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The Family Trattorie That Outlasted the Fashion
Culture

The Family Trattorie That Outlasted the Fashion

By Mes Prestiges Editorial Team Last reviewed June 2026
6 min read
Culture

Hotels change hands, stars come and go, but a few kitchens on this coast are run by the same families that ran them before the tourists arrived — and they are still, quietly, where you eat best.

The Amalfi Coast wears its glamour lightly because underneath it is a deeply provincial place — a string of small towns where families have cooked for each other for centuries and simply kept doing it when the world showed up. The trattorie that descend from that continuity are not nostalgia acts. They are the actual backbone, and they tend to be where locals send you when they trust you.

In Ravello, Cumpà Cosimo is the clearest case. Netta Bottone has run the room for decades — four generations of her family behind the kitchen — and she still walks the tables herself, deciding what you should eat and bringing a sampler of pastas whether you asked or not. The cooking is mountain-Ravello: ragù that has been going since morning, fresh pasta, rabbit, a house red. It is the opposite of curated, and that is exactly the point.

Down in Positano, before the town became a fashion shoot, there was Da Vincenzo — three generations of one family, a small room off the main steps, the kind of place where the grandmother's recipes are still the recipes. The seafood is bought that morning, the desserts are made in-house, and the welcome is the genuine article. It survives the crowds by simply being better than the alternatives.

Amalfi town keeps Trattoria Da Gemma, an institution since the 1870s, generations deep, the place where the local intelligentsia and visiting writers have always eaten. The fish soup is the dish to order — a recipe the town half-claims as its own — and the room has the unhurried confidence that only very old restaurants have. Just around the headland in tiny Atrani, A' Paranza is the village seafood trattoria the Amalfi locals slip away to: family-run, fish-focused, no view to speak of, and consistently the better meal.

Up in the hills above Positano, Donna Rosa carries the tradition forward into the next generation — a family kitchen in Montepertuso that started as a simple trattoria and became quietly serious about its handmade pasta, the daughter now cooking what the mother taught. It is proof the lineage isn't frozen; it is being handed down and pushed gently forward at the same time.

And out on the Sorrento peninsula, Antico Francischiello da Peppino has fed travellers on the Massa Lubrense road for generations — walls crowded with copper and photographs, the cooking unapologetically traditional, the kind of long lunch that reminds you the coast existed, and ate very well, long before anyone called it a destination. These are the kitchens to anchor a trip around. The fashion will move on. They won't.