Few cities blend romance and chocolate as effortlessly as Turin during Cioccolatò. In February 2026, the city’s beloved chocolate festival coincides with Valentine’s week, filling Turin with soft lights, cocoa aromas, and an atmosphere that feels intimate, elegant, unmistakably Torinese. Here, chocolate isn’t just a treat—it’s a language. And Cioccolatò is the perfect moment to understand how deeply it speaks to the city’s identity.
I often gift giandujotti and cremini, or invite friends to a historic café for a hot chocolate. Because sharing a giandujotto or a steaming cup of hot chocolate in one of Turin’s old cafés is never just a “sweet gesture”: it’s a way of saying let me show you my city.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Turin tells its story through chocolate
- Why Turin is Italy’s chocolate capital
- The gianduja revolution
- What to taste at Cioccolatò 2026
- Cioccolatò 2026 and what to do in Turin on Valentine’s Day
- Want to experience the most authentic Turin beyond Cioccolatò?
TURIN TELLS ITS STORY THROUGH CHOCOLATE
From 13 to 17 February 2026, Turin transforms into a grand salon of taste. Piazza Vittorio Veneto, with its neoclassical elegance, becomes the stage for a rich program spread across museums, historic palaces, and iconic city landmarks.
Cioccolatò is not a simple fair. It’s a narrative. A journey through giandujotti, cremini, spreads, and inviting aromas. A way to experience a city that has made chocolate one of its most recognizable signatures for centuries.
WHY TURIN IS ITALY’S CHOCOLATE CAPITAL
Turin’s relationship with cacao is centuries old. In the 16th century, Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy introduced chocolate to the city after the battle of San Quintino. A romanticized version of the story says he offered the population a cup of hot chocolate to celebrate his decision to move the ducal capital from Chambéry to Turin. From then on, chocolate became a court ritual—elegant, aristocratic, modern.
Over time, Torinese artisans refined techniques and recipes, turning the city into a true chocolate laboratory. Here, the first modern chocolate shops were born, along with one of Italy’s most brilliant culinary inventions.
THE GIANDUJA REVOLUTION
In the early 1800s, Napoleon’s blockade made cacao scarce and expensive, encouraging experimentation. But the true invention of a spreadable cream made with cacao and hazelnuts came only around 1852, thanks to Michele Prochet, in collaboration with Caffarel and Baratti.
Prochet perfected the roasting of the Tonda Gentile delle Langhe hazelnut (now IGP) and blended it with cacao, creating a soft, aromatic, surprisingly modern paste: gianduja.

In 1858, Ferdinando Baratti created the Cremino, a perfect cube alternating layers of gianduja and hazelnut cream.
Finally, in 1865, during Carnival, gianduja spread took shape as the giandujotto, distributed by the traditional Piedmontese mask Gianduja. It became the first individually wrapped chocolate in history—a gesture of Savoyard elegance that still defines Turin today.
WHAT TO TASTE AT CIOCCOLATÒ 2026
If you want to experience Cioccolatò like a local, don’t miss:
- Fresh artisanal giandujotti — soft, fragrant, incomparable.
- Cremini — Turin’s iconic layered chocolate cube.
- Cri-Cri chocolates — a hazelnut heart coated in chocolate and tiny sugar beads, wrapped like candies.
Cioccolatò is the perfect moment to explore Turin’s chocolate culture in all its nuances.

CIOCCOLATÒ 2026 AND WHAT TO DO IN TURIN ON VALENTINE’S DAY
If you’re looking for what to do in Turin on Valentine’s Day, Cioccolatò offers the ideal setting for a romantic and authentic experience.
You can take a sunset walk along the Po River, starting from Piazza Vittorio: the river, the bridges, and the hillside view create one of the city’s most romantic panoramas.
And of course, you can have a hot chocolate in a historic café like Fiorio, Baratti & Milano, Mulassano — timeless places where Turin slows down. (You’ll find the full list and descriptions in my guide.)
WANT TO EXPERIENCE THE MOST AUTHENTIC TURIN BEYOND CIOCCOLATÒ?
If you want to explore Cioccolatò, and the city through the eyes of someone who truly knows Turin, let yourself be guided by an itinerary designed to be yours: free, independent, meaningful.
Discover my Turin guide and let it accompany you through historic shops, character-filled neighborhoods, and hidden corners that often escape traditional itineraries. A discreet companion for those who want to explore the city at their own pace.
