🇮🇹 Italy · Italian cuisine · b. 1962
The Modena maestro reinventing Italian tradition through avant-garde technique.
Massimo Bottura is widely regarded as one of the most important Italian chefs of his generation. Born in Modena, Emilia-Romagna, he opened Osteria Francescana in 1995 and built it into a temple of Italian gastronomy that holds three Michelin stars and was twice named the World's Best Restaurant by The 50 Best Restaurants ranking (2016, 2018).
Bottura is famous for his philosophical, technique-driven take on Italian classics — dishes like 'Five Ages of Parmigiano-Reggiano' and 'Oops! I dropped the lemon tart' redefine what Italian cuisine can mean in a fine-dining context. Through his nonprofit Food for Soul, he campaigns against food waste and runs community kitchens in Italy and abroad.
He trained under Alain Ducasse and Ferran Adrià, two influences clearly visible in his approach: the precision of French haute cuisine, the conceptual playfulness of Spanish modernism, and a deep, almost stubborn loyalty to the ingredients of Emilia — Parmigiano-Reggiano, traditional balsamic vinegar, prosciutto di Parma.
Tradition is not the worship of ashes — it is the preservation of fire. Bottura argues that true respect for Italian cuisine means evolving it, not freezing it in time. Every dish at Osteria Francescana starts with a regional Italian classic and asks: what would happen if we questioned every assumption about it?
Three Michelin stars; the flagship since 1995.
More casual sister restaurant.
Collaboration with the fashion house, run by chef Karime López.
Original recipes we created as homages to Massimo's cooking style and signature dishes. Not direct reproductions of any copyrighted material — these are our interpretations of the traditionsMassimo has worked with throughout their career.
These recipes from our database reflect the italian cooking tradition that Massimo works in. They are not direct reproductions of Massimo's copyrighted recipes, but traditional dishes inspired by the same culinary heritage.
“Tradition is the best of the past projected into the future.”
— Interview, Financial Times
“Cooking is an act of love.”
— Never Trust a Skinny Italian Chef (2014)
Opens his first trattoria, Trattoria del Campazzo, outside Modena.
Founds Osteria Francescana in Modena.
Earns first Michelin star at Osteria Francescana.
Awarded three Michelin stars.
Osteria Francescana named World's Best Restaurant by The 50 Best.
Launches the Food for Soul nonprofit to fight food waste.
Osteria Francescana named World's Best Restaurant a second time.
His flagship restaurant is Osteria Francescana, located in Modena, Italy. It has held three Michelin stars since 2012 and was named the world's best restaurant in 2016 and 2018.
Bottura cooks contemporary Italian cuisine rooted in Emilia-Romagna's traditions. He uses modernist technique to deconstruct and reimagine regional classics, while remaining loyal to ingredients like Parmigiano-Reggiano, traditional balsamic, and prosciutto di Parma.
Yes — Bottura did stints in both Alain Ducasse's kitchen and at Ferran Adrià's elBulli, and frequently cites both as foundational influences alongside his Modenese grandmother.
Food for Soul is the nonprofit Bottura founded in 2016 to fight food waste and social isolation. It runs community kitchens (Refettorios) in Milan, Rio de Janeiro, London, Paris and other cities, using surplus ingredients to feed people in need.
Two dishes are usually cited: 'Five Ages of Parmigiano-Reggiano,' which presents the cheese at five different stages of ageing in five textures, and 'Oops! I dropped the lemon tart,' a deliberately broken dessert that became a symbol of his philosophy that imperfection can be beautiful.
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