![]() Freshly baked bread and sweets come from Marchesi, Milan’s most celebrated antica pasticceria, which the Prada family purchased in 2015 and expanded into a mini-franchise. Young Livorno-born chef Lorenzo Lunghi serves modern Milanese fare and seafood dishes influenced by Tuscan coastal cuisine. The restaurant boasts one of the city’s most stunning dining spaces, decorated with works by Lucio Fontana and John Baldessari, as well as an expansive triangular terrace ideal for sunset aperitivi. Torre (“tower”) opened in 2018 on the sixth floor of the newest building. But head for the bar’s more mature sibling, its upscale restaurant. Diners came too for the celebrated Bar Luce, designed by Wes Anderson with trompe-l’oeil wall decorations and pinball machines. The multibuilding complex became a contemporary art destination, attracting visitors to a former gin distillery on the southern edge of the city. In 2015, the Prada family opened the Fondazione Prada museum to showcase the family’s extensive art collection. She writes about food and culture in northern Italy where she has lived since 2015. You can (and should) still enjoy the Old World charms of glistening cotoletta Milanese, creamy risotto all’onda, and bubbly Campari soda, but Milan’s food scene is increasingly embracing the new, redefining another industry in the capital of avant-garde.Įlizabeth Thacker Jones leads food and drink tours in Milan via Risotto & Steel. New restaurants (many of them women-owned) have arrived, celebrating social inclusion and vegetable-forward menus, even while the city’s historic Chinatown, retro market food stalls, and traditional osterias continue to thrive. ![]() ![]() A new generation is putting creative spins on cuisine steeped in tradition, and the city’s melting pot of food and cultures is thickening with new international restaurants and regional Italian dishes. ![]() Thanks to the food-themed Expo 2015 world’s fair, the restaurant scene has gradually shed its classic veneer. Many restaurateurs just stuck to aperitivo and pizza, reliably popular with tourists and hallmarks of Milan’s cultural history - as embedded as the Duomo or Last Supper.īut Milan’s culinary landscape has slowly begun to change. Like others in much of Italy, Milanese restaurants often defaulted to local ingredients, rarely looking beyond Lombardy for flavors or inspiration. Milan may be Italy’s fashion and design capital, but the city known for creative style long played it a bit safe when it comes to food. ![]()
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