remarkable labels also available by the glass.; One of the best restaurants in the area, San Martino focuses on fish dishes including classic favourites inherited from the chef’s father as well as more creative fare introduced by the new generation. The Colleoni family never fails to impress! Our inspectors particularly appreciated the constant search for perfection demonstrated by owner-chef Vittorio. This perfection is also evident in the private kitchen garden where flowers and vegetables are grown, emphasising the importance that this chef places on the provenance of his ingredients. The chef’s brother Paolo is responsible for the wine list, which is extensive and well structured, with a slight preference for French labels.€€€
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert NiederkoflerMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Dal PescatoreMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Osteria FrancescanaMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Quattro PassiMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    RealeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at San Martino?

    The venue data does not confirm a bar seating option at San Martino. The dining room and a bookable wine cellar (summer only) are the confirmed formats. If bar dining matters to you, this is not the right venue to bank on — call ahead to confirm before making the trip to Scorzè.

    Is San Martino good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases for a special occasion in the Veneto at the €€€ tier. The Michelin star has held across generations, the front-of-house is singled out by name in the Michelin awards text (rare), and the wine cellar table — bookable in summer — gives you a private-feeling room that most special-occasion restaurants cannot offer. For winter visits, the contemporary dining room with a modern fireplace works well for the same purpose.

    Is San Martino good for solo dining?

    Manageable but not the natural fit. San Martino's strengths — the plateau royal, a structured wine list with vintage labels, and a kitchen that builds around sharing-style fish courses — are better experienced with at least one other person. Solo diners can eat here, but the format rewards a companion who will share the range of the menu.

    Is lunch or dinner better at San Martino?

    Dinner, without question. San Martino's posted hours show no lunch service at all — the kitchen opens at 7:30 PM Wednesday through Saturday. Saturday extends to midnight, making it the most relaxed option if you want to take your time with the wine list.

    How far ahead should I book San Martino?

    Book at least two to three weeks out for a standard Thursday or Friday dinner; longer if you want the wine cellar table in summer, which is a specific request and limited in availability. San Martino draws regulars who know the kitchen well, and a Michelin-starred room open only four evenings a week fills faster than the town's profile would suggest.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at San Martino?

    At the €€€ price point, yes — provided fish is your format. The kitchen's identity is built around fish, and the menu moves from the plateau royal through dishes that span both classic inherited recipes and more contemporary work. If you want a meat-led or flexible à la carte experience, San Martino does offer those options, but the tasting menu is where the kitchen's point of view is clearest.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    closed
    Wednesday
    7:30 PM-10 PM
    Thursday
    7:30 PM-10 PM
    Friday
    7:30 PM-10 PM
    Saturday
    7:30 PM-12 AM
    Sunday
    closed

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