Metamorfosi Rome 2026: The Colombian-Italian Michelin Star in Parioli That Proves Rome's Fine Dining Scene Is Finally Moving

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Metamorfosi (Via Giovanni Antonelli 30, Rome — in the Parioli quarter, the residential hill neighbourhood north of the Villa Borghese that is the traditional address of Rome's upper-middle-class professional and diplomatic community) holds one Michelin star and represents the most interesting development in Rome's fine dining landscape of the past decade: a restaurant whose chef, Roy Caceres (born Colombia, trained in Spain and Italy), applies a specific Latin American sensibility — the use of acidic, fermented, and tropical flavour profiles that the South American kitchen has developed — to Italian ingredients and techniques, producing dishes that are simultaneously recognizable in their Italian structure and genuinely surprising in their flavour combinations. This is not fusion cooking in the pejorative sense but the specific creative synthesis that occurs when a technically accomplished chef from one culinary tradition works deeply with the ingredients and philosophy of another.

The Rome fine dining context: Rome has historically underperformed relative to Milan and the northern cities in Michelin-starred restaurants — the reasons are complex (the Roman preference for traditional osteria cooking, the tourist market that does not demand culinary innovation, the specific economic structure of Roman hospitality) but the result has been that Rome, Europe's most visited city, had fewer starred restaurants than Bologna or Modena until the 2010s. The post-2010 generation of Roman chefs (Caceres at Metamorfosi, Cristina Bowerman at Glass Hostaria, Francesco Apreda at Idylio) has begun to change this, and Metamorfosi is the most internationally discussed of the new wave.

Metamorfosi: The Food and the Experience

The Tasting Menu

Metamorfosi offers a tasting menu format (approximately 8-10 courses, €130-160 per person without wine pairing, €200-240 with pairing) that changes seasonally with some signature dishes maintained across seasons. The specific Caceres techniques: the use of fermentation (chicha — the traditional South American fermented corn drink — appears as a component in several courses), the acid balance that comes from the Colombian tradition of pairing rich animal proteins with citrus and fermented elements, and the specific handling of Italian ingredients (the Roman artichoke, the Sicilian tuna, the Piedmontese white truffle in season) that produces dishes recognizable as Italian in their ingredients but unexpected in their preparation. The service: formal without being stiff, with the specific Latin warmth that Caceres and his team bring to a format that could easily become cold.

Q&A: Metamorfosi Rome

How far in advance do I need to book Metamorfosi?

2-4 weeks in advance for standard weekday evenings; 4-6 weeks for Friday and Saturday evenings; longer for special occasions and the truffle season (October-November). Online booking at ristorantemetamorfosi.it. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday. Parioli is accessible by bus from the Villa Borghese area or by taxi from the centro storico (approximately €10-15 from Piazza Navona).

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