Alfio - Carte

Strada Gardesana Occidentale 7/B, I-38074, DRO, Italy

🛍 Pizza, Pasta, Europeo, Italiano

4.2 💬 1111 Avis
Alfio

Téléphone: (+39)0464504208

Adresse: Strada Gardesana Occidentale 7/B, I-38074, DRO, Italy

Ville: DRO

Menu Plats: 3

Avis: 1111

Site Web: http://www.ristorantealfio.it/

"This restaurant came recommended by the owner of our hotel. It did not disappoint. They had large menu with something for every taste. Allergens were clearly marked and they had good choice of gluten free options, including pizza. There was a good choice of local wines. Our bill was just over €100 for four people including wine starter and dessert. Delicious food!"

Menu complet - 3 options

Tous les prix sont des estimations sur Menu.

Pâtes

Calzone

Vienna Vienna

Good job. very kind and welcoming staff. I'll be back for sure

Adresse

Afficher la carte

Avis

Marvin
Marvin

classic local x work lunches overall eaten well with a fair price


Silvia
Silvia

Nice. affordable prices. tractor to good... good food if you please. I'd be back.


Ettore
Ettore

very kind staff, varied menu and what we chose ... really great. I'll definitely go back and recommend it to everyone Voir le carte


Federico
Federico

attentive and kind staff, I tried it at noon and we realize to return in the evening to be able to appreciate it better.


DavidWxxx
DavidWxxx

Really enjoyed the food, the service and ambience of this family friendly restaurant. The pizza was large the wine delicious and the sides tasty. The service was polite and helpful and the price reasonable.


Nayade
Nayade

very cozy restaurant with rooms furnished differently. wide choice of dishes from fish to meat and pizza, good proposals of local products. the dishes are delicious and tasty, I tasted a thread of good bike angus. Voir le carte


Gianni
Gianni

We were once an alphae and I have to say it was a positive experience. Very friendly staff, enough because we were with a baby and I expected a little more helpful when we asked for a change to the menu. Eat well and spent the right. If you pass there, you can stop.


Miriama
Miriama

large restaurant/pizzeria/steak house on the state road Riva-Trento. a little anonymous, although well furnished and well equipped with spaces inside, outside and on the veranda. well prepared food, with abundant portions. Ultimately a place in the norm, but that does not disappoint.


463kristiinas
463kristiinas

This restaurant came recommended by the owner of our hotel. It did not disappoint. They had large menu with something for every taste. Allergens were clearly marked and they had good choice of gluten free options, including pizza. There was a good choice of local wines. Our bill was just over €100 for four people including wine starter and dessert. Delicious food! Voir le carte

Catégories

  • Pizza Plongez dans nos pizzas parfaitement cuites, élaborées avec de la pâte étirée à la main, une sauce tomate riche et un mélange de fromages gourmets. Chaque tranche éclate de garnitures fraîches, garantissant une bouchée délicieuse à chaque fois.
  • Pasta Régalez-vous avec notre sélection de plats de pâtes classiques et contemporains, chacun élaboré avec des ingrédients frais et de qualité et des sauces savoureuses qui capturent l'essence de la cuisine italienne à chaque bouchée. Voir le carte
  • Europeo Savourez un voyage culinaire à travers l'Europe avec notre menu savamment élaboré, mettant en vedette des plats authentiques de France, d'Italie, d'Espagne et d'ailleurs, en utilisant les ingrédients les plus frais pour donner vie aux saveurs traditionnelles.
  • Italiano Savourez les saveurs riches et diversifiées d'Italie avec notre menu, proposant des pâtes classiques, des risottos savoureux et des plats traditionnels de viande et de fruits de mer, tous élaborés avec des ingrédients authentiques et de la passion. Buon appetito !

Commodités

  • Wifi
  • Sodexo
  • Carte
  • Cocktail
  • Menu
  • Mastercard

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Carte • Vino • Carne • Gelato • Italiano


"Let me start by saying that La Casina may be the most beautiful country restaurant I even ever been in, and I have been in several in several countries. The enormous terrace shaded by a pergola of wisteria, allowed for tables (made of stone) to be widely spaced. It reminded me strongly of the French Laundry in the Napa Valley, but was if anything even more beautiful and gracefully proportioned. For some reason (though they knew I spoke English and barely a dozen words of Italian — they knew this because I had phoned ahead for a reservation), they assigned us one of the few waitresses who didn’t seem to know English at all. Fortunately, all the younger staff (the runners, etc), knew some English and a few of them knew English very well. Now may be as good a time as any to mention that the entire restaurant, from Executive Chef to Maitre d’, to all the floor staff, consisted of women. In America that would very likely be illegal in a restaurant not run entirely by one family. In Italy it was merely a curiosity. It didn’t make any difference that I noticed; I suspect that many people probably didn’t notice it. The food was imaginative — often an imaginative tweak of some northern Italian dish that didn’t really need any tweaking. In almost every instance it was somewhat more imaginative than it was good. For example, I began with risotto with fresh berries the most successful dish I ordered. The slight sourness of the fruits — raspberries, strawberries, blue berries, and a black berry or two — worked well with the rice and creamy cheese (fontina? clearly not parmigiana). The texture was both creamy and nutty, a state not easily achieved in a restaurant, where the slow cooking required of a traditional risotto is usually broken up into stages so that the final dish can be finished off in a matter of about 10 15 minutes instead of the usual 40. The result in many restaurants is often a dish devoid of the slight crunch of the best risottos. This one, however, was perfectly executed. The flavours, though unusual together, worked well together. My daughter began with a spaghetti flavoured with sardines and capers. She didn’t like it much, so we switched. I thought it was delicious if perhaps a little bland. Bland being the operative adjective for nearly all the food. As with the rice in the risotto, the spaghetti was cooked perfectly, properly al dente. With my first course I had an Italian Riesling, made by a winery called Kelner, which was complex, substantial, and very slightly peppery (a favour note I don’t generally associate with Riesling). It was “real wine,” as my close friend Paul (who knows more about wine than anyone else I know) might put it. I alone had a second course, which consisted of the smallest pork chops I have ever seen (about the size of normal lamb chops) that were grilled and served with the strangest polenta I have ever eaten, gelatinous and largely lacking in flavour, though to the extent I can remember any flavour it was thyme, a little too much thyme. This was accompanied by a so called ratatouille that bore almost no relation to the classic dish. It consisted of barely cooked and largely flavourless rondelles of tomato, daikon radish, and courgettes, with almost no seasoning at all, not even salt. Something is clearly wrong when a tomatoe in Italy in July is lacking flavour. The meat was over cooked and leathery it's always a risk with lean pork, but it can an should be avoided in a kitchen that clearly has ambitions. It was a nice idea, sounded very appetising on the menu, but it was not well achieved. The polenta was frankly abominable, resembling sea slug. Now, I happen to like sea slug, but not when it is called polenta. And I happen to like polenta when it tastes of maize and has a texture of, well, of polenta, not of sea slug. With my second course I drank an Italian Pinot Noir that was splendid — somewhere between a French Pinot Noir (more red Sancerre than Burgundy) and a Northern California Pinot Noir, with lots of zip to it. The wines, together with the setting, were the best part of the evening. We carried on to dessert, as one sometimes does even while knowing it’s going to be a risk. Meggie had a strawberry extravaganza (a sort of strawberries six ways), while I opted for the house version of tiramisu. Again, loads of imagination, lots of technique, beautiful presentation, but the flavours were, as with too much of the food we ate, simply under seasoned and unexciting (not subtle, but bland), as though the chef had been suffering a bad cold. There are lots of ways to tweak a classic tiramisu that can work — but making it too obviously an homage to something concocted at El Bulli was not, in my view the best way to go. It did not help, in my view, that it arrived as a pale pink globe on a bed of crumbled chocolate cookies. What, I wondered, is this? I continued to wonder it right through to the end. In sum, the setting was inspiring. The wines were eye opening. But the food was not as good as it should have been, bright ideas perhaps, but marred by a lack of flavour and a well judged sprinkling of salt and pepper. Lest some of you wonder if perhaps I might have been suffering from Covid, I can assure you that I was not. Proof was that I tasted the wines perfectly well."