There are restaurants you visit out of convenience, and then there are restaurants you plan your entire trip around. Terza, nestled inside the Rochester Marriott Mayo Clinic Area on Second Street Southwest, firmly belongs in that second category. From the moment you step through the doors and into its warm, amber-lit dining room, you get the sense that someone here cares deeply — about the food, about the atmosphere, and about the people sitting at those tables.
Terza takes its culinary cues from rustic Italian-American tradition, but it never feels like a cliché. The kitchen leans into seasonal ingredients, and the menu shifts just enough throughout the year to give you a genuine reason to return. On a recent visit, I started with the burrata — silky, impossibly fresh, draped over heirloom tomatoes and finished with a drizzle of olive oil that tasted like it had been pressed yesterday. It was the kind of opener that makes you slow down and pay attention.
For the main course, the wood-fired preparations are where Terza really earns its reputation. The roasted chicken, carved tableside with a fragrant herb jus, arrives with a gorgeous mahogany crust and meat that falls apart with the gentlest encouragement. If you are a pasta person — and you should be, at least for one night — the housemade tagliatelle with braised short rib ragu is deeply satisfying, the kind of dish that makes you wonder why you ever ordered anything else anywhere else.
The bar program here deserves equal attention. The wine list is thoughtfully curated with a strong Italian backbone, including some lesser-known regional bottles that your server will happily walk you through. The cocktails are precise without being fussy — a well-made Negroni, a bright and citrusy spritz, or a classic Manhattan served exactly right. It is the sort of bar where you could happily linger before a table opens or after dessert stretches a bit longer than planned.
Speaking of dessert — do not skip the tiramisu. It arrives in a generous portion, pillowy and espresso-soaked, dusted with enough cocoa to be dramatic without crossing into excess. Pair it with a small pour of Amaro and consider the evening a success.
The location puts you right in the heart of the medical district, just steps from the Mayo Clinic campus and the downtown skyline walkway system, making it an effortless choice whether you are wrapping up a long day of appointments or celebrating good news with family who has traveled from across the country. The staff seems to understand that distinction — they are attentive and genuine, never rushed, and they read the room with admirable skill.
Rochester has a dining scene that continues to surprise visitors who expect only chain hotels and cafeteria fare near the clinic. Terza is one of the most compelling arguments that the city has grown into something far more interesting than that assumption. Whether you are a first-time visitor or a returning patient making Rochester a regular stop, this is a table worth booking. Reserve ahead, dress up just a little, and let the evening unfold at its own pace. You will be glad you did.