Osteria Francescana
Bottura's three-star theatre of memory and emotion in Modena
Balsamico's home town, where attic-aged vinegar and Lambrusco anchor a kitchen that runs from Francescana to the trattoria counter.
Modena keeps two clocks running at once: the slow one, where balsamico blackens in attic barrels for decades, and the fast one of Ferrari engines a few kilometres away. The city's true monument is the acetaia — the loft of nesting casks where traditional balsamic vinegar ages twelve, twenty-five, sometimes a hundred years into something between syrup and perfume. That patience underwrites everything, from Massimo Bottura's three-Michelin reinventions at Osteria Francescana to the lunch-counter ladies plating tortellini and bollito at Aldina. Eat the gnocco fritto and tigelle with a smear of lardo, drink the fizzy purple Lambrusco that locals refuse to apologise for, and finish with a few drops of the good aceto on a wedge of Parmigiano.
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Bottura's three-star theatre of memory and emotion in Modena
Modena's intimate one-star alternative to Francescana
Bottura's relaxed table: Emilian roots, modern eye, fair prices
Four tables behind Europe's oldest salumeria, lunch only
First-floor home cooking by the Albinelli market, lunch only
The carrello dei bolliti, a few steps from the Duomo
Ermes seats you, Bruna cooks, pure Modena home cooking