The Five Best Food Experiences in Bergamo Alta (And Why You Need to Slow Down to Enjoy Them)
The Voyage Co.
After thirty years walking people through Bergamo, I have learned that the city reveals itself only to those who slow down. Food is the best reason to slow down. Let me take you to five places that will change how you understand this city.
Lucia grew up in this area and has been a walking companion for over thirty years, exploring the city in depth — from the famous places to those known only by people who live here. She helps travellers discover the most hidden and characteristic corners of Bergamo.
1. Casoncelli at Il Circolino: Bergamo's Signature Pasta
Bergamo Alta
Casoncelli is a traditional stuffed pasta from Bergamo, often unknown outside the region. It is filled with meat, breadcrumbs, cheese, and subtle sweet notes from amaretti or raisins. Served with butter, sage, and pancetta, it is rich and deeply comforting.
Il Circolino is located inside an ancient convent decorated with magnificent frescoes hundreds of years old. Eating casoncelli in this space, you are tasting Bergamo's history with every bite. The food and the setting become one experience.
2. Pizza at Da Mimmo: Medieval Underground
Bergamo Alta
Da Mimmo is a historic restaurant that travellers overlook. It combines southern Italian pizza tradition with Bergamasco ingredients. The dough is made carefully for light digestion, the toppings are simple but perfect.
The venue is magical: vaulted medieval ceilings and Roman archaeological remains visible on the lower floor. You are eating pizza in a room that has existed for centuries, that has sheltered people for generations.
3. Stracciatella Gelato at La Marianna: The Birthplace
Bergamo Alta
Stracciatella gelato was invented in Bergamo Alta, and La Marianna is still making it the original way. The base is creamy fior di latte, broken through with thin shards of dark chocolate. It is simple, perfect, and tastes like tradition.
4. Polenta: The Comfort of Tradition
Bergamo Alta
Polenta is comfort food elevated. Cooked slowly with stock, topped with rich sauces and meats, it is what Bergamo eats on cold evenings. To eat traditional polenta here is to understand something about northern Italian food culture.
5. Wine at an Enoteca: The Drink of the Region
Bergamo Alta
Sit at an enoteca with a glass of Valcalepio or other Bergamo wines. The wines of this region are often overlooked, but they are excellent. Tasting them in their home territory, paired with the food, you understand the completeness of Bergamo's food culture.
Bergamo Alta is small enough to walk in a morning and rich enough to spend a lifetime in. Eat these five things across two days, sleep in the upper city, walk the walls at dusk — and the city will give you something most travellers never get: time.