Description
MÙA does a seasonal tasting menu of around 14-15 courses built entirely around local and regional ingredients, and they rotate it every season. The kitchen clearly has a point of view: dishes are creative and carefully balanced, with optional beverage pairings (alcoholic or non-alcoholic) that are worth taking. This is a full evening commitment, not a quick dinner – budget three hours.
The farm-to-table framing isn’t marketing copy here. Staff actually explain the sourcing and traditions behind dishes, which makes the whole thing feel less like a restaurant and more like a guided experience. Solo diners have done the full tasting menu here without it being awkward (the staff make that work).
At around 40 euros for the full menu, it’s priced well below what you’d pay for comparable cooking in Europe. The mains occasionally get outshone by the appetizers and desserts, and multiple courses sometimes land at the table simultaneously rather than in a clean sequence. Arrive around sunset – the atmosphere at dusk is good.
Highlights
- Beverage pairings (both alcoholic and non-alcoholic) are thoughtfully matched and well-received
- Staff are attentive and knowledgeable, sharing context around ingredients and food traditions
- Exceptional value for the level of cooking compared to fine dining elsewhere
- Meat-focused menus may limit appeal for non-meat eaters (though a vegetarian menu exists)






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