A production kitchen by day that pours Gravner by night, with a handful of tables and an omakase style chef's table.
Magazzino works as a production kitchen by day and flips into a Condesa wine bar at night. The Infatuation says the room feels like drinking in someone's personal kitchen, which is close to literally true.
The wine list is the draw: hard to find orange wines, including bottles from Josko Gravner, poured beside Italian leaning small plates built for sharing. Star Wine List counts it among its favourite wine bars in Mexico City.
Who would hate it? Anyone who needs a big room and a long menu. There is a small chef's table inside, a handful of tables outside, and not much else.
The working kitchen stays visible: steel counters, shelving, and a chef's table that seats six at most, with a few tables on the sidewalk outside. The Infatuation frames the tightness as the charm; OpenTable diners rate the whole experience 4.7 from 49 reviews.
The list leans natural and Italian, with orange wines as the house specialty; Gravner anchors the top end while accessible skin contact pours sit around MX$250 a glass. The kitchen sends out modern small plates, and the gnocchetti with pesto is the named dish in The Infatuation's review.
Order whatever orange wine the staff are excited about; the list turns over too fast for fixed picks. Skip the walk in gamble on weekends and reserve, especially for the two hour omakase style chef's table, which takes groups of one to six.
Condesa locals who care about producers, sommeliers off shift, and dates who booked ahead. The room stays conversational; nobody is here for a scene, and OpenTable reviews repeatedly credit the staff's recommendations.