Lacocina Restaurant
Lacocina Restaurant is a dining establishment situated in the province of Latina in southern Lazio, a coastal region stretching between the Pontine hills and the Tyrrhenian Sea. The area’s cuisine draws on the agricultural richness of the Agro Pontino plain and the seafood traditions of the gulf coast, combining produce from the reclaimed marshlands with fish and shellfish from local fishing villages.
At a glance
- Type
- Restaurant
- Period
- Contemporary
- Style
- Italian regional cuisine, Lazio coastal tradition
- Location
- Province of Latina, Lazio, Italy
- Coordinates
- 41.2091° N, 13.5859° E
Overview
The province of Latina occupies the southern portion of Lazio between Rome and Naples, encompassing both the flat Pontine plains — reclaimed from marshland in the 1930s — and a rugged coastline dotted with ancient ports. Dining in this territory means engaging with a dual identity: an interior larder of buffalo mozzarella, lamb, lentils from the Lepini hills, and a maritime pantry of sea bream, clams, and totanetti caught in the gulf. Lacocina sits within this culinary geography, offering a local restaurant experience tied to the seasonal produce of the surrounding countryside and sea.
History
Latina province was reshaped dramatically in the early twentieth century when Mussolini’s land reclamation programme drained the Pontine Marshes and founded new towns including Latina (originally Littoria, 1932), Sabaudia, and Pontinia. Before reclamation, the coastal strip was characterised by fishing communities at Terracina, Gaeta, and Sperlonga that maintained continuous traditions of Mediterranean seafood cooking reaching back to Roman antiquity. The contemporary restaurant scene in the province inherits both the straightforward land-based cooking of the new agricultural settlements and the older maritime craft.
What you see
The Latina province landscape visible from the road alternates between flat agricultural fields, eucalyptus windbreaks planted during reclamation, and the sudden drama of Monte Circeo — the promontory associated in myth with the sorceress Circe — rising from the coastal plain. The coastline south of Anzio offers sandy beaches backed by Mediterranean scrub, while the gulf around Gaeta and Formia is framed by limestone cliffs and clear water. A restaurant in this setting typically sources directly from local markets at Terracina, Fondi, or the Mercato Ittico fish auction.
Cultural significance
Southern Lazio’s coast holds a concentration of Roman and medieval heritage — from the Roman villa at Sperlonga and the Montagna Spaccata sanctuary at Gaeta to the medieval cathedral at Terracina set atop a Roman temple podium. Eating here situates the visitor within a food culture that has fed travellers on the Via Appia for more than two millennia, one of the most historically stratified routes in Italy.
Practical information
- Location
- Province of Latina, Lazio (41.2091° N, 13.5859° E)
- Hours
- Check official website or local listings for current opening times and reservations
Getting there
The province of Latina is served by the A1 motorway (Rome–Naples) with exits at Frosinone, and by the coastal SS7 Via Appia and SS148 Pontina from Rome. Regional trains from Roma Termini reach Latina Scalo and Terracina. The coordinates place this location approximately 90 km south-east of Rome and 80 km north of Naples, accessible in under two hours by road from either city.
