Magazzino degli Scipioni 2026: The Prati Wine Bar Where Romans Eat Before and After the Vatican

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Magazzino degli Scipioni (Via degli Scipioni 30, Prati — in the heart of the Prati quarter, 700m from the Vatican Museums entrance) occupies the specific Prati gastronomic position that the neighbourhood has been developing since the early 2010s: the wine bar with serious ambitions, offering a curated Italian natural and artisanal wine list alongside a cold kitchen (salumi, cheeses, vegetable preparations, seasonal bruschette) that operates as an all-day food resource rather than as a restaurant requiring the ritual of a table booking and a full meal commitment. The Magazzino format — you can eat at the counter standing, at a small table for a light lunch, or linger for an extended aperitivo with multiple wine glasses — is the specific Prati adaptation of the enoteca-osteria hybrid that the Italian food culture has developed in every city as the counterpoint to the formal restaurant.

The Prati context: the Prati quarter (built in the 1880s-1900s to house the new civil service of unified Italy's capital) has the specific urban character of a planned residential neighbourhood that has aged well — the wide straight streets, the Liberty-style apartment buildings, the neighbourhood piazze with their morning markets. The food scene in Prati has improved dramatically in the past decade: the tourist-trap restaurants around the Vatican perimeter have been joined by genuinely good mid-price operations aimed at the Prati residential clientele, producing the specific economic competition that drives quality upward.

Magazzino degli Scipioni: The Offer

The Wine Programme

The Magazzino wine list rotates seasonally and emphasizes small Italian producers working with indigenous varieties and minimal-intervention methods — the natural wine tendency without the dogmatic exclusion of conventionally made wines that some natural wine bars apply. The by-the-glass selection (approximately 12-18 wines, changing weekly) includes specific highlights from Lazio (the Cesanese from the Affile and Piglio producers, the indigenous Bellone white from the volcanic Castelli Romani), Campania (the Greco di Tufo and Coda di Volpe that are still underrepresented in the Roman market), and the occasional non-Italian natural wine from the European producers who are distributing in Rome. Prices by the glass: €6-12 depending on the wine.

The Food and Aperitivo

The Magazzino kitchen produces the classic enoteca cold plate — the salumi board (guanciale from a Lazio producer, coppa from a Norcia salumeria, the occasional seasonal salame), the cheese selection (Pecorino Romano DOP alongside smaller-production Lazio and Umbrian sheep cheeses), the seasonal vegetable preparations that change monthly. Hot dishes are limited and seasonal. The aperitivo format (from 18:00): a glass of wine and a selection of snacks for approximately €12-16 — the Prati aperitivo price bracket, higher than Pigneto or San Lorenzo but calibrated to the neighbourhood.

Q&A: Magazzino degli Scipioni

Is the Magazzino degli Scipioni better than the Nag's Head for a Vatican-area evening?

Different rather than better — the two venues serve different purposes. The Magazzino is the Italian wine and food choice: the wine list is more interesting, the food is more distinctly Roman, and the atmosphere is the specific Italian enoteca combination of informed conversation about wine and casual eating that is not available in a British pub format. The Nag's Head is the pub choice: draught beer, a familiar social format, and English-speaking staff. The choice depends on whether you want a specifically Italian evening or a familiarly British one in a Roman setting. If you are already eating Italian food for every meal, the Nag's Head offers genuine variety; if you want to extend the Italian experience into the aperitivo, the Magazzino is the better address.

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