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    Restaurant in Breuil-Cervinia, Italy

    Wood

    750pts

    Book it. Michelin star, mountain setting, real cooking.

    Wood, Restaurant in Breuil-Cervinia

    About Wood

    Wood is Breuil-Cervinia's only Michelin-starred restaurant, where Swedish chef Amanda Eriksson builds a creative menu around the productive tension between Scandinavian and Italian ingredients — elk tartare, smoked Aosta Valley Fontina, rare vintages by the glass. At €€€, it delivers a genuine tasting-menu experience at altitude for less than comparable starred alternatives elsewhere in northern Italy. Book well before you travel: five services per week and high demand make this one of the harder reservations in the Alps.

    The Verdict

    If you're skiing in Cervinia and wondering whether to save Wood for a special night or just treat it as another mountain restaurant, stop wondering: Wood is the only Michelin-starred dining room in the resort, and it earns that distinction through a genuinely unusual creative menu rather than alpine cliché. At €€€ per head, it costs meaningfully less than comparable starred options elsewhere in northern Italy, and the Swedish-Italian crossover cooking from chef Amanda Eriksson is not a gimmick — it's a coherent point of view that most creative restaurants at altitude cannot match. Book it. Reserve it early. Go on a weekday if you can.

    About Wood

    Most mountain restaurants at 2,000 metres compete on view and comfort food. Wood competes on sourcing precision and culinary imagination, and that distinction matters when you're deciding whether to spend a full evening here rather than at a cosier, cheaper option on the same street.

    Chef Amanda Eriksson, originally from northern Sweden, has built a menu around the productive tension between Scandinavian and Italian ingredients. That means dishes such as elk tartare in beetroot ravioli with horseradish sauce — a construction that requires sourcing elk, a northern European ingredient with no natural home in an Italian alpine kitchen, and treating it with the delicacy of a pasta course rather than the bluntness of a charcuterie plate. It also means cauliflower cooked in butter like an escalope, then finished with smoked Fontina cheese from the Aosta Valley: a vegetable dish that earns its place on a tasting menu not through novelty but through genuine technical restraint. These are not fusion dishes in the lazy, crowd-pleasing sense. They are a chef making considered decisions about where two ingredient traditions can improve each other.

    Sourcing is the lens through which the menu makes most sense. Smoked Fontina from the Aosta Valley is a local cheese with a specific character , salty, persistent, slightly sharp , that amplifies the cauliflower without dominating it. Elk from Sweden is lean, with a pronounced mineral quality that holds up against beetroot's earthiness. The wine list, overseen by Cristian Scalco (Eriksson's business partner), extends the same seriousness: rare vintages alongside a solid selection by the glass, which matters if you are dining as a couple working through a tasting menu and not looking to commit to a full bottle at each course.

    Wood has held its Michelin star since the 2024 guide, which places it in a small group of altitude restaurants across the Alps that have convinced Michelin inspectors to make the journey. For context, the Valle d'Aosta has historically been underrepresented in the Michelin Italy guide relative to regions like Piedmont and Lombardy, which makes this recognition more specific: it is not a star given to fill a regional quota but one earned in a category where the guide has historically been cautious.

    The restaurant is open Tuesday through Saturday, evenings only (7 PM to 9:30 PM), with both Monday and Sunday closed. This is a deliberate service model, not an oversight , it limits covers and keeps the kitchen focused. It also means your planning window is tighter than it looks during a ski week: if you arrive Sunday and leave Saturday, you have five possible evenings, but one is your arrival night and one may be your departure. Book before you travel.

    Google Reviews stand at 4.4 from 168 ratings, which for a tasting-format creative restaurant at this price point suggests consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance. The score is not inflated by volume, which means the feedback is coming from diners who sought the restaurant out deliberately rather than stumbled in from the piste.

    For wider context on dining in the resort, see our full Breuil-Cervinia restaurants guide, and check our Breuil-Cervinia hotels guide if you are still deciding where to stay. Those already planning a broader Valle d'Aosta or northern Italian itinerary might also consider Piazza Duomo in Alba or Reale in Castel di Sangro for creative tasting menus with a different regional perspective. For local evening options that don't require committing to a full tasting menu, La Chandelle and La Luge cover Italian Alpine and Aosta Valley cuisine at a lower commitment level.

    Practical Details

    Booking & Timing

    Booking difficulty is high. Wood operates with limited covers across five evenings per week, in a resort where guest turnover is driven by ski season calendars rather than local dining rhythm. Expect competition for Saturday tables in particular during peak winter weeks (late December, February half-term, early March). Book as far ahead as possible , ideally before you book your accommodation. There is no booking method listed in the public record, so check the restaurant directly via its address at Via Guido Rey, 26, Breuil-Cervinia.

    Comparison Table

    VenueLocationPriceCuisine StyleMichelinBooking Difficulty
    WoodBreuil-Cervinia€€€Swedish-Italian Creative1 StarHard
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert NiederkoflerBrunico€€€€Italian Creative2 StarsVery Hard
    Dal PescatoreRunate€€€€Italian Contemporary3 StarsVery Hard
    Le CalandreRubano€€€€Progressive Italian Creative3 StarsVery Hard
    Enoteca PinchiorriFlorence€€€€Italian-French Contemporary2 StarsHard

    FAQs

    • Can Wood accommodate groups? The restaurant has a tasting-format creative kitchen, no seat count is published, and the booking difficulty is high. Groups larger than four should contact the venue directly well in advance. A mountain restaurant of this type , Michelin-starred, evenings only, five services per week , is unlikely to hold large tables back from regular reservations, so don't assume availability. Smaller groups of two to four are your leading bet for securing a booking.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Wood? Wood is dinner only, open from 7 PM to 9:30 PM Tuesday through Saturday. There is no lunch service. If you want a midday creative meal in the Cervinia area, you'll need to look elsewhere , La Luge covers Aosta Valley cuisine and may suit a post-ski lunch format better.
    • Is Wood good for solo dining? At €€€ per head with a creative tasting format, solo dining here is financially direct compared to higher-priced alternatives like Enrico Bartolini at €€€€. Whether the room is set up for counter or solo seating is not confirmed in available data, so contact the venue directly before arriving alone. Cervinia attracts solo skiers, so this is likely not an unusual request.
    • Is Wood good for a special occasion? Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases you can make for a special-occasion dinner in the Alps at this price tier. A Michelin star at 2,000 metres, a wine list with rare vintages managed by a dedicated sommelier-partner, and a menu built around precision sourcing rather than crowd-pleasing alpine staples , these are the conditions that make a meal feel considered rather than generic. At €€€ versus the €€€€ of comparably starred rooms like Osteria Francescana or Dal Pescatore, you're getting genuine occasion dining without the most aggressive price point.
    • Does Wood handle dietary restrictions? No public information is available on dietary accommodation. The menu features specific sourced ingredients , elk, smoked Fontina, beetroot , that suggest dishes are designed rather than assembled, which typically means substitutions require advance notice. Contact the restaurant directly before booking if you have dietary requirements that go beyond preference.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Wood? No bar seating is confirmed in the available record. Wood operates as a focused creative restaurant with a curated wine program rather than a bar-forward space. For a more casual bar experience in Breuil-Cervinia, see our full Breuil-Cervinia bars guide.

    Compare Wood

    Full Comparison: Wood
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    WoodCreativeTalented chef Amanda Eriksson brings together Swedish and Italian influences in her creative cuisine served at this restaurant situated at an altitude of 2 000m in the centre of Breuil-Cervinia. Originally from northern Sweden, she delights guests with a menu featuring imaginative recipes that alternate or even combine ingredients from the two countries, resulting in dishes such as elk tartare in beetroot ravioli with horseradish sauce, and cauliflower cooked in butter like an escalope and topped with smoked Fontina cheese. The wine list, which is overseen by the chef’s business partner Cristian Scalco, boasts excellent labels including rare vintages and a good choice of wines by the glass.; Chef: Amanda Eriksson document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() { var el = document.getElementById("Achievements_chefs"); if (el && el.parentNode) { el.parentNode.removeChild(el); } });; Talented chef Amanda Eriksson brings together Swedish and Italian influences in her creative cuisine served at this restaurant situated at an altitude of 2 000m in the centre of Breuil-Cervinia. Originally from northern Sweden, she delights guests with a menu featuring imaginative recipes that alternate or even combine ingredients from the two countries, resulting in dishes such as elk tartare in beetroot ravioli with horseradish sauce, and cauliflower cooked in butter like an escalope and topped with smoked Fontina cheese. The wine list, which is overseen by the chef’s business partner Cristian Scalco, boasts excellent labels including rare vintages and a good choice of wines by the glass.; Michelin 1 Star (2024)Hard
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert NiederkoflerItalian, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dal PescatoreItalian, Italian ContemporaryMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Enoteca PinchiorriItalian - French, Italian ContemporaryMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Enrico BartoliniCreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Le CalandreProgressive Italian, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Wood accommodate groups?

    Wood operates with limited covers across five evenings per week, which means large groups are a genuine challenge to place. Parties of two to four are the format the room is built for. If you have a group of six or more, contact the restaurant well in advance and be flexible on date — availability at this Michelin-starred room moves fast once ski season opens.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Wood?

    Dinner is your only option. Wood operates Tuesday through Saturday from 7 PM to 9:30 PM and is closed Monday and Sunday. There is no lunch service. Plan accordingly if you are building a ski day around an evening booking.

    Is Wood good for solo dining?

    It can work, but Wood is not set up as a solo-first experience the way a counter-format omakase would be. The creative tasting format from Chef Amanda Eriksson rewards conversation and the pace of a shared meal. Solo diners who are comfortable at a table alone in a focused restaurant will be fine — but if solo dining with counter interaction is your preference, options like a chef's table at Enrico Bartolini may suit better.

    Is Wood good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it is one of the stronger cases for it in the Aosta Valley. A Michelin star at 2,000 metres, a wine list overseen by business partner Cristian Scalco featuring rare vintages, and a kitchen running elk tartare in beetroot ravioli alongside butter-cooked cauliflower with smoked Fontina — the menu has enough ambition to make a dinner feel considered rather than routine. Book well ahead: this is a small room in a high-turnover ski resort.

    Does Wood handle dietary restrictions?

    The database does not specify Wood's dietary restriction policy. Given the creative format and small kitchen — Chef Amanda Eriksson works with precision Swedish-Italian recipes involving specific ingredient pairings — check the venue's official channels before booking if you have serious dietary needs. Arriving without notice at a tasting-format Michelin-starred room with restrictions is high risk.

    Can I eat at the bar at Wood?

    No bar dining option is documented for Wood. The restaurant operates as a dinner-only creative venue at €€€ pricing, and the format is a seated dinner service rather than a bar-forward room. If informal counter or bar seating is your preference, Wood is not the right format.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    7 PM-9:30 PM
    Wednesday
    7 PM-9:30 PM
    Thursday
    7 PM-9:30 PM
    Friday
    7 PM-9:30 PM
    Saturday
    7 PM-9:30 PM
    Sunday
    closed

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