Ministry of Foodies Review
Cuisine: Italian
Average price per person: 35€
Environment: 9/10
Food: 8.5/10
Service: 7.5/10
Other: Vegetarian options
Madrid has no shortage of Italian restaurants, which is both a blessing and a warning. For every genuinely good trattoria, there are at least three places serving anonymous pasta under dim lighting and calling it la dolce vita. Trattoria Pulcinella, thankfully, has been around long enough to suggest it is doing something right.
We visited on a weekday for lunch.
Location / Environment
Trattoria Pulcinella is located in Chueca. It’s a location that works well for almost everything: casual dinners, group meals, first dates, and those “somewhere easy but still decent” plans that end up happening more often than anyone admits.

Inside, the restaurant leans into the classic trattoria formula: warm lighting, close-set tables and a constant buzz. The atmosphere is energetic, sociable and designed to keep things moving.

Service is efficient but not particularly attentive or “warm”.
Trattoria Pulcinella – Menu
The menu at Trattoria Pulcinella is extensive, recognisably Italian, and clearly designed to appeal to a wide audience. It’s a full trattoria menu, with antipasti, pasta, pizza and mains as well as desserts.

The pasta is where you will find the most variety. There are familiar staples like tagliatelle alla bolognese, lasagna, gnocchi al pesto and spaghetti al pomodoro, alongside richer house-style combinations such as tagliolini al tartufo. The pizza selection is similarly broad.

One practical detail worth knowing: bread and focaccia are served automatically for an added per-person charge unless declined. You also get a nice spicy oil to dip your bread.
Trattoria Pulcinella – Food
We shared a burrata pizza, which was very good, with nice quality burrata and delicious crust. Dipping the crust in the spicy oil was also a nice touch.

The carbonara was well executed, with a nice creamy sauce from the eggs, guanciale and plenty of black pepper just the way I like it.

The tagliatelle alla bolognese was rich and flavorful, elevated with the addition of grated cheese on top. Nice but not something I would crave.

Finally, we tried the lasagna with minced meat, San Marzano tomatoes and bechamel sauce. Another solid version, although maybe due to the season, the sauce lacked a bit of the sweetness of the tomato that would add to the taste of the dish.

Conclusion
Trattoria Pulcinella is not trying to be the most refined Italian restaurant in Madrid, and it’s probably better off for it. What it offers instead is a reliable, central and genuinely useful trattoria experience: lively atmosphere, generous portions, and a menu built around the kinds of dishes most people actually want to eat.
In a city full of restaurants trying very hard to be something, there is still something to be said for a place that mostly just gets on with it.
Visit: March 2026
