Trattoria Zà Zà
Trattoria Zà Zà is a well-known historic trattoria in Florence, located beside the Mercato Centrale in the San Lorenzo district and operating since 1978. Named after the Florentine colloquial expression for liveliness and bustle, it has served generations of market traders, Florentine families, and international visitors with a menu anchored in traditional Tuscan cuisine, becoming one of the most recognised addresses in the city’s neighbourhood restaurant landscape.
At a glance
- Type
- Historic trattoria
- Period
- Founded 1978; family-run
- Style
- Traditional Tuscan / Florentine cuisine
- Location
- Piazza del Mercato Centrale 26r, Florence (Firenze), Tuscany, Italy
Overview
Trattoria Zà Zà occupies a prominent position on the Piazza del Mercato Centrale, the square fronting Florence’s main covered food market (completed 1874, architect Giuseppe Mengoni), which supplies the trattoria with fresh produce, meat, and fish each morning. The name Zà Zà derives from Florentine vernacular, evoking energy, informality, and conviviality — values that have shaped the restaurant’s identity from its founding. Over four decades, it has expanded from a small room into a multi-room establishment while maintaining the essential character of a Florentine neighbourhood trattoria: generous portions, regional wines, and a menu grounded in seasonal Tuscan ingredients.
History
Zà Zà was established in 1978 by a Florentine family aiming to serve the workers and vendors of the nearby Mercato Centrale with affordable, traditional meals. The San Lorenzo district, historically a centre of Florentine wool and textile trades and later leather crafts, had sustained a dense network of modest eateries since the Renaissance; Zà Zà entered this lineage at a moment when many historic trattorias were closing under economic pressure and changing dining habits. The restaurant’s survival and growth through the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s reflected both the resilience of Florentine culinary tradition and a growing international appetite for authentic regional cuisine as mass tourism to Florence accelerated.
What you see
The dining rooms combine vaulted stone ceilings, wooden furniture, and walls hung with photographs, bottles, and the decorative ephemera of decades of operation. The menu is printed on a chalkboard and changes with the market and the season; signature dishes include ribollita (thick bread-and-vegetable soup), pappa al pomodoro, tagliatelle al ragù, bistecca alla fiorentina grilled over charcoal, and the full range of Florentine offal dishes (lampredotto, trippa) that distinguish Tuscan cooking from other Italian regional traditions. The Piazza del Mercato Centrale outside, with its wrought-iron market structure and street vendors, provides one of Florence’s most authentic urban settings.
Cultural significance
Zà Zà is regularly cited in international food journalism and guidebooks as a model for the survival and adaptation of the Florentine trattoria format in the era of mass tourism. Its combination of genuine culinary quality, neighbourhood setting, and accessible pricing has made it a reference point for discussions of how historic city-centre restaurants can maintain authenticity while remaining economically viable — a challenge acute in Florence, where tourist pressure on the historic centre is among the highest in Italy.
Practical information
- Address
- Piazza del Mercato Centrale 26r, 50123 Florence (Firenze), Italy
- Hours
- Lunch and dinner, Monday–Saturday; check for current hours and holiday closures
- Reservations
- Recommended, especially for dinner and weekends
Getting there
Florence Santa Maria Novella station (SMN) is a five-minute walk from the Mercato Centrale and Trattoria Zà Zà. Multiple city bus lines stop at SMN and at Via Nazionale nearby. By car, use ZTL-exempt parking outside the historic centre (Fortezza da Basso or Parterre car parks) and continue by foot or bus; ZTL cameras operate 24 hours across the historic centre.
Sources & resources
- Mercato Centrale, Florence — Wikipedia
- Trattoria — Wikipedia
- Cultural Heritage Online — Florence guide
