
At Andiamo, we prepare the finest local and seasonal ingredients à la minute — with care, precision, and respect for every element on the plate. While our inspiration is rooted in Italian cuisine, our soul is grounded in the region. We honor our close relationships with local farmers, ranchers, and artisans, letting their harvests guide our ever-evolving menu. Dining at Andiamo is more than a meal — it’s a shared experience. A place where conversation flows easily, memories are made, and the love of food brings people together. We’re grateful for our guests and passionate about creating a space where you can relax, connect, and savor every moment.
Buzzy trattoria serving locally sourced pasta plates & Italian entrees in an atmospheric old home.
Address and Contact Information
Address: 322 Garfield St, Santa Fe, NM 87501
Phone: (505) 995-9595
Website: http://andiamosantafe.com/
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Reservations: andiamosantafe.com
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Andiamo! Santa Fe
Andiamo Santa Fe – Facebook
Andiamo! Restaurant – Santa Fe, NM – OpenTable
Reviews
We started with a supertuscan wine that was great a great pairing for italian food.
Started off with the polenta and caesar .Both entrees were there within minutes of ordering. They were great!
The chicken parm is good and huge.
The arrabiata is to die for!(spicy)
The rigatonni with pancetta is crispy and the sauce is thick in shredded parmesan.
The meatballs were the winner, according to the picky preferences my kid.
Not enough room for dessert. The profiteroles looked good in picture. Maybe next time.
100 % recommended. Get a reservation!
I have been to Andiamo a number of times and can confidently share that the food has been fine at times but never wonderful.
The lasagna was great but the penne with spicy Colorado lamb sausage was absolutely phenomenal. I would probably never order anything else.
My fiancé ordered the Caesar salad, Chicken Parmesan, and Strawberry Pannacotta. The Caesar salad tasted fine. There was truly nothing wrong with the flavor but it was served as large, uncut pieces on a plate too small that he also had to cut himself. His entrée and dessert were also just fine. Not bad but not impressive.
I ordered the Prosciutto di Parma, Fettuccine with local mixed mushrooms, and Tiramisu. Again, it was fine but that’s the problem. At $75 per person, fine isn’t enough.
When we arrived, my fiancé asked for a soda. The waitress responded, “No, we are a completely different type of restaurant.” That phrasing felt dismissive and unnecessarily condescending. A simple, “We don’t carry soda” or an offering of an alternative would have sufficed. Ironically, about 15 minutes later she popped open a can of soda water next to his ear while serving another table…
The dining room was unorganized. Food runners repeatedly attempted to drop off dishes that weren’t ours. We watched the same incorrect plates circulate between tables (at least three times) before they made it to the correct table. On a fixed Valentine’s menu (of 16 dishes total) the restaurant staff shouldn’t have issues like this.
We paid the same $150 total for two people at Market Steer and had attentive service, welcoming staff and genuinely impressive food. That experience felt worth every dollar.
For $150, I expected far more than average food and attitude. I can get that same level of food and service at a $15 hole-in-the-wall restaurant — without the soda pretension.
From the moment we arrived, the tone was set poorly. We stood at the entrance for nearly ten minutes without acknowledgment — no greeting, no eye contact, no sense that anyone was aware of or interested in welcoming guests. Unfortunately, that lack of hospitality continued throughout the evening.
The menu sounded promising, but we were repeatedly informed that multiple items were unavailable. After adjusting our selections more than once, we were told additional dishes were sold out yet again. For a restaurant operating at this price point, menu execution and inventory management should be seamless — not an exercise in compromise.
When the food did arrive, it was underwhelming across the board. Flavors were flat, execution felt careless, and the dishes lacked the refinement one expects from a premium establishment. A simple request — to toss a pasta in its sauce rather than serve it separated — was met with an outright refusal, which felt unnecessarily rigid and dismissive.
To end the evening, dessert was genuinely inedible — yet remained on the bill. Most frustrating of all, we were charged for a dish that we were later told was unavailable.
At $425 for dinner, the experience should reflect thoughtful service, polished execution, and culinary consistency. Instead, we left feeling disappointed and overcharged.
Hospitality matters. Attention to detail matters. And at this level, both should be non-negotiable.
The Spaghetti were cooked to perfection and the meat balls were incredibly delicious. Despite being fine dining, I had 6 generous meatballs that came with the dish. Superb!
The chicken was so incredibly tender, the duck was super intense in flavor and perfectly prepared and the pork chop was fantastic.
Service was beautifully done without being pushy or too much.
This is a fantastic place to stop for great Italian food! If I lived in Santa Fe, I’d be a regular.
The food was exceptional—every dish was bursting with authentic Italian flavors. The pasta was perfectly cooked, and the sauces were rich and delicious, showcasing the high-quality ingredients they use.
What really made the evening special was the service. The staff were so friendly and attentive, ensuring that we had everything we needed without ever making us feel rushed – despite it was already pretty late.
If you find yourself in Santa Fe, I highly recommend Andiamo. It was a delightful way to end our day, and we’ll definitely be back the next time we’re in town!
We had Crispy Polenta and Parma Prosciutto & Belgian Endive for appetizers. My companion had Puttanesca and I Spaghetti and Meatballs. All of which were delicious. We certainly plan to be back.