Bella Vita

Our Favorite Italian Restaurants in Houston

From classic cacio e pepe to creative pizzas, we have it all right here in town.

By Houstonia Staff April 23, 2024

Head to Trattoria Sofia for the ragu d'agnello.

Image: Jenn Duncan

Houston is home to an endless variety of exciting global cuisines—from West African fare to standout Indian food, we truly have it all. While Italian cuisine may not seem that exciting in comparison, our city offers a stellar crop of red sauce–slinging hot spots that so perfectly epitomize la bella vita that they’ll make a true Italian out of you by dessert.

Whether you’re on the hunt for a romantic spot fit for the perfect date night or you’re looking for an easy way to carb yourself up ahead of a night out on the town, Houston’s best Italian restaurants have you covered.


Amore

Montrose

It’s a classic American Dream restaurant story: Alfredo Mojica left his 20-year tenured position as executive chef at Da Marco to open his own place. Investing his life’s savings and with help from his family, he opened Amore Italian Restaurant in December 2021. The menu plays like his own greatest hits album, from the decadently delicious Spaghetti Harry’s Bar to the red wine slow-braised short ribs with burrata to the simply grilled whole branzino.

Capone's Oven & Bar

montrose

This hidden spot located just off Richmond Avenue is inspired by the 1920s, giving off an old-school speakeasy vibe. Head here on a Thursday, Friday, or Saturday to enjoy the restaurant's live music performances. Although Capone's is known for its pizza, don't leave without trying the lobster ravioli. It's so good that once you finish it, you'll already be planning your next visit. Other notable pasta menu items include the truffle mac, jumbo shrimp pasta, and lasagna.

Duck on a pizza? Yes please. Coltivare serves it with charred spring onion, fennel, and smoked mozzarella.

Image: Mikah Danae

Coltivare

The Heights

Agricole Hospitality owner Morgan Weber and chef Ryan Pera’s handsome Heights restaurant is perfect for both dates and groups. Outdoor tables sit practically in picking distance from the raised-bed gardens, where the restaurant grows most of its herbs and some of its salad ingredients. Start your meal with the cauliflower with pine nuts and raisins appetizer and some arancini, order a pizza (we love the chicken and prosciutto), and don't sleep on the bolognese tagliatelle.

Coppa Osteria

Rice Village

Peer into the “dough room” to watch as pastas and pizzas are made by hand at this lively Italian spot. Standouts include the octopus carpaccio, the Houston Dairymaids cheese board, the chicken parmesan, the pepperoni and goat cheese pie, and the divine, lightly creamy spaghetti carbonara with salumi Toscano and an egg that’s broken tableside by your server.

Giacomo's Cibo e Vino

Upper Kirby

Owner and chef Lynette Hawkins has succeeded in keeping her cozy Italian restaurant both casual and high-quality since opening in 2009. Her small plates and accompanying small prices encourage you to order, experiment, and share (don’t miss the eggplant involtini), though Giacomo's is perhaps best known for its exemplary spaghetti carbonara with guanciale, a farm-fresh egg, and Tellicherry pepper. All of the pastas are made by hand at the restaurant. Wash it down with the help of the wine list featuring plenty of biodynamic selections and spotlighting Italy’s myriad female winemakers.

Il Bracco 

uptown

This Italian-inspired spot originated in Dallas, but since landing in Houston, it has become one of our favorite go-to spots for pasta. Il Bracco's dimly lit dining room with leather banquettes makes for the perfect setting for a quick lunch or an intimate dinner date. Its menu has plenty to offer, too. From the Sicilian crudo and housemade focaccia starters to the bolognese and cacio e pepe, you can't go wrong with any choice you make from this menu.

Don't miss the bucatini all’amatriciana at Lulu’s in River Oaks.

Lulu's

River Oaks

Palacios Murphy Hospitality may have a stronghold out in Round Top, where they own Hotel Lulu, Mandito's, Lulu’s, and Popi Burger, but it's also a force to be reckoned with here in Houston. When the hospitality group opened a second location of fine-dining Italian restaurant Lulu’s in River Oaks in 2021, we were immediately charmed. This spot’s classic Italian fare includes must-tries like the pappardelle bolognese with black Angus beef tip and loads of fresh parmigiano and herbs, and the radiatore cacio e pepe with sheep’s milk pecorino and toasted black pepper.

Mimo

East End

Among the surge of flashy new Italian restaurants to have hit Houston recently, Mimo is excellent in its simplicity. Opened in 2023 in the colorful Tlaquepaque Market strip, the restaurant serves fresh, vibrant salads and handmade pastas that overdeliver, like the paccheri tossed in a Castelvetrano olive pesto and the pappardelle with braised lamb and mushrooms. Mimo also has a concise wine list of Italian favorites and lesser-known selections to boot.

Paulie's

Montrose

One of Montrose's most adored spots for comfort food, Paulie's is still going strong with housemade pasta dishes focused on unique varieties, like the frilly, U-shaped creste di gallo—tossed with sausage, chile flakes, and pickled onions in marinara—and tiny, chubby, earlike canestri, served with crimini and shiitake mushrooms and a creamy marsala sauce with garlic and sage. Paulie's also makes one of the finer Italian hoagies in Houston, using Genoa salami and ham with provolone in oil and vinegar. Don't sleep on the shortbread cookies to complete your meal.

Roma serves its fusilli pasta chilled, with mint, capers, and lemon.

Roma

Rice Village

In 2019, owner Shanon Scott rebranded the eatery Sud Italia, which opened in 2015 serving Southern Italian cuisine, as Roma Ristorante, which now focuses more broadly on multiple regions of Italy. The restaurant serves traditional pastas and recipes unique to each region, while incorporating proteins of land and sea like salmon orzo and ossobuco. We love the decadent sweet corn and caramelized onion ravioli that's topped with lobster.

Rosalie Italian Soul

Downtown

Top Chef Masters winner Chris Cosentino’s Houston restaurant, named after his great-grandmother Rosalie, is the chef’s most personal endeavor to date. The modern Italian spot, located inside downtown’s C. Baldwin Hotel, serves Italian-American comfort food with an upscale twist. Standouts on the menu include the rigatoni with Texas wild boar ragù and the crispy calamari featuring pickled peppers and Palermo aioli.

Tiny Champions serves some of the best pizzas in town.

Tiny Champions

East end

Opened in 2020 by the folks behind the acclaimed Nancy’s Hustle, Tiny Champions is small in name but big in charm. The relaxed hipster haunt features great pasta dishes like the beloved radiator noodles that rotate on and off the menu, currently served with braised octopus, Calabrese chile, and gremolata; as well as some of the best pizzas in Houston, like the anchovy pie with tomato sauce, garlic, and salsa verde. But you shouldn't skip over the "vegetables" section of the menu—those braised butter beans come up in our dreams.

Trattoria Sofia

The Heights

Trattoria Sofia is a Berg Hospitality Group concept that serves Italian fare in a setting so convincingly Italian you’ll want to serenade your bowl of cacio e pepe with a spontaneous "Nessun dorma." Spring for dishes like veal Milanese with castelfranco salad, clarified butter, and lemon; a campanelle lamb ragù with tomato, sage, rosemary, and Parmigiano-Reggiano; and one of the best prosciutto pizzas in the city.

Timothy Malcolm, Daniel Renfrow, Sofia Gonzalez, and Emma Balter contributed to this guide.

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