3190 in Coconut Grove Only Serves Lasagna—and You’ll Have to Find It First
Written by Eric Barton | July 11, 2025
AUTHOR BIO: Eric Barton is editor of The Adventurist and a freelance journalist who has reviewed restaurants for more than two decades. Email him here.
Just behind Lokal in Coconut Grove, past the usual bustle of Commodore Plaza, there’s a quiet new project from the team behind Cotoletta and San Lorenzo. It’s called 3190, and if you wan’t anything besides lasagna, you’ve come to the wrong place.
3190 is a 24-seat speakeasy-style spot from 84 Magic Hospitality in collaboration with Kush Hospitality. There’s no menus, no apps, no delivery—just a single dish called the “Si Papa.”
The lasagna’s name is borrowed from the memory of chef Giulio Rossi’s daughter, who used to ask for seconds with that phrase when she was a young ballerina in training.
"My daughter is a ballerina and she is the prima ballerina at the royal opera in Madrid ," Rossi says. “The ‘si papa’ was always the dish she would eat when she was young and in training. It was the only dish she would always say ‘si papa’ to.”
The restaurant opens today, just steps from Cotoletta, and offers two versions of its lasagna: a traditional Bolognese and a vegetarian take with pesto, peas, and green beans. Both are priced at $15. A short list of Italian wines, including a Lambrusco from a small farm in Modena, is available by the glass or bottle. That’s the whole experience—no delivery apps, no QR codes, and no tipping, in line with 84 Magic’s stripped-down, hospitality-first ethos.
The idea, according to co-founder Andrea Fraquelli, came out of demand. Cotoletta’s Bolognese pasta had become something of an off-menu phenomenon, and guests began asking for it even when it wasn’t available. 3190 gives that craving its own stage. And when Cotoletta is fully booked, diners may be offered a table next door instead—what could’ve been a waitlist becomes an unexpected alternative.
Designed by Eduardo Suarez, the space is dark, minimal, and intentionally simple. Walk in, order your lasagna, sip a glass of wine, and stay as long as you like. Whether 3190 turns out to be a hidden gem or a niche experiment, it’s a rare Miami opening that bets on focus rather than flash.