Bacaro La Bottiglia

Traditional bacaro · Venice · Dorsoduro

Bacaro La Bottiglia

Bacaro La Bottiglia — “The Bottle” — is a traditional Venetian bacaro in the Dorsoduro sestiere, its name signalling its primary identity as a wine-centred establishment. Like all bacari, it operates within the oldest format of Venetian hospitality: wine served in small glasses (ombre) alongside cicchetti, the counter snacks that have sustained Venetian daily life from the working classes of the Republic to the students and residents of the contemporary city. Its location in Dorsoduro places it within one of Venice’s most authentic and architecturally rich districts.

At a glance

Type
Traditional Venetian bacaro (wine bar with cicchetti)
Period
Contemporary establishment in a historic neighbourhood
Style
Informal, counter service, Venetian wine and cicchetti tradition
Location
Dorsoduro, Venice, Italy
Coordinates
45.4378° N, 12.3272° E

Overview

A bacaro is a type of Venetian osteria — usually simply furnished, sometimes standing-room only — that serves wine in small glasses called ombre alongside cicchetti: food offerings typically displayed on and served from a counter. Bacaro La Bottiglia continues this tradition in Dorsoduro, one of Venice’s six historic sestieri, which occupies the southern zone of the city on the relatively firm ground (“duro dorso,” hard back) between the Grand Canal and the Giudecca Canal. The district is home to the Accademia galleries, the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, the Punta della Dogana, and one of Venice’s most atmospheric neighbourhoods for daily life.

History

The bacaro tradition in Venice is believed to stretch back to the early centuries of the Republic, when wine taverns provided refreshment for the city’s merchants, artisans, and dock workers who moved goods through the Rialto and along the Grand Canal. The word bacaro is thought to derive from Bacco, the god of wine, though some Venetian etymologists propose connections to local dialect. Establishments named with a direct reference to the bottle — La Bottiglia — evoke the material simplicity of this tradition: wine, a vessel, a counter, company. In Dorsoduro, bacari of this type have long coexisted with the district’s strong university presence, the Ca’ Foscari campus attracting generations of students who embrace the ombra culture.

What you see

The interior typically features a compact bar with bottles lining the walls and a counter presenting the day’s cicchetti selection — crostini with whipped baccalà, boiled eggs with anchovy, polpette (meatballs), artichoke hearts, and seasonal preparations in saor (a sweet-sour Venetian marinade with onions, vinegar, pine nuts, and raisins). Wine is poured from Veneto producers, particularly Soave, Valpolicella, and Prosecco. The surroundings in Dorsoduro provide a backdrop of Gothic and Baroque canal facades, narrow calli, and the broader atmosphere of a neighbourhood where Venetian residents still outnumber tourists.

Cultural significance

The bacaro is as much a social institution as a commercial one: the practice of the “ombra de vin” at the counter, conducted standing and briefly between other activities, defines a particular rhythm of Venetian sociability that resists the seated, leisurely model of the restaurant. Bacari like La Bottiglia that maintain this format contribute to the preservation of intangible cultural heritage — a way of inhabiting the city — that is as endangered as Venice’s physical fabric by the pressures of mass tourism and demographic change.

Practical information

Address
Dorsoduro, Venice (coordinates 45.4378° N, 12.3272° E)
Hours
Check official website or contact directly for current opening times
Admission
No entry charge; cicchetti and wine priced individually at the counter
Notes
Standing at the bar is the traditional format; cash preferred at many bacari

Getting there

Take vaporetto line 1 or 2 to Ca’ Rezzonico on the Grand Canal, then walk into the Dorsoduro street network heading north-east (approximately 5–8 minutes on foot). The Accademia stop (lines 5.1/5.2) provides an alternative access point from the east. The precise location at 45.4378° N, 12.3272° E can be plotted on any mapping application for exact navigation through the calli.

Sources & resources

Find it on the map

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